Eastern European Oral Histories: Marion Kuklewicz

Kuklewicz, Marion 1999

Marion Kuklewicz

And it was at her funeral that something very strange and wonderful happened to me and as I asked people about it afterwards, it seems as if I was the one who was most affected by this. We were sitting in the church waiting for the sermon to start, and it was drizzling and raining out which was kinda fitting you know, a very sad day uh for all of us.

See below for the full interview.

TURNERS FALLS – Marion Rose (Olanyk) Kuklewicz, 85, a resident of Sunrise Terrace Apartments, died peacefully surrounded by her loving family on Tuesday, August 1, 2017 at Baystate Medical Center, Greenfield, MA.
A native of Sunderland, MA, she was born on March 10, 1932 to Julia (Biscoe) and John Olanyk and was educated in local public schools. She attended GCC and obtained a certificate in the Nursing Assistant Program. Marion worked for Eaglebrook School and later at the former Franklin Medical Center for 28 years retiring in 1997.
She married Henry George Kuklewicz on May 31, 1954 in St. Mary’s Church, Turners Falls, MA. Sadly, he predeceased her on January 24, 1988, following nearly 34 years of marriage.
She was, for many years, a communicant of the former St. Mary of the Assumption Church in Turners Falls, where she was a member of the Catholic Women’s Council. She was a descendant of the Olanyk and Biscoe families, who were among the original founding members of the Holy Spirit Ukrainian Catholic Church in South Deerfield, MA, where she worshiped prior to her marriage. She returned to her “”mother church”” following her husband’s death, where she was instrumental in guiding the church as a valued trustee and in the church’s many activities. A devoted parishioner, she could be often found baking and cooking for numerous events and was renowned for her skill in baking breads and preparing authentic Ukrainian foods.
Marion was a loving and nurturing mother and a doting grandmother and great-grandmother. She leaves her loving children: John of Kamiah, Idaho; Richard and his wife Linda, of Turners Falls, MA; David and his wife Tammy, of Turners Falls, MA; Susan Kuklewicz of Cornish, NH and Tracey Kuklewicz and her husband Gary Weber of Turners Falls, MA. Additionally, she leaves her adoring grandchildren: Jennifer Lively, Michelle Bessette, Kenneth Kuklewicz, Neisha Hill and Tasha Hand, as well as her great-grandchildren: Annika Rose Lively and Henrik James Lively with whom she cherished spending time. She also leaves great-grandchildren Jacqulyn, Andrew, Tiffany and Tristan, and also many nieces, nephews, grandnieces and grandnephews who will remember her with affection. She was predeceased by her grandson, Noah James Kuklewicz, in 1993, as well as by her ten siblings.
She was most proud to be able to maintain her independence throughout her entire life. In later years, she was able to continue her independence, thanks to her family, dedicated caregivers and visiting nurses.
Funeral services in celebration of Marion’s life, will be observed on Tuesday, August 8, 2017 at 10:00AM with the Liturgy of the Divine Spirit, from the Descent of the Holy Spirit Ukrainian Catholic Church, 44 Sugarloaf Street, South Deerfield, MA. Rev. Fr. Andriy Krip, Pastor will be the principal celebrant, assisted by Very Rev. Archpriest Kiril Angelov and Very Rev. Archpriest Ed Young, former pastors, as co-celebrants. Rites of committal and burial will follow in St. Mary’s Cemetery, Turners Falls, MA. Visiting hours will be Monday from the McCarthy Funeral Homes, 14 Prospect St., Turners Falls, from 6 to 8 p.m., with a Panakhyda Vigil Service to be conducted at 7 p.m.
Guest book and condolence message available at mccarthyfuneralhomes.com
Expressions of affection in the form of a charitable contribution in Marion’s memory are suggested to either the Descent of the Holy Spirit Ukrainian Catholic Church, 44 Sugarloaf Street, South Deerfield, MA 01373 or to LifePath, 101 Munson St., Suite 201, Greenfield, MA 01301. The McCarthy Funeral Homes of Greenfield and Turners Falls, MA, have been entrusted with the arrangements. Guest book and condolence message available at www.mccarthyfuneralhomes.com

Stories

  • Marion Kuklewicz interview 3-1-1994 1 of 2

    …we were sitting in the church waiting for the sermon to start, and it was drizzling and raining out which was kinda fitting you know, a very sad day uh for all of us. And so it was kinda fitting that it was overcast and the church was a real special place for my sister.
  • Marion Kuklewicz Interview 3-1-1994 2 of 2

    Marion Rose (Olanyk) Kuklewicz, (1932-2017), was born in Sunderland, MA, to Julia (Biscoe) and John Olanyk. Her mother, Julia Biscoe, was born in Sunderland, MA, the daughter of Polish and Hungarian immigrants. Her father, John, immigrated in 1908 from Lutowiska, Austria/Poland. She worked as a nursing assistant at the former Franklin Medical Center. Marion was a descendant of the Olanyk and Biscoe families, who were among the original founding members of the Holy Spirit Ukrainian Catholic Church in South Deerfield, MA. She guided the church as a valued trustee and in the church’s many activities. A devoted parishioner, Marion was renowned for her skill in baking breads and preparing authentic Ukrainian foods.
  • Marion Kuklewicz Interview 3-16-1994 1 of 2

