Difference between revisions of "Becker, Helen Elizabeth"

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__NOTOC__
 
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==Birth== <!--These are your category headers that will appear. You can change them just make sure to keep the "=".-->
+
==Birth==  
<!--Insert birth and parent information text here -->
+
Helen Elizabeth Becker was born October 14, 1913, the daughter of '''[[Becker, Minton Washington|Minton Washington Becker]]''' (18 JUN 1885 - 18 SEP 1955) and Lucilla Wayman (10 SEP 1887 - 14 JUN 1957). Her brother and sister were:<ref name="BH">www.BerneHistory.com Family Files</ref>
 +
*Donald Minton Becker (10 DEC 1910 - 5 JAN 1959)
 +
*Marjorie Alice Becker (16 AUG 1921 - 22 MAY 2000 ) - Mrs. Irving (Marjorie) Bernhardt of Scotia
 +
 
  
 
==Education== <!--DELETE THIS LINE IF NOT NEEDED-->
 
==Education== <!--DELETE THIS LINE IF NOT NEEDED-->
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==Death==
 
==Death==
<!--Insert the death and burial information here -->
+
Helen Becker died February 6, 1983.
  
 
==Obituary==  
 
==Obituary==  
 +
[[File:19830210BeckerHelenMemoirObit.jpg|300px|thumb|right|<center>Helen Becker Obituary - [[h:Altamont Enterprise|Altamont Enterprise]] — February 10, 1983</center>]]
 +
 
Died
 
Died
BECKER —Feb, 6,1983, Helen
 
E. Becker of 125 Maple Ave,,
 
Altamont, daughter of the late
 
Minton and'Lucilla Becker; sister
 
of Mrs, Irving (Marjorie) Bernhardt
 
of Scotia; also survived by
 
several nieces and nephews. Funeral
 
services were held from
 
Fredendall Funeral Home, Altamont
 
Wednesday, Feb, 9, Burial
 
will be at Fairview Cemetery,
 
Altamont, N.Y. Those who wish
 
may make contributions to the
 
Altamont Reformed Church Memorial
 
Fund, Altamont, N.Y.
 
12009.
 
  
 +
BECKER —Feb, 6,1983, '''Helen E. Becker''' of 125 Maple Ave,, Altamont, daughter of the late '''[[Becker, Minton Washington|Minton]]''' and Lucilla Becker; sister of Mrs. Irving (Marjorie) Bernhardt of Scotia; also survived by several nieces and nephews. Funeral services were held from Fredendall Funeral Home, Altamont Wednesday, Feb, 9, Burial will be at Fairview Cemetery, Altamont, N.Y. Those who wish may make contributions to the Altamont Reformed Church Memorial Fund, Altamont, N.Y. 12009.
 +
:[[h:Altamont Enterprise|Altamont Enterprise]] — February 10, 1983
  
 
==Additional Media==  
 
==Additional Media==  
 +
Helen Becker: A Personal Memoir
 +
 
By CAROL DuBRIN
 
By CAROL DuBRIN
What does one say with tthe
 
passing of an era — an era that
 
endswhenonespecial person dies?
 
Such itisnowin Altamont with the
 
death Sunday of our neighbor and
 
Mend.HelenBecKer.Knowntoall
 
of vs, a friend to village children
 
through many years, Helen's
 
departure willleave avoid no other
 
canfill.
 
Minton Becker had a harness
 
and shoe Tepair shop on Maple
 
Avenue in Altamont always, it
 
seems. My (generation and at least
 
(several -oT 'those ibelore mine grew
 
luplknowingthat was where to igo if
 
(one needed any type tsl ileather
 
goods repaired. And though she
 
livedhome andhelpedher mother,
 
toicillav-early <on Helen, a fathers
 
.girl and avowed tom-boy, toolc an
 
interest in the shop.
 
Notthatshe-didri't.have her turn
 
at more "womanly" (things, hiring
 
'out to cook and clean. Fiercely
 
independent, she just liked working
 
with her father better — <or
 
being (out in a (garden (growing
 
things.
 
Firiendsfor manyyearssheand I
 
have (often reminisced <over (our
 
'dblngspistandipresent.T'veheard
 
(tales iof the mountains (bf food
 
cookediuptofeed theharvesters at
 
((he Wade -Swatftz farm, "Amy
 
falwaysfedithemplenty,'"andshe'''di
 
describe platters <ol pork chops,
 
bowls of potatoes and pies bf every
 
(description she's helped produce:
 
Or the times cleaning for Miss
 
Peters, dusting all her antiques
 
and around her many collections.
 
