Blog: BUNNYpants and SIPPYcup - Eclectic Menagerie by Aharleygyrl
60 Years Together
Successful marriages
Date: 6/1/2007 11:04:15 PM ( 17 y ) ... viewed 3448 times
By Paula Popp, For the Capital
Bryce and Felda Parks of Crofton were
married on April 27, 1947, and recently renewed their vows during their 60th
wedding anniversary celebration at the home of Shawne and Adrian McGibbon of
Glenn Dale.
Officiating the ceremony was the Rev.
LaJuana Caldwell, of Bowie. Her father, who is now deceased, was Mr. Parks'
best man in 1947. Following the ceremony, family and friends presented one
testimonial after another about how Mr. and Mrs. Parks have made a difference
in the lives of others.
Mrs. Parks was born and raised in Denver,
Colo., and worked as a librarian for 10 years at the University of Denver.
Shortly after the couple moved to Maryland in 1975, Mrs. Parks became the
circulation supervisor at the Crofton library until her retirement in 1988.
Mr. Parks was born on a farm in western
Kansas in the 1920s. His family moved to Denver when he was in the 7th grade. He
said that he remembered seeing Felda just once in junior high school.
"We also went to high school together, but
didn't know each other well," Mrs. Parks said.
It wasn't until they both attended the
University of Denver that they became better acquainted, but then Mr. Parks was
called to serve three years in the Air Force during World War II. He was a
candidate with the Tuskegee Airman, but didn't make the squadron and became a
land surveyor instead.
"I wrote Felda and told her that if she
couldn't write, just put me down as MIA," said Mr. Parks noting that she never
did write him back. Somehow they managed to find each other again.
Mrs. Parks remembers the marriage proposal,
of sorts, made by Mr. Parks after a day of skiing at Pikes Peak in Colorado
Springs. While sitting in a car, Mr. Parks took that leap of faith by asking,
"Should I order this car or should we get married?" Apparently, he was a little
confused as to which one he wanted more - a new car or a wife.
"I must have said yes, because look at us
now," said Mrs. Parks, who said they were married at her mom's house. But she
didn't remember much about the reception at her mother-in-law's house or the
brief honeymoon that followed.
For their 10th anniversary, Mr. Parks
surprised his wife with a trip to Acapulco. On their 25th anniversary, they
packed up the kids and headed to Mexico for a camping trip. Their 50th
anniversary was spent alone on the Eastern Shore.
Mrs. McGibbon, a longtime family friend took
care of all the arrangements for the 60th wedding anniversary celebration that
included invitations to 100 family and friends, engraved champagne glasses, a
wedding cake, catered meal, cocktails, music, and the required wedding decor to
give the event that final touch of elegance. Mrs. McGibbon's father, John
Carter, and Mr. Parks were ski buddies who had known each other since high
school. Mr. Carter was a dentist in New York and passed away in 1976.
Mr. Parks was one of the first African
American members of the National Ski Patrol in Denver. He received a Purple
Merit Star from the Red Cross for saving the life of a skier after an avalanche
in 1957. He moved to Crofton and worked for Bechtel Corp. as a safety engineer
during the construction of Metro until his retirement in 1988. His uncle, Gordon
Parks, who passed away just over a year ago, was a groundbreaking
African-American photographer, musician, poet, novelist, journalist, activist
and film director. He is best remembered for his photo essays for Life
magazine and as the director of the 1971 film "Shaft."
Mr. & Mrs. Parks helped form the Slippers
and Sliders Ski Club and the Denver chapter of Jack and Jill of America, a group
that enhances the development of children socially, culturally and
educationally. Both groups are still in existence today.
Their three children, Toni Parks and Bryce
Parks, Jr. both of San Francisco and Beryl Parks of Pfafftown, N.C.. attended
the celebration and spoke about how lucky they are to have come from such a
loving household with great parents.
"After we were married, we didn't have
children for four years, which I think helps build a marriage," said Mrs. Parks
who also said that commitment and having hobbies in common keeps a marriage
strong.