    Marion Rose (Olanyk) Kuklewicz, (1932-2017), was born in Sunderland, MA, to Julia (Biscoe) and John Olanyk. Her mother, Julia Biscoe, was born in Sunderland, MA, the daughter of Polish and Hungarian immigrants. Her father, John, immigrated in 1908 from Lutowiska, Austria/Poland. She worked as a nursing assistant at the former Franklin Medical Center. Marion was a descendant of the Olanyk and Biscoe families, who were among the original founding members of the Holy Spirit Ukrainian Catholic Church in South Deerfield, MA. She guided the church as a valued trustee and in the church’s many activities. A devoted parishioner, Marion was renowned for her skill in baking breads and preparing authentic Ukrainian foods.
  • Marion Kuklewicz Interview 3-16-1994 2 of 2

    Marion Rose (Olanyk) Kuklewicz, (1932-2017), was born in Sunderland, MA, to Julia (Biscoe) and John Olanyk. Her mother, Julia Biscoe, was born in Sunderland, MA, the daughter of Polish and Hungarian immigrants. Her father, John, immigrated in 1908 from Lutowiska, Austria/Poland. She worked as a nursing assistant at the former Franklin Medical Center. Marion was a descendant of the Olanyk and Biscoe families, who were among the original founding members of the Holy Spirit Ukrainian Catholic Church in South Deerfield, MA. She guided the church as a valued trustee and in the church’s many activities. A devoted parishioner, Marion was renowned for her skill in baking breads and preparing authentic Ukrainian foods.

Story Clip #1:

Marion Kuklewicz interview 3-1-1994 1 of 2

Interview with Marion Kuklewicz

Date of Interview: 1 March 1994; Turners Fall, Massachusetts

Interviewer: David Nixon

Transcriber: Diane Asher

Begin Tape 1 of 2, Side 1

Kuklewicz: Good Morning David.

Nixon:

Morning.

Kuklewicz: Um, I’m glad you could come out and visit with me this

morning, and if I may Um run this a little. Lim Some things that are real important to me, in my life and um perhaps something has brought me to a place in time where I’m much more aware of the richness that I share.

Nixon: ohuhm.

Kuklewicz:

Um, and I guess I should start at the beginning, but I’m going to tell you something that happened to me six years ago, or what will be six years ago in September of 94. Ah, I had an elder sister who had been very ill for two years with cancer, and she passed away in September six years ago.

Nixon:

What was her name?

Kuklewicz: Her name was Rose Dacyczyn and um that’s not D-E-C it’s D-A-C-Y-C-Z-Y-N.

Nixon:

Kuklewicz: and that’s an old Ukrainian name. And my sister Rose had married a boy who was Ukrainian and so she had

Kuklewicz interview

Page 2

March 1, 1994

always stayed in our family parrish um in South Deerfield, theHoly Ghost Ukrainian Catholic Church. And it was at her funeral that something very strange and wonderful happened to me and as I asked people about it afterwards, it seems as if I was the one who was most affected by this. We were, we were sitting in the church waiting for the sermon to start, and it was drizzling and raining out which was kinda fitting you know, a very sad day uh for all of us. And so it was kinda fitting that it was overcast and the church was a real special place for my sister. She had always belonged here from the time of her birth to the time of her death, and was church and so forth. to be a special day. It’s a trustee and treasurer of the So this was very special, going The church was very crowded. a very small little wooden church, and it was packed. People were standing, and we got in there and the priest started the celebration of of the um of the um liturgy and then he started to eulogize Rose at that particular time in the service and as he did he said “from this day forward she will be know as Saint Rose”, and when he said those words the sun came out. And through the stained glass window on the right hand side of the church it seemed like a beam of sun came through that rested on my left shoulder and at that

Kuklewicz interview

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March 1, 1994

time I had such a feeling that went through me it was almost um not fear but, it really shook me that I had goose bumps. And I kinda just what it was like it was like awe is all I can say. It was just awesome, then I turned to my other sister who was sitting next to me, and um I didn’t notice that she was experiencing anything but I didn’t say a word. And after the funeral service was all over, we went to the cemetery and then went back to my sisters house, I had asked her if she felt anything she said “No, not particularly,” she said, except that it was all very sad.” I, it ” was, but did you feel anything else and she said no. So I thought well, I better not say anything because people are gonna really think I’m off the wall, I mean I know I’m upset, and mourning my sister and all but they are really gonna think I’m off the wall if I tell what happened. thinking about it, were having a meal But I kept thinking about it and and a little later in the day as we together sharing um all us sharing in our sorrow and relatives and friends from out of town were there. I was busy serving one and all, and then Father Basil came along to pay his last respects and to join in the meal with us. And um I started to single him out went over and sat with him, had a cup of coffee with him and begin talking to him and I said