Miss Peters" fantastic gardens
 
werea special joy and inspiration.
 
Allthisworkwastoaspecialoend
 
— it meant money carefully saved1
 
until finally she could buy her own
 
car and cam ""freedom,'" Not
 
freedom from her home or her
 
community — just *he means to
 
Go might mean taking a church
 
youth group or Sunday school class
 
on a picnic or talcing some (elderly
 
shutinsfor a(drivecrafriend to the
 
city(or, hestwf all, being able to .go
 
visit some relative in another
 
state. Helen took her pleasures in
 
simple things.
 
As Minton Becker had gotten
 
older and neededhelp, Helen spent
 
more and more time with Mm,
 
learning by (doing, repairing the
 
occasional harness and working on
 
shoes. She learned how to use all
 
the sturdy old equipment in the
 
place, ((It is stall all there and has
 
been in use until' the past few
 
weeks.;)'
 
The Becker shop occupied1 a
 
lengthwise hall of the fust floor of
 
125 Maple Ave. I remember taking
 
dancing lessons in the long, narrow
 
room in the other side of the
 
building. Helen told me that a t one
 
lame the basement was a fish
 
market and the reason her garden
 
grew so well out back was all the
 
fish heads and entrails buried in
 
various garbage holes there.
 
Arthur 'Gregg, former town
 
historian, ^recalled a period before
 
that when it was a (taproom. The
 
building was apparently higher at
 
(onetimeandhadbeenlowered'ona
 
new foundation.
 
Altamont seems to have been
 
great on moving and changing old
 
buildings so that what is now an
 
apartment house on Maple Ave.
 
was once a school on Lincoln Ave.
 
(School St.).. The shed (garage
 
behind the apartments next to
 
Helen's shop were<once part <of the
 
horse sheds behind the Reformed
 
Church, attached to the bam still
 
there — for parishioners' horses
 
(during services. Even they had
 
been moved (there from their first
 
site behind the original SRef ormed
 
Church located about where Junction
 
Hardware is now.
 
This practical, saving nature of
 
(the community was a part of
 
Helen, too.
 
"Waste not, want not" found her
 
constantly recycling things and
 
when she took over her father's
 
Ibusinessitherealwayswasacorner
 
forusedclothing, shoes, skates and
 
such for resale, i kept up with my
 
(Children's growing feet with ice
 
skates from that shop, returning
 
outgrown ones for someone else's
 
use.
 
©idyou need sewing findings or
 
perhaps a (greeting card? Helen
 
carried those, too. And somewhere
 
along the line Helen brought candy
 
into the store.
 
Inan old-fashioned glass (display
 
case were (quantities of penny
 
candies. Children could go out with
 
a great handful for a nickel.
 
My Mend Charlie Gage recalls
 
the great bargains he and his
 
buddies always found to satisfy
 
theirsweet tooth— andthat was35
 
years ago. Certainly my children^
 
as a treat or for being "'-good;"
 
were rewarded! with pennies so
 
they could go to Helen's shop and
 
choose anything they wanted.
 
Helen would wait patiently while
 
young shoppers tried! to make up
 
their minds, explaining that these
 
were two for a penny or those five
 
for that single cent. Thenshe'd put
 
theirchoicesinaiittlebrown paper
 
bag that the kids would come out
 
gripping tightly.
 
Certain changes came with time
 
— plastic baggies and fewer
 
candies for that penny. But she
 
always kept some that could be
 
bought at that price. We suspected
 
she sold them a t a less.
 
As Millie Plummer said to me,
 
"'Helen never saw a bad kid." She
 
might see youngsters with problems,
 
but she loved them all, tried
 
to help them all; And she would
 
appeal to those who she thought
 
might help one of "her kids." I
 
recall telephone calls about doctors
 
or clothing.
 
Helen was fast to help others,
 
too. If ladies wished^ to earn a bit of
 
money by their handiwork, Helen
 
wouldfind'displaycflsespaceforit
 
andsellit—keeping that money in
 
a separate box OT can, rarely
 
keeping any commission for herself.
 
Her shop became a j*ecycling
 
station for church groups •collecting
 
cans, bottles and jpapers.
 
