Thursday, June 5, 2014

Memory of Frederick Eugene Tuttle- By Sylvia Vivian Tuttle Howells



 My Father was called Fred for Frederick Eugene.  He was over 6’ tall, lean, sported side burns, had dark wavy hair and hazel eyes after his great ancestor John Tuthill of Long Island.  I never can remember my Dad without a twinkle in his eyes, truly handsome but in a very humble self- effacing way.   The ladies were flattered by his slightest attention and Mother was a little jealous.  A pretty unmarried lady on the way to the Milk station used to seek a ride into town.  My Mother sent me to report.  I did. She told the pretty lady to get her rides into town elsewhere.  She did.  My father was a good man and gave measure heaped up and running over of his garden produce when he sold it.  He was a Baptist and sometimes went to church.  He was a man of few words, considerate and never harsh, living and giving of himself to neighbors, friends and family alike.  His vitality was a constant wonder to me as a child and now I know it came from a pure and thankful heart, clean living and a love of all good things.  He was a Latter-Day Saint through he had never heard the Gospel.  Years later when my son Tom did his work for him in the Temple he accepted it with a rejoicing heart.  My Father taught us from nature, the writings of Benjamin Franklin and the Bible.  The uncomplaining way he took the lean years with the good has been an inspiration to me to this day.  I have a home, a good husband six beautiful sons and a powerful testimony of the Gospel but I do not know the security as an adult that I did as a child with my Father and Mother.  How wonderful the Great Plan of Life and Salvation is.  What hope fills us, to know we will be to-gather again.  My father had little formal education but was a kind generous person loving the great out of doors, reverent and never tiring in giving.  At 21 years he went to De Smett Kingsbury South Dakota and took up a homestead with his brother Frank.  Before this he had appreciated as a carpenter.  He left off ranching and worked for the Wyoming Milling Company.  The ranch was sold in later years when I was little for $10,000.  In his early 30’s he went to Cedar Rapids Iowa and met and married Kate Verney Morrison daughter of John Dunlap Morrison and Mariah Clark Caldwell, the 26th of July 1892, my mothers 17th birthday.  They made a romantic and beautiful picture, he in his swallow tailed prince Albert and she in a lace trimmed cream white wedding gown with kid slippers of white, Her titian hair and green eyes him with dark brown curly hair and twinkling hazel eyes and deferential way.  The year she graduated from school she was chosen Queen because of her beauty.  They came East to Gouverneur, New York and using his carpenters trade built some of the finest homes in the village.  Some still standing to this day.  This place where we lived was a city once but the marble quarries gave out, the Paratese mines (containing a dark soft rock used for topping roads) reached the end of production, leaving great deep holes filled with water, the paper mills closed and also the lace factories.  It now has a population of about 5000.  It is one of the loveliest spots on earth.  In the middle of the residential section is a small park surrounded on all sides by churches, stores and the post office and Library.  Just to the west is $1,000,000 bridge crossing the Oswegtchie River (an Indian name meaning Hose – we – gotch – ye).  While in the building business my father fell.  When he recovered his health he farmed on shares.  In 1902 with six children he bought a five acre plot with a big house well built near a good Public School.  It was 1 ¾ miles to the town.  Here we all grew up and went our ways.  He made furniture, beds, bureaus, commodes, chairs, kitchen cabinets, and barns, milk houses and tool sheds for the farmers.  He had a big garden, a cow, a pig, and chickens and helped in haying season.  He could load more hay and milk more cows than any man around.  My mother never milked.  He sold his vegetables raising tomatoes when every on else still thought they were poison.   He had grapes and strawberries. 

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