Kuklewicz interview

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March 1, 1994

that was a very moving service. something happened that I’m I said in fact not quite sure but something happened to me then, and I said I don’t know what it is and I have to think about it and he said, “well Marion, um when you want to talk about it further come and see me.” And I said,” oh I will.” I never intended to really do much about it. I thought you know this is really, you know it’s sad, you’re upset um you were very attached to your sister so it will go away this feeling will go away and you’ll be fine. Well it didn’t go away and I would go to work and sometimes when I would get out of work, and I would get in my car and intend to come home and the next thing I knew I would find myself in South Deerfield and that’s not the direction I should have been driving in. I would go into the church and I’d sit there. And And I would just pray and sit there and think and a lot of times I would cry and in fact that’s OK, your dealing with your emotions. A lot had happened during this year. Um in the start of this year I had lost my mother’s sister who was our only real aunt. We had we lost her on New Year’s Day. My mother was kinda superstitious person and she said to me before she had died many years ago, she said, you know Marion, you gotta be careful what you do on New Year’s Day because

Kuklewicz interview

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March 1, 1994

what you do on New Year’s Day, you will be doing all year long. Well, little did I know how much that was going to affect my life, because on New Year’s Day six years ago my mother’s sister passed away. She had been ill, but it was kinda sudden, her passing was kinda sudden. Anyways, 24 days later I lost my husband. He had been ill for many years um with heart problems but had managed to get through with life um and see his children grow up and see grandchildren and so forth. And then in July, I lost another sister very very unexpectedly. And it was strange because she had just retired and she was thinking about how nice it was going to be that she was retired and now she could help care for her sister who had cancer and so on and so forth. And just boom, like that, she was just snatched away from us. And this seemed to affect my sister Rose. She kept saying “Why, why her not me, I should have gone first, I was the one who was sick, it should have been me, it shouldn’t been her,” and that kinda thing. And because of all this sadness and all the death we had in our family that year it seemed to bring the rest of us much closer together, and I spent a lot of time with my sister Rose. Being as how I work as a nurse’s assistant in a hospital, I was there for her, to help her with you, know bathing, doing her hair,

Kuklewicz interview

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doing personal things for her that she probably was too proud to have anyone else do for her. This is back to why was I sitting in that church and I’d go and sit in this one certain pew. The reason I sat in this pew was that’s where I had this feeling, so I thought you know, it’s going to come out to me, but it didn’t. So uh one day Father Basil noticed that I was there and came out and said to me, “why don’t you come in and have a cup of coffee with me and let’s sit down and talk.” Well, this went on for several times; finally I said to him, “I don’t understand, but I have to be here. It seems like something is drawing me here, I have to be here I said. It’s really, it’s really such a strange feeling that I have when I come into the church I feel at peace,” and he said, “I can tell you what it is, but I think you have to discover it for yourself.” So after several times of going down to sitting in the church by myself and then actually going to attending a Sunday service I felt I need to be here. This is where I belong so I talked to Father Basil, and he suggested this is coming home and I said “I think that you’re right, I do feel comfortable I feel like I’m home. feel like I’m in touch with people that I’ve missed in my life for a long time, my parents, my grandparents, brothers and sisters who had passed away.” And not I

Kuklewicz interview

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that they were church members at that point in time but none-the-less I felt comfortable. I felt at home there.” So I said to him, “you know, I view life like a book.” And that when you start out in life you start writing a book and though I never actually written things down I feel I’m writing chapters for the book. Here’s your chapter as a child and some of the things you do as a child. Many pleasant memories of childhood, you know, there are some bad things in there too, but most of them good memories. And then you become a young girl and a teenager and then you start experiencing more of life, going out into the world, working, and getting married and having a family. I have completed all those things. I have grown up, I had worked, I had a family, a husband, a family. My children were grown and now I had grandchildren. um I had experienced a loss of my parents. My loss of brothers and sisters, close relatives, then my husband. I felt like those chapters of the book was complete. Those chapters were already written and from now on the rest of my life I had to write the rest of this book. Each day that I lived is another page or each week is another chapter of the book. So that’s the way I view life and that’s why I decided that um since this is what happened to me maybe it was worth really looking

Kuklewicz interview

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March 1, 1994

into why this was SO important. And I started remembering things about my childhood, about my parents, about why the church was meaningful to me and just a lot of things. And I found that um the reason I thought I was coming home was that since we don’t have our family home which was in Sunderland where I grew up. The church was probably the next closest thing that I could identify with family, and simply because my mother’s father and my father had helped to actually build the church, carried materials by horse cart, they built the lumber and so forth and actually building the structure. So it was very important to me and then when I realized after going to church for awhile was that in the seat that I sat, in where the sun came through and rested on me and also exited through a window and the window that it exited through was the window that was dedicated to my grandparents, my grandmother and grandfather Biscoe on my mother’s side of the family.

David

Was that name again?