She carried farm produce for
 
local farmers, sold berries for
 
industrious kids and bunches of
 
bright bittersweet collected along
 
(the fencerows. And flowers from
 
her own /garden, too, though more
 
of ten she would give them away.
 
Her produce became such a
 
popular item that with the help of
 
the Abbruzzese family of Altamont
 
Orchards, she got stuff from the
 
farmers market to resell very
 
reasonably anher shop. Shealways
 
(donated the potatoes or squash for
 
church dinners and each Christmasfgaveindividually
 
packed bags
 
or boxes of candy for Santa to
 
(distribute to all the children at the
 
Sunday school party. In later
 
years, the church took her under
 
its wing in appreciation.
 
Perhaps the candy store was an
 
outgrowth <o? Helen's own love of
 
sweets^ Anyway, along the line she
 
(developed -diabetes and many
 
(Mails lay ahead of her.
 
Stubborn, she would admit to no
 
problems. So she ignored them,
 
Andas with all ignored problems it
 
was at her own peril
 
She lost one leg to diabetes after
 
a long fight with gangrenous sores
 
on her heel. She accepted it
 
matter-oMactly but found that she
 
(didn't Ike her artificial leg much.
 
Still, she conducted business as
 
usual on crutches as soon as she
 
could get back to her shop and
 
home. ((The side of the building
 
where I had taken those dancing
 
classes was her apartment J)
 
Conceding nothing except her
 
precious car ((she gave it to her
 
nephew;) and trying to cook with
 
sugar substitutes, Helen kept up
 
her gardens (with the help of the
 
Miller tooysj), with her housekeeping,
 
canning and preserving in
 
addition to her shop work.
 
Then I remember one long, hot
 
summer when we fought with bed
 
rest, special! dressings and diets.
 
But again the dread diabetes took
 
its toll. She lost her remaining leg.
 
Lesser souls would have been
 
completely devastated. But, refusing
 
two artificial legs — "Td
 
break my neck, too" — she went
 
back to her home and shop again
 
where friends had altered things
 
enough to accommodate a wheelchair.
 
Along about then, Mary Maslowsky
 
came upon the scene and she
 
became Helen' "legs" — kneeling
 
in the garden to keep the flowers,
 
the strawberries, the vegetables
 
coming, shopping, picking up the
 
mail, banking, pushing the wheelchair
 
on "outings" around the
 
  
Helen Becker:
+
What does one say with the passing of an era — an era that ends when one special person dies?
A Memoir . . ,
+
Such it is now in Altamont with the death Sunday of our neighbor and friend, Helen BecKer. Known to all of us, a friend to village children through many years, Helen's departure will leave avoid no other can fill.
(Continued from Page7)
+
 
village (usually stopping at the
+
Minton Becker had a harness and shoe repair shop on Maple Avenue in Altamont always, it
Penguin for refreshment along the
+
seems. My (generation and at least several of those before mine grew up knowing that was where to go if one needed any type of leather goods repaired. And though she lived home and helped her mother, Lucilla, early on Helen, a father's girl and avowed tom-boy, took an interest in the shop.
way).
+
 
They even entered a walk-a-thon
+
Not that she didn't have her turn at more "womanly" things, hiring out to cook and clean. Fiercely independent, she just liked working with her father better — or being (out in a garden growing things.
or two until Mary's own health
+
 
precluded that. Other Mends
+
Friends for many years she and I have often reminisced over our doings and present. I've heard
helped, but Mary was the mainstay.
+
tales of the mountains of food cooked up to feed the harvesters at the Wade Swartz farm, "Amy
She even learned to use that
+
always fed them plenty," and she'd describe platters of pork chops, bowls of potatoes and pies of every description she's helped produce.
antique shoe repair equipment in
+
 
the shop under Helen's direction,
+
Or the times cleaning for Miss Peters, dusting all her antiques and around her many collections.
1 don't believe Helen ever
+
Miss Peters' fantastic gardens were a special joy and inspiration.
realized how much she depended
+
 
on Mary as she continued on her
+
All this work was to a special end — it meant money carefully saved until finally she could buy her own car and earn "freedom," Not freedom from her home or her community — just the means to
defiantly independent way. She
+
"go."
told me it was her "Indian blood"
+
 
and proudly proclaimed an Indian
+
Go might mean taking a church youth group or Sunday school class on a picnic or taking some elderly shutins for a drive or a friend to the city or, best of all, being able to go visit some relative in another state. Helen took her pleasures in simple things.
grandmother somewhere along the
+
 
line.
+
As '''[[Becker, Minton Washington |Minton Becker]]''' had gotten older and needed help, Helen spent more and more time with him, learning by doing, repairing the occasional harness and working on shoes. She learned how to use all the sturdy old equipment in the place, (It is still all there and has been in use until the past few weeks.)
Visiting a western Indian reservation,
+
 