Mattie Springfield, a transplant from Denver
who currently lives in Bethesda, has known the couple since 1962 when she and
Mrs. Parks were roommates after they both gave birth to their kids at St. Luke's
Episcopal Hospital in Denver.
Standish and Gail Brooks, Tony and Corinne
Stripling, Tom and Marge Guinard, Dick and Terri Ray, Mike Garner, and Gary
Whitmore spoke highly of their Crofton friends and neighbor.
"You couldn't have better neighbors," Mrs.
Ray said.
Two months ago, Mrs. Parks fell and
fractured a vertebra in her neck. She is well on the road to recovery and plans
to get back to fishing and traveling with their motor home group soon.
Bingo for the Cure
If you are wild about playing Bingo,
mark your calendar for Sunday. Crofton resident and cancer survivor, Daryl Brown
and his West Anne Arundel County Relay for Life team will sponsor "Bingo for the
Cure," a community event at the Gambrills Athletic Club on McKnew Road. The $20
per person donation will benefit the American Cancer Society. Doors open at
noon, first game at 1 p.m. with 20 games and 3 specials to be called. There will
be food, a plant wheel and a 50/50 raffle. For more information, contact Linda
Phipps at 410-827-8156 or e-mail lphippsfamily@yahoo.com.
Marriage in the News: Eloping
Again, 60 Years Later
In 1947, a young woman
named working at the Phoenix Theater in Arizona dropped six bags of popcorn when
a man named Tom Abbot walked in the front door. Though she already had a
boyfriend, she knew she loved Tom a great deal. Three months after they started
dating, they eloped to another town so that her mother wouldn't see the marriage
license in the newspaper.
60 Years Later
60 years later,
they celebrated their anniversary by returning to the courthouse they eloped to
and renewing their vows. Considering the fact that she was 17 and he was 20 in
1947, the chances of such a marriage surviving today are pretty slim. They
barely knew each other, can you imagine getting married to someone you'd only
known three months?
So how did Tom and
Virginia do it?
They made commitment and
love their number 1 priority. Divorce was not a word that entered into their
dictionary. Tom told her and their guests that he didn't measure success by
where they lived or what they had:
Success is not what you
have ... to me, it's who you have.
Together, the couple have
four children, sixteen grandchildren and fourteen great-grandchildren. They kept
their marriage a secret at first, intending to only tell her parents after she
turned 18. Virginia spilled the news when she heard her parents commenting on
their neighbor's choice for marriage. When Virginia blurted out the news that
she was married.
Her family finally
decided to leave the young couple alone, figuring they wouldn't last six months.
Sixty years later - wow. It's stories like this that remind us we can make our
marriages work, we focus on the love, the commitment and we don't give ourselves
an easy out.
No, not all marriages
work out and sometimes, you can't help it. But other marriages do and those
marriages should inspire us. So a toast to Tom and Virginia and their 60 years
of love, commitment and family.
The Secret To A 60 Year Marriage
There was once a man and woman
who had been married for more than 60 years. They had shared everything. They
had talked about everything. They kept no secrets from each other -- except that
the old woman had a shoebox in the top of her closet that she cautioned her
husband never to open or ask her about.
For all of these years, he had never thought about the box, but one day the
little old woman got very sick and the doctor said she would not recover. In
trying to sort out their affairs, the little old man took down the shoebox and
took it to his wife's bedside. She agreed that it was time that he should know
what was in the box. When he opened it, he found two crocheted doilies and a
stack of money totaling $25,000.
"When we were to be married," she said, explaining the contents of the box, "my
grandmother told me the secret of a happy marriage was to never argue. She told
me that if I ever got angry with you, I should just keep quiet and crochet a
doily."
The little old man was so moved, he had to fight back tears. Only two precious
doilies were in the box. She had only been angry with him two times in all those
years of living and loving! He almost burst with happiness.
"Honey," he said "that explains the doilies, but what about all of this money?
Where did it come from?"
"Oh," she said, "that's the money I made from selling the doilies.
"When we were first married we
came to an agreement. I would make all the major decisions and my wife would
make all of the minor decisions. And in 60 years of marriage we have never
needed to make a *major* decision."