Marion

Biscoe

David

Marion

How do you spell that?

They spelled it because of the way it was spelled at Ellis Island. They spelled it B-I-S-C-D-E, but it may have been spelled in the past other members of the

Kuklewicz interview

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March 1, 1994

family as B-I-S-H-K-0 which is properly a more correct translation of the name from Europe and some people spell it B-I-S-C-0 and leave off the E. It’s either way, but I think um ethnically correct B-I-S-H-K-O is the way it’s spelled. And when you look at the window in the church you don’t recognize that its spelled that way because it’s spelled in Ukrainian and that’s um cyrillic alphabet. So it looks different and it’s almost B-I-M-K-O. I think it’s sorta how it looks when you see it written. My grandmother’s name was Anna. How the church would do it, it looked like A-H-H-A and that translated as “Anna”. And my grandfather’s name was Alexander which again is good a Ukrainian name. Its still used a great deal today um so that sorta brought it all together. And that sorta when I started really looking back, looking into the past and wondering um if there was a reason for me to be back here. And I now feel that the reason I was back here is that suddenly I became much more aware of the heritage that I share

Nixon

ah hum

Marion

and the heritage that I was sorta losing contact here in the Valley. Um many people for many many different reasons um have sorta lost touch with who they really are. And many people who are of Ukrainian descent or

Kuklewicz interview

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March 1, 1994

some of the other close knit Eastern countries some of the Ukrainians, Hungarians, Czechoslovakians Lithuanian um I can’t think of some of the other countries. But they sorta went um they wanted to belong to a church. We didn’t have a church at first when we came, so many of them passed themselves off as Poles. It was easier to be a Pole in this Valley than it was to be from the other nations that I mentioned Whys that?

Nixon

Marion

There was a lot of, people kinda looked down their nose at you, if they really didn’t understand where you came from. Um I can remember as far back as a child in grammar school, even though I was born in this country there were some people in the town that I grew up in and some of the kids that I went to school with that looked at us like a green horn you, know fresh off the boat and actually all of us were born here. Because my father came to this country as a very young child, and my mother was actually born here. Her parents were born in Ukraine or Austria again because depending on where the border was at the time as to where they actually came from. But my own father was born in Brody which is in the Ukraine, it’s not too far from Kiev and we got picked on, so it was easier just to say you were because Polish seemed they to be more

Kuklewicz interview

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March 1, 1994

respected than some of these other ethnic groups. And for that reason many many people passed themselves off as Polish, went to a Polish church or a catholic church and that was it. Um but our group, a little group of people who are founding fathers still

have many relatives here that participate in and go to the World Church in South Deerfield. We seem to be aware of who we were and who we wanted everybody to know who we were. And the reason that I had been away from the church was when I married, one of the laws in OLIF church was when you married you followed your husband most like alot of churches you marry wise church you go but usually there’s an understanding of but in our church law you followed your husband. I used to joke and say but nobody told me I had to walk three steps behind, and we sorta joked about that all the time, but that was how it was and so what happened like in my family these were big family five girls and five boys. The boys were scattered to the far winds of the state. There weren’t communities that they could join the church similar to ours and then three of us married men of Polish extraction SO naturally we followed them. My sister, Rose, was the one who had always been in the church and married a Ukrainian boy and so she stayed right there. My youngest sister

Kuklewicz interview

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March 1, 1994

married someone who was from Irish decent so she then followed him to a nondenominational catholic church.

So here I was for 35 years, while I was married to my husband and having our family we were practicing as Roman Catholic and it was O.K.

David

And now your husband was Polish.

Marion

My husband was Polish. We practiced as Roman Catholic.

David

And his name was?

Marion

Henry George Kuklewicz. Which ever you choose to pronounce it. um, We always say Kuklewicz because it was easier for the kids to sound it out. But in Polish it’s Kuklewicz. So anyways, his family had belonged to a Polish church and then there was some problems so they decided to join a catholic church that was nondemonination and that’s where my children grew up and where they were educated. So what happened to me was that my children grew up to be Roman Catholic and I had followed that faith. But after the death of my husband, the thing that happened to me when I was in church um I knew that I had to go back and it wasn’t easy. Some of my children were not sure that I should go back and I said to them, “well I feel that I must there has to be a reason for this I don’t know what it is at the moment but I know there’s got to be a reason for it.” We kinda joked about it and all but I really

Kuklewicz interview

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March 1, 1994

think that the reason is that, that particular moment in time maybe I realized I needed to let people know who I was. Why I believe so strongly in my faith and that it’s real important to me. And that it’s important for my children to know there is another side to this family other than the side of their father as children. I think they are beginning to realize that more, that though my husband and I were not really that far apart at times when religion was concerned but that we could take the best with the best to combine it so that we were able to carry out alot of the traditions that were similar to both of us. We were not, we were not um able to do everything but the main celebrations at Christmas time, Easter time, we just sorta combined them the best of both and pulled it together so they had some feel for the traditions. And it was important. Christmas eve was our big important time um and it was always family time and we always stressed that this was a time to be all together. But as families go, they grow, they marry and different things happen and we always talked about being home but that was the goal. That was the goal that we established as a family. That we would always be together, if not at any other time of year that we would be sure to be together. And it wasn’t just because of Santa Claus,