I brought her back a tiny
+
The Becker shop occupied a lengthwise hall of the first floor of 125 Maple Ave. I remember taking dancing lessons in the long, narrow room in the other side of the building. Helen told me that at one time the basement was a fish market and the reason her garden grew so well out back was all the fish heads and entrails buried in various garbage holes there.
piece of scrimshaw (Indian artwork
+
 
incised on elk horn) on a
+
Arthur Gregg, former town historian, recalled a period before that when it was a taproom. The
chain whichIputaroundher neck.
+
building was apparently higher at one time and had been lowered on a new foundation.
She loved it—it gave her a reason
+
 
to tell about her own "Indian
+
Altamont seems to have been great on moving and changing old buildings so that what is now an
connection,"
+
apartment house on Maple Ave. was once a school on Lincoln Ave. (School St.) The shed garage
Julia Drebitko had come into our
+
behind the apartments next to Helen's shop were once part of the horse sheds behind the Reformed
village life, living right across the
+
Church, attached to the barn still there — for parishioners' horses during services. Even they had been moved there from their first site behind the original Reformed Church located about where Junction Hardware is now.
street from Helen, And they
+
 
becamefriends, Jwlia alwayshad a
+
This practical, saving nature of the community was a part of Helen, too.
hearty smile _...** laugh to share
+
 
and made sure to visit Helen daily
+
"Waste not, want not" found her constantly recycling things and when she took over her father's
—especiallyif Helen was "Down,"
+
business there always was a corner for used clothing, shoes, skates and such for resale. I kept up with my children's growing feet with ice skates from that shop, returning outgrown ones for someone else's use.
There were those days — pain in
+
 
her "legs and feet" were genuine,
+
Did you need sewing findings or perhaps a greeting card? Helen carried those, too. And somewhere
the brain's response to cold or
+
along the line Helen brought candy into the store.
atmospheric changes, and the
+
 
diabetes dimmed the eyes (Helen
+
In an old-fashioned glass display case were quantities of penny candies. Children could go out with a great handful for a nickel.
usedmagnifyinggoggles to work),
+
 
Julia's daily round usually
+
My friend Charlie Gage recalls the great bargains he and his buddies always found to satisfy
included picking up milk or some
+
their sweet tooth— and that was 35 years ago. Certainly my children as a treat or for being "good;" were rewarded with pennies so they could go to Helen's shop and choose anything they wanted.
other small item at the store for
+
 
Helen, But then came theday a few
+
Helen would wait patiently while young shoppers tried to make up their minds, explaining that these were two for a penny or those five for that single cent. Then she'd put their choices in a little brown paper bag that the kids would come out gripping tightly.
weeks ago when Julia was felledtey
+
 
a heart attack. And with her
+
Certain changes came with time— plastic baggies and fewer candies for that penny. But she
passing Helen seemed to have lost
+
always kept some that could be bought at that price. We suspected she sold them at a loss.
her own spirit. And despite
+
 
encouragement from her sister,
+
As Millie Plummer said to me, "Helen never saw a bad kid." She might see youngsters with problems, but she loved them all, tried to help them all; And she would appeal to those who she thought might help one of "her kids." I recall telephone calls about doctors or clothing.
Marjorie, and her many friends,
+
 
Helen gave up the long fight. The
+
Helen was fast to help others, oo. If ladies wished^ to earn a bit of money by their handiwork, Helen would find display case space for it and sell it—keeping that money in a separate box or can, rarely keeping any commission for herself. Her shop became a recycling station for church groups collecting cans, bottles and papers.
Lord called her home,
+
 
