Family curse

Have you ever noticed that in some families it seems that one career or industry keeps appearing in the working lives of relatives or ancestors? It almost seems like predetermination, or a family curse.

In my case, that curse seems to revolve around transportation in all its various forms. My maternal grandfather’s brush with transportation came when he was a hard hat diver who worked on the building of the current Welland Canal. This is the most tenuous of the connections. He wasn’t directly involved in transportation, but in creating part of the infrastructure.

His son, my uncle, worked for a trucking company specializing in boat haulage.

From there, the family moved into the office aspects of transportation. My favourite uncle worked for a couple of motor transport companies in what is called the Traffic Department This job involved pricing shipments among other duties that varied with the company. In one, I succeeded him in his job (remark from the interview “so you’re Bobby’s kin. Let’s see if you’re as good.”) I was. In his second company, he tried to hire me. I declined on the basis that it would have meant working for family. His son and daughter, my cousins, also followed him into transportation.

Both my grandmother and my worked for a travel agent – again, arranging transportation for people this time.

As for me, my first part-time job was as delivery boy for a drug store. My first full-time job was as an accounts payable clerk for a motor transportation company. From there I moved into their traffic department for a couple of years, then I succeeded my uncle. Several other jobs followed, always in motor transportation and always with carriers serving different parts of the country. From there I moved to a company that forwarded goods by both boxcar and airfreight. Sticking with transportation, I moved to Toyota Canada’s National Parts Department, importing parts and sending those parts to dealers. At one point I became the “VOR” clerk, “VOR” stands for “vehicle off road”, the most urgent category of complaint. I described this job this way: When a customer is standing in the dealer’s showroom yelling and screaming because his car needs a part, my job was to find that part anywhere in the world. My finest moment in that post was the time a dealer from Montreal called me on a Wednesday because his customer’s car needed something but couldn’t wait for a normal order because he needed his car for his wedding on Saturday. I found it in a California parts depot, got it to the dealer and the customer had his car back on Friday afternoon in time for the wedding. His new wife sent a nice “thank you” note to me afterward.

I further moved into international transportation after Toyota, working for a major importer where I was in charge of all imports into Canada. Fleet manager for someone else followed. When the economic downturn of the ‘80’s hit, I found work as a courier – again, transportation – and still later drove a cab for 7 years.

Even my hobbies involved transportation in some way. I was involved with the group that did timing for all races at Mosport Park and I enjoyed rallying.

Each and every job I’ve held involved some contact with or participation in, transportation. As I said at the beginning, it seems transportation is either my family’s destiny or curse, I can’t decide which. And just to carry it on to the next generation, one of my sons is a bus driver. Who knows what my grandchildren will do, but I’ll wager it will involve some form of transportation.

Maybe your family tree will reveal a similar pattern of employment.

Enjoy your weekend, stay safe on the roads and remember to hug an artist – we need love (and the occasional ride) too.

Cat.

Interesting family I have

My son has been helping me find information on my father, partly so I can complete a government form and partly for his own curiosity.

First, on the other side of the family, I knew my mother was born in the US, which apparently means I would have very little trouble getting American citizenship (I have no intention of so doing, not at my age), but I learned my maternal grandfather was also American.

Back to my father’s family.  In the past day my son turned up my grandparents’ marriage records.  They are very interesting.  I discovered both grandparents were born on Cape Breton Island and that he was 12 years older than her when they married.  I had known that my grandfather had worked on the building of one of the Welland Canals – I don’t know if it was the current one or the previous one.  It wasn’t until I saw the papers today that I learned he had been a diver, not the labourer I had been lead to believe.

But it is some of the other information on this form that I really find fascinating.  Being from Cape Breton Island, it is almost a given names are of Scottish origin, with lots of “Mc’s” and “Mac’s”.  Such is the case here.  What I find fascinating is that while my grandfather spelled his name “Mac”, my great-grandfather spelled his name “Mc”.  Equally fascinating is that both grandparents are shown as being Catholic.  Don’t know when that changed, for I am Anglican (Episcopalian in the US) and as far as I  know, nobody in the family is Catholic.

According to the document, both great-grandfathers were also born in Cape Breton.  The form only lists the names of my great-grandmothers, not their birthplaces.  My son is going to try to trace the family back even further, so who knows what may turn up.

If you’ve watched the television show “Who do you think you are?” you are aware that sometimes things happened in the past that changed our present.  That certainly seems to be the case here.

Enjoy your day and remember to hug an artist – we need love too.

Cat