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March 1, 1994

and wasn’t just because of the presents he was to bring but it was an important time to be together. Easter was another important time for us. So the birth and the resurrection were always, you know, foremost in our minds and to celebrate the feast and all the other things that went with it, I mean, Santa Claus, the presents and all that, that was not important. The important thing was our family would see it as they grew up. We hoped

David

Uhm

Marion

But you know American’s changed a great deal (laugh) and the values for everyone has changed. But I think as my children are growing older they are beginning to see where I’m coming from, what I’m all about and they are beginning to rediscover

David

I was going to ask you this, if you are writing a book, life’s a book and its another chapter

Right.

Marion

David

Um, what’s the story here, what’s the moral of this chapter that you are writing now?

Marion

That I’m writing now? I quess I’d have to call it awareness

David

whm

Marion

Awareness of who I am, where I’ve come from and why. I have this feeling of this is where I belong, this is

Kuklewicz interview

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March 1, 1994

where I belong spirtualy, um I can reflect alot of how I think of the value system that I grew up with um this is all important to me

David

uhm.

Marion

Can we stop for a minute?

David

sure.

David

Can you tell me about your father?

Marion

Oh ya! That’s, that’ll be interesting I think. My father came to America when he was a very very young boy. It seemed that he was one, he was the eldest out of five children, born to his parents in Brody in the Ukraine.

David

How do you spell Brody?

Marion

Brody

David

yhm. What is his first name?

Marion

My father’s name was John

David

Now, he wasn’t John in the Ukrainian?

Marion

No!

Story Clip #2:

Marion Kuklewicz interview 3-1-1994 2 of 2

Interview with Marion Kuklewicz

Date of Interview: 16 March 1994

Interviewer: David Nixon

Transcriber: Brenda Light

Begin Tape: 2 Side: 1

Nixon:

Good morning to you.

Kuklewicz:

Good morning, David, and, ah, it’s good to see you today. Yesterday, being March 15, was an important day in my family. If my dad had been alive, it would have been his 102nd birthday.

Nixon:

Yeah.

Yeah, 102nd birthday, so I think that was kind of noteworthy. It would be, let’s see, February 2nd, in 1917 was the year that my parents were married.

Kuklewicz:

So you see, he was quite a young man.

Nixon: Mmm hmm.

Kuklewicz:

My mother, whom we didn’t get a chance to talk very much about last time we were here, was just a young girl of seventeen years old at that time.

Nixon:

Mmm hmm. So she was married when she was…

Kuklewicz:

She was married when she was seventeen; very, very, young. actually. Quite a tiny little, pretty little lady, She was not born in the Ukraine, ah, she was born to Ukrainian immigrant parents, who had come to America back in, actually, in the 1800s and I

2

Kuklewicz Interview March 16, 1994

Kuklewicz: don’t know the exact year. Her father came over and

when he got off the ship at Ellis Island, was taken to Pennsylvania to work in the coal mines. But he didn’t like working in the coal mines very much. So he and some friends had decided to start a barroom or taproom, or a tavern, I guess they probably called it back in those days. He did that for awhile, but then made his way to Sunderland, where… I believe it’s where he met my grandmother and they lived right on the line between Sunderland and Hadley.۰۰

Nixon: Uh huh,

Kuklewicz:

off route 47. That’s where my mother was born and lived there for awhile. Then they purchased another piece of property which was on the Amherst Road, Route 116, in just about, oh about, two and a half miles south of the center of Sunderland. That’s where my mom grew up and met my father, who he was working with, like I told you last week, in the fields, down in the lower, ah, along the Connecticut River, down along the main street in Sunderland.

They were married and very shortly, within the next year, my oldest brother was born and that started their whole family unity.

3

Kuklewicz Interview March 16, 1994

Nixon:

Mmmm.

Kuklewicz: My mother was very young and had had a lot of

responsibilities from the time she was a young girl, She only went to school in Sunderland, the grammar school, until the third grade. Then she was ill and was home, due to a very serious illness, for about a year, at which time her mother’s family was growing, you know brothers and sisters, and her mother became quite ill. So she stayed at home and from the time she was in the third grade, so that would probably make her about nine years old, maybe.

Umm.

Kuklewicz:

She was responsible for helping to take care of her brothers and sisters and help her mother with household chores. So even though she was very young, she was well versed in housekeeping, child care, and so forth. Not only did she become a mother, but she also was “the right hand man to my father” because she had to help him with the farm and so she not only took care of the children, but she had to go out and work in the barns, take care of the dairy animals, you know, perhaps some pigs and chickens and things like that. That was her responsibility, while he did

Nixon:

4

Kuklewicz Interview March 16, 1994

Kuklewicz: the heavier work, and then there were other children that came along. During the course of their marriage, there were ten children.