Helen Becker, Oct. 14, 1913 —
+
She carried farm produce for local farmers, sold berries for industrious kids and bunches of
Feb. 6,1983.
+
bright bittersweet collected along the fencerows. And flowers from her own garden, too, though more often she would give them away.
One of a kind. There are no
+
 
others.
+
Her produce became such a popular item that with the help of the Abbruzzese family of Altamont
 +
Orchards, she got stuff from the farmers market to resell very reasonably in her shop. She always donated the potatoes or squash for church dinners and each Christmas gave individually
 +
packed bags or boxes of candy for Santa to distribute to all the children at the Sunday school party. In later years, the church took her under its wing in appreciation.
 +
 
 +
Perhaps the candy store was an outgrowth of Helen's own love of sweets. Anyway, along the line she developed diabetes and many trials lay ahead of her.
 +
 
 +
Stubborn, she would admit to no problems. So she ignored them. And as with all ignored problems it was at her own peril.
 +
 
 +
She lost one leg to diabetes after a long fight with gangrenous sores on her heel. She accepted it matter-of-factly but found that she didn't like her artificial leg much. Still, she conducted business as usual on crutches as soon as she could get back to her shop and home. (The side of the building where I had taken those dancing classes was her apartment.)
 +
 
 +
Conceding nothing except her precious car (she gave it to her nephew) and trying to cook with
 +
sugar substitutes, Helen kept up her gardens (with the help of the Miller boys), with her housekeeping, canning and preserving in addition to her shop work.
 +
 
 +
Then I remember one long, hot summer when we fought with bed rest, special dressings and diets.
 +
But again the dread diabetes took its toll. She lost her remaining leg. Lesser souls would have been completely devastated. But, refusing two artificial legs — "I'd break my neck, too" — she went back to her home and shop again where friends had altered things enough to accommodate a wheelchair.
 +
 
 +
Along about then, Mary Maslowsky came upon the scene and she became Helen' "legs" — kneeling
 +
in the garden to keep the flowers, the strawberries, the vegetables coming, shopping, picking up the mail, banking, pushing the wheelchair on "outings" around the village (usually stopping at the Penguin for refreshment along the way.
 +
 
 +
They even entered a walk-a-thon or two until Mary's own health precluded that. Other friends
 +
helped, but Mary was the mainstay. She even learned to use that antique shoe repair equipment in
 +
the shop under Helen's direction. I don't believe Helen ever realized how much she depended
 +
on Mary as she continued on her defiantly independent way. She told me it was her "Indian blood"
 +
and proudly proclaimed an Indian grandmother somewhere along the line.
 +
 
 +
Visiting a western Indian reservation, I brought her back a tiny piece of scrimshaw (Indian artwork incised on elk horn) on a chain which I put around her neck. She loved it—it gave her a reason to tell about her own "Indian connection."
 +
 
 +
Julia Drebitko had come into our village life, living right across the street from Helen, And they became friends. Julia always had a hearty smile and laugh to share and made sure to visit Helen daily —especially if Helen was "Down."
 +
 
 +
There were those days — pain in her "legs and feet" were genuine, the brain's response to cold or atmospheric changes, and the diabetes dimmed the eyes (Helen used magnifying goggles to work).
 +
 
 +
Julia's daily round usually included picking up milk or some other small item at the store for
 +
Helen, But then came the day a few weeks ago when Julia was felled by a heart attack. And with her passing Helen seemed to have lost her own spirit. And despite encouragement from her sister,
 +
Marjorie, and her many friends, Helen gave up the long fight. The Lord called her home.
 +
 
 +
Helen Becker, Oct. 14, 1913 — Feb. 6, 1983.
  
 +
One of a kind. There are no others.
 +
:[[h:Altamont Enterprise|Altamont Enterprise]] — February 10, 1983
  
 
<gallery>
 
<gallery>
Image:{filename}|<center>{caption}</center>
+
Image:19830210BeckerHelenMemoir1.jpg|<center>Helen Becker Memoir -[[h:Altamont Enterprise|Altamont Enterprise]] — February 10, 1983</center>
Image:{filename}|<center>{caption}</center>
+
Image:19830210BeckerHelenMemoir2.jpg|<center>Helen Becker Memoir -[[h:Altamont Enterprise|Altamont Enterprise]] — February 10, 1983</center>
 
Image:{filename}|<center>{caption}</center>
 
Image:{filename}|<center>{caption}</center>
 
Image:{filename}|<center>{caption}</center>
 
Image:{filename}|<center>{caption}</center>

Latest revision as of 16:19, 19 December 2012

Birth

Helen Elizabeth Becker was born October 14, 1913, the daughter of Minton Washington Becker (18 JUN 1885 - 18 SEP 1955) and Lucilla Wayman (10 SEP 1887 - 14 JUN 1957). Her brother and sister were:[1]

  • Donald Minton Becker (10 DEC 1910 - 5 JAN 1959)
  • Marjorie Alice Becker (16 AUG 1921 - 22 MAY 2000 ) - Mrs. Irving (Marjorie) Bernhardt of Scotia


Education

Occupation

Marriage & Children

Death

Helen Becker died February 6, 1983.

Obituary

Helen Becker Obituary - Altamont Enterprise — February 10, 1983

Died

BECKER —Feb, 6,1983, Helen E. Becker of 125 Maple Ave,, Altamont, daughter of the late Minton and Lucilla Becker; sister of Mrs. Irving (Marjorie) Bernhardt of Scotia; also survived by several nieces and nephews. Funeral services were held from Fredendall Funeral Home, Altamont Wednesday, Feb, 9, Burial will be at Fairview Cemetery, Altamont, N.Y. Those who wish may make contributions to the Altamont Reformed Church Memorial Fund, Altamont, N.Y. 12009.

Altamont Enterprise — February 10, 1983

Additional Media

Helen Becker: A Personal Memoir

By CAROL DuBRIN

What does one say with the passing of an era — an era that ends when one special person dies? Such it is now in Altamont with the death Sunday of our neighbor and friend, Helen BecKer. Known to all of us, a friend to village children through many years, Helen's departure will leave avoid no other can fill.

Minton Becker had a harness and shoe repair shop on Maple Avenue in Altamont always, it seems. My (generation and at least several of those before mine grew up knowing that was where to go if one needed any type of leather goods repaired. And though she lived home and helped her mother, Lucilla, early on Helen, a father's girl and avowed tom-boy, took an interest in the shop.

Not that she didn't have her turn at more "womanly" things, hiring out to cook and clean. Fiercely independent, she just liked working with her father better — or being (out in a garden growing things.

Friends for many years she and I have often reminisced over our doings and present. I've heard tales of the mountains of food cooked up to feed the harvesters at the Wade Swartz farm, "Amy always fed them plenty," and she'd describe platters of pork chops, bowls of potatoes and pies of every description she's helped produce.

Or the times cleaning for Miss Peters, dusting all her antiques and around her many collections. Miss Peters' fantastic gardens were a special joy and inspiration.

All this work was to a special end — it meant money carefully saved until finally she could buy her own car and earn "freedom," Not freedom from her home or her community — just the means to "go."

Go might mean taking a church youth group or Sunday school class on a picnic or taking some elderly shutins for a drive or a friend to the city or, best of all, being able to go visit some relative in another state. Helen took her pleasures in simple things.

As Minton Becker had gotten older and needed help, Helen spent more and more time with him, learning by doing, repairing the occasional harness and working on shoes. She learned how to use all the sturdy old equipment in the place, (It is still all there and has been in use until the past few weeks.)

The Becker shop occupied a lengthwise hall of the first floor of 125 Maple Ave. I remember taking dancing lessons in the long, narrow room in the other side of the building. Helen told me that at one time the basement was a fish market and the reason her garden grew so well out back was all the fish heads and entrails buried in various garbage holes there.

Arthur Gregg, former town historian, recalled a period before that when it was a taproom. The building was apparently higher at one time and had been lowered on a new foundation.

Altamont seems to have been great on moving and changing old buildings so that what is now an apartment house on Maple Ave. was once a school on Lincoln Ave. (School St.) The shed garage behind the apartments next to Helen's shop were once part of the horse sheds behind the Reformed Church, attached to the barn still there — for parishioners' horses during services. Even they had been moved there from their first site behind the original Reformed Church located about where Junction Hardware is now.

This practical, saving nature of the community was a part of Helen, too.

"Waste not, want not" found her constantly recycling things and when she took over her father's business there always was a corner for used clothing, shoes, skates and such for resale. I kept up with my children's growing feet with ice skates from that shop, returning outgrown ones for someone else's use.

Did you need sewing findings or perhaps a greeting card? Helen carried those, too. And somewhere along the line Helen brought candy into the store.

In an old-fashioned glass display case were quantities of penny candies. Children could go out with a great handful for a nickel.