Nixon:

Umm, humm.

Kuklewicz:

There were five boys and five girls, and of course sons were much wanted. If you were a farmer, sons were much wanted. So the first four children were boys.

Nixon:

Kuklewicz:

Why was that?

Well, because they grew up and helped on the farm; that way you didn’t have to hire help when it was time to harvest crops and things like that. Also, they could help take over part of the chores that were necessary to family life in those days; not that daughters weren’t welcomed, but it was quite nice to have those sons first. So there were four sons and my mother used to always tell us that she was in dispair; she thought that she would never have a little girl, and she very much wanted to have a daughter. But her fifth child was a girl and then she had two more girls.

Nixon:

Umm, humm

5

Kuklewicz Interview March 16, 1994

Kuklewicz: Then she had another boy, to make up the five, and then there were two more. I am the ninth of the ten children that she had.

Nixon:

Umm humm.

Kuklewicz:

Not only did she work outdoors and take care of us as children, but she did a lot of things that today we don’t even think we have time for, and I marvel at how she was able to get everything done. Her days started very, very early in the morning; she would be up at three-thirty or four in the morning.

Nixon: Wow!

Kuklewicz:

Yeah. Farm women always got up very early, but before she would go out to do chores she would start making bread and she would get the bread all mixed and kneaded and set to rise. Then she would go out. and do chores and when the oldest children were very small, it meant that she’d have to bundle them up and take them out with her, because she couldn’t leave them in the house unattended. So she’d have to bundle up the boys and take them out to the barn, hope that they wouldn’t get into too much mischief while she was helping my dad with the chores and all.

Then, like in a lot of big families, as the number of

6

Kuklewicz Interview March 16, 1994

Kuklewicz:

children increased and the older ones got older, then each one was responsible for taking care of the younger ones…

Nixon:

Umm humm.

Kuklewicz:

….until they were old enough to go out and work. Once the boys got older and could go outside, she didn’t have to go out quite so early in the morning. The other thing that I always remember my mother doing; my mother was a very, very soft, very gentle person, very soft spoken, very shy, rather retired person. She always had many, many good things to give in our house.

Nixon:

Umm humm,

Kuklewicz: One of the things, you never came into our house and there wasn’t a pot a soup on the stove.

Nixon:

Umm humm

Kuklewicz:

I probably told you before, about when I was a little girl, about the stone soup.

No.

Nixon:

Kuklewicz:

No? I didn’t tell you about the stone soup? Well, when you have ten children you always have to think of little games and ways to keep them busy; to help you without them even knowing it sometimes. One of

7

Kuklewicz Interview March 16, 1994

Kuklewicz:

the things she use to do was, she would go to start soup and we would kind of be under foot, getting in the way and she didn’t want to tell us to get out so she would find little ways to keep us busy. One thing she’d say, we’d say, “What’ll you make up your soup today,” and she’d say, “I’m going to make stone soup, so you have to go out into the yard and find me a pretty stone. A nice good-looking stone that I can bring in the house and we’ll put it in the soup pot.” Of course, we’d always say, “Ah, that’s dirty,” or something like that and she’d say, “Well you have to bring it in the house,” and then she’d set us to work at the kitchen sink wash room getting it all cleaned and polished. She’d tell us she was going to put it in the pot, but she really didn’t. But we were too stupid to know that, so we thought she did. Then she’d say, “This is pretty good, but I need, ah, maybe some carrots, and beets, and string beans.”

She’d send us each out to a certain part of the garden to go back and bring the things in. Or if it was in the winter time, she’d send us down to the cellar, to the root cellar, to get the potatoes, and the carrots, and turnips, and whatever was down

8

Kuklewicz Interview

March 16, 1994

Kuklewicz:

there; beets to put in the soup. So, actually, she was making vegetable soup, but she told us it was stone soup and we thought that was really funny. So we’d, you know, run to do all those little chores for her and that freed her up to stay in the kitchen to be doing things that were more important, and then she wouldn’t have to make all those tiny trips.

Nixon:

Umm, humm.

Kuklewicz:

You know, she probably would have done it in one trip, but she’d send us off on all these errands. That was her way of keeping us busy, umm, keeping us out of her hair, so to speak, so she could get the work done. But there was always, always, a pot of soup on the stove. Of course, we lived in an old farm house and it was heated, basically heated by wood, so she had a wood burning cook stove. If you can imagine baking and cooking, you know, doing it all in a wood stove. Not only wood she make home-made bread, but able to have cookies and pastries. She used to make all of her own pastries and, umm, everything else that we ate. She used to start from scratch–didn’t go to the store and buy anything.

Nixon:

Umm, humm,

9

Kuklewicz Interview March 16, 1994

Kuklewicz: Umm,

I can think of so many pleasant things we had; food was very important to our household, because we all worked so hard that we needed to have three fairly substantial meals to keep us going. We were not considered wealthy, we were rather, you know, we were struggling like so many people in the early 1900s. My earliest recollections, of course, are in the thirties, which was during the Depression.