My friend Charlie Gage recalls the great bargains he and his buddies always found to satisfy their sweet tooth— and that was 35 years ago. Certainly my children as a treat or for being "good;" were rewarded with pennies so they could go to Helen's shop and choose anything they wanted.

Helen would wait patiently while young shoppers tried to make up their minds, explaining that these were two for a penny or those five for that single cent. Then she'd put their choices in a little brown paper bag that the kids would come out gripping tightly.

Certain changes came with time— plastic baggies and fewer candies for that penny. But she always kept some that could be bought at that price. We suspected she sold them at a loss.

As Millie Plummer said to me, "Helen never saw a bad kid." She might see youngsters with problems, but she loved them all, tried to help them all; And she would appeal to those who she thought might help one of "her kids." I recall telephone calls about doctors or clothing.

Helen was fast to help others, oo. If ladies wished^ to earn a bit of money by their handiwork, Helen would find display case space for it and sell it—keeping that money in a separate box or can, rarely keeping any commission for herself. Her shop became a recycling station for church groups collecting cans, bottles and papers.

She carried farm produce for local farmers, sold berries for industrious kids and bunches of bright bittersweet collected along the fencerows. And flowers from her own garden, too, though more often she would give them away.

Her produce became such a popular item that with the help of the Abbruzzese family of Altamont Orchards, she got stuff from the farmers market to resell very reasonably in her shop. She always donated the potatoes or squash for church dinners and each Christmas gave individually packed bags or boxes of candy for Santa to distribute to all the children at the Sunday school party. In later years, the church took her under its wing in appreciation.

Perhaps the candy store was an outgrowth of Helen's own love of sweets. Anyway, along the line she developed diabetes and many trials lay ahead of her.

Stubborn, she would admit to no problems. So she ignored them. And as with all ignored problems it was at her own peril.

She lost one leg to diabetes after a long fight with gangrenous sores on her heel. She accepted it matter-of-factly but found that she didn't like her artificial leg much. Still, she conducted business as usual on crutches as soon as she could get back to her shop and home. (The side of the building where I had taken those dancing classes was her apartment.)

Conceding nothing except her precious car (she gave it to her nephew) and trying to cook with sugar substitutes, Helen kept up her gardens (with the help of the Miller boys), with her housekeeping, canning and preserving in addition to her shop work.

Then I remember one long, hot summer when we fought with bed rest, special dressings and diets. But again the dread diabetes took its toll. She lost her remaining leg. Lesser souls would have been completely devastated. But, refusing two artificial legs — "I'd break my neck, too" — she went back to her home and shop again where friends had altered things enough to accommodate a wheelchair.

Along about then, Mary Maslowsky came upon the scene and she became Helen' "legs" — kneeling in the garden to keep the flowers, the strawberries, the vegetables coming, shopping, picking up the mail, banking, pushing the wheelchair on "outings" around the village (usually stopping at the Penguin for refreshment along the way.

They even entered a walk-a-thon or two until Mary's own health precluded that. Other friends helped, but Mary was the mainstay. She even learned to use that antique shoe repair equipment in the shop under Helen's direction. I don't believe Helen ever realized how much she depended on Mary as she continued on her defiantly independent way. She told me it was her "Indian blood" and proudly proclaimed an Indian grandmother somewhere along the line.

Visiting a western Indian reservation, I brought her back a tiny piece of scrimshaw (Indian artwork incised on elk horn) on a chain which I put around her neck. She loved it—it gave her a reason to tell about her own "Indian connection."

Julia Drebitko had come into our village life, living right across the street from Helen, And they became friends. Julia always had a hearty smile and laugh to share and made sure to visit Helen daily —especially if Helen was "Down."

There were those days — pain in her "legs and feet" were genuine, the brain's response to cold or atmospheric changes, and the diabetes dimmed the eyes (Helen used magnifying goggles to work).

Julia's daily round usually included picking up milk or some other small item at the store for Helen, But then came the day a few weeks ago when Julia was felled by a heart attack. And with her passing Helen seemed to have lost her own spirit. And despite encouragement from her sister, Marjorie, and her many friends, Helen gave up the long fight. The Lord called her home.

Helen Becker, Oct. 14, 1913 — Feb. 6, 1983.

One of a kind. There are no others.

Altamont Enterprise — February 10, 1983

Sources

  1. www.BerneHistory.com Family Files