Nixon:

Umm humm.

Kuklewicz:

I can remember her cooking things for us for breakfast, like cornmeal mush was one of the things that she used to cook for us for breakfast. It was substantial, it was relatively inexpensive. It was good whole milk, it really was a good breakfast to start our day off. But I didn’t particularly like cornmeal mush; that was not my favorite. But she would cook a great big pot of it, and after breakfast there would be leftovers. And she used to pour it into, like a loaf pan that you’d bake bread in, put into the refrigerator and let it get hard, The next day is when I really liked it, ’cause she’d take it out of the pan, and she’d slice it, and she’d brown it, ah, butter it, and skillet…

10

Kuklewicz Interview

March 16, 1994

Nixon:

Um hmm.

Kuklewicz:

and have it with maple syrup, That was my treat! That was my treat.

Nixon:

That’s what the southerners call “sloosh”.

Kuklewicz:

I know. I didn’t know that until about a year or so ago, I was with a group of people in Amherst and they were talking about their southern, umm, roots; these happened to be black ladies and they were calling it grits.

Nixon:

Umm humm.

Kuklewicz:

When I said how my mother used to make it, they were amazed that somebody of our, ah, culture would know to make grits, and they got the biggest kick out of it. But they didn’t know to eat it with maple syrup.

Nixon:

‘Cause down south they probably didn’t have the abundance of syrup that we had, umm…

Umm humm,

Kuklewicz:

here in our area, So that was one of the favorite things. Other stand-bys that she used to feed us, because we were so many, and again money was, you know, fairly scarce. She used to make, ah, for dessert she used to make great big bowls of bread pudding. And at that time, umm, I had an Uncle who

11

Kuklewicz Interview

March 16, 1994

Kuklewicz:

was not able to find work and so, umm, not like the food stamps that people have today, they used to receive certain foods, One of the things they used to get are large quantities of raisins, Well, he was married to a girl who didn’t know how to cook, and if she did know how to cook she wouldn’t take the time to do it anyway. So, he would get the raisins, he would bring them to my mother and he’d say, “What can you do with these.” She’d say, “Well, I can put them in bread or other things, So she used to use quite a generous amount or raisins in the bread pudding.

Nixon:

And we had our own farm, so we had lots of eggs and lots of nice cold milk.

Umm, humm.

Kuklewicz:

So that was a good way to use up dry, crusted bread. Like so many people did back then, and I know it’s available today, but we used to have the little neighborhood bakeries that baked bread, Now, we didn’t buy that bread to eat, particularly for our main bread source, but my father would go to the bakery and buy the day old, ah, bread.

Nixon:

Umm, humm

12

Kuklewicz Interview March 16, 1994

Kuklewicz:

It would be a little on the hard side, because of course it wasn’t made the same as our homemade bread.

My mother would use that, cut that up, and put it into bread pudding. If we had french toast that’s what she’d use that for. And we would have bread pudding as one of our desserts; that was a tradition for dessert in our house. The other thing that was very inexpensive and relatively easy to come by was rice.

Nixon:

Umm humm.

Kuklewicz:

And so, she used to make a lot of rice pudding for us. And again we’d have the fresh eggs, we’d have the fresh milk, she’d have these raisins that were given to her so we could have a nice bowl of rice pudding. And we’d always have cream, fresh from the farm, to go on top of it. Whether it was just cream poured on or whipped cream, either way. So that probably explains why I look like I do today, you know, all those little fat cells just soaked up all those good things.

Nixon:

Huh huh huh.

Kuklewicz:

Hah hah hah. Another favorite that she used to make in the winter time was, we had, of course, we had the

13

Kuklewicz Interview

March 16, 1994

Kuklewicz:

farm, we had a big garden. She used to can; we didn’t have freezers then, so she used to can everything. And one of the things that she used to can was tomatoes. And we would can probably about two hundred quarts of tomatoes to use during the wintertime; for soups and stews and so forth. But she had a breakfast food that she used to make with tomatoes that looked like cream of tomato soup. But not like you buy in a can today; it was real chunky, real chunks of whole tomatoes. And then she would thicken it with, um, usually the top, the milk that she’d skim off the top. So it was really like a heavy cream, And she would spice it and I have tried, and tried, and tried, and I can’t make it taste like hers. It was sort of sweet and spicy, and again we’d have it over [pieutzahl, the day old bread, and that was a good hot meal to have in the morning. You had your bread, you had your milk, and you had your tomatoes, So, um, it was really good. After you’ve been out in the barn and done a couple of hours worth of a chores, you were hungry enough to want a substantial breakfast. favorites in the wintertime. So that was one of the And the spices just

14

Kuklewicz Interview March 16, 1994

Kuklewicz:

really, really warmed you right up. Your toes right up to your finger tips; it was really great. And I can’t… She never had written down the recipe, so I don’t have it. But it was the things that I remember, I couldn’t wait to have tomato soup in the morning. Which sounds like a strange thing to have for breakfast, but it really was a hot bubbly delight. I guess no different than having a glass of tomato juice.

Nixon:

Umm humm.

Kuklewicz:

So it was perfectly acceptable. Then there was another thing that my father used to like it wasn’t the best thing for him to eat ’cause he wasn’t really well. She used to make a noodle or dumpling type of, um, breakfast food. And again you have to remember we didn’t have english muffins, and bagels, and all these nice things that you can go to the store and buy. So she had to improvise and do all her own cooking. She used to make a potato noodle, which she called (klusky) and it was done…

Nixon:

Wait a minute, how do you spell that?

Kuklewicz:

I don’t know how you spell it. I can look it up in a minute for you. I don’t have it. And I am not sure

15

Kuklewicz Interview March 16, 1994

Kuklewicz:

if that is a Polish word or Ukrainian word, But she called it Klusky.

Nixon:

Klusky?

Kuklewicz: Dumplings.

I think it is K-L-U-S-K-Y, but I am not She would make those–they were made–with sure. warm mashed potatoes, and egg, and flour, and a little salt and pepper. And she would mix it all together to make a sticky dough. Then she would take a spoon, and sort of like you dump dumplings into stew, she would dump them into boiling water and cook them. And then she would serve them with the top melt, the cream…

Nixon:

Umm humm.

Kuklewicz:

a little salt and pepper and that would be another substantial breakfast food. Can you imagine how heavy that would settle in your stomach; like rock. But they were so good! I mean, I think about it now and I can’t believe we ate all these heavy things. That’s probably why I never grew to be six feet tall; I probably stunted my growth from all this heavy food. But she was a marvelous cook, she was a really marvelous cook. Umm, most of the things she cooked were, umm, not necessarily from a cook book;

16

Kuklewicz Interview March 16, 1994

Kuklewicz:

they were probably things that she learned from her mother; things she learned from other people that she talked with might have… Sundays were usually a leisure day, especially for the women. My father didn’t take many days off at all. He generally worked every day, seven days a week. I think I told you last time, he’s pretty much a workaholic. Ah, but my mother would take Sundays as her leisure day. So after church, it was the custom for the women to sort of chat for awhile after the services. And they might talk about different foods that they cooked, ways to stretch the things that they had, and share recipes as women still do today. As she got older, I’m sure she was always using a cookbook. Basically, she cooked by instinct. And like when she made bread, I’d say to her, “Mom how do you do it?” She’d say, “Oh, I put some eggs and some milk in the bowl, and then I put my yeast in, then I add enough flour, and when it feels good then it’s ready.”

Nixon:

Umm humm.

Kuklewicz:

You know. So, umm, I couldn’t rely on some of those recipes. I don’t have the touch, I guess, a pinch of salt, you know….

17

Kuklewicz Interview March 16, 1994

Nixon:

Umm, humm.

Kuklewicz:

and a hand full of flour like, she does. So after a lot a recipes… But, um, basically she was rather an experimental cook I would guess, you’d have to say, But they just seemed to have so much instinct for being able to put things together and come up with something really, really great.

Nixon:

Umm, humm

Kuklewicz:

As children, as we grew older, then we began to start looking for recipes. Very often our source of recipes would come, umm, from word of mouth. They were passed down word of mouth from the older generations, you know, even generations before my mother. Ah, things would be passed down and we got them to reduplicate them. And if it came out good, then we’d try to write down the recipe. I can remember my mother having one of those composition books with the plastic white cover, you know, stitched-in pages. She would have little notes scribbled in there of things that she’d done that came out good, so she’d record that as a recipe.

Unfortunately, I don’t have those just now; they were lost. She had given them to one of my sisters, who

18

Kuklewicz Interview

March 16, 1994

Kuklewicz: had really a flair for cooking.

And a few years back They lost everything my sister’s house had a fire. in the kitchen. So a lot of those handwritten recipes that we had that would have been really nice things to pass down to the generations were destroyed in the kitchen fire. Most of the house was destroyed, and the kitchen particularly. What happened was the fire started in the barn, it was in the winter time, and the wind was blowing and so it blew, you know, the flames into the house and that whole ell was totally destroyed.

Nixon:

Yeah.

Kuklewicz: So a lot of the, ah… That was after my mother had broken up the home. So a lot of her dishes, things that were family heirlooms, not necessarily priceless…

Nixon:

Umm humm.

Kuklewicz:

but family heirlooms, nonetheless, were destroyed, Umm, we lost a lot of things then. Um,

Nixon:

what other…

What was your mothers name?

Kuklewicz: Oh, I didn’t tell you that, did I?

Nixon:

No.

19

Kuklewicz Interview March 16, 1994

Kuklewicz: My mother’s name was Julia.

Nixon:

Julia.

Kuklewicz: Lilian. And in parenthesis you might write “Lean,” because some places it’s Julia Lilian and some places it’s Julia Lean. My mother preferred Julia Lilian.

Nixon:

Ah huh.

Kuklewicz:

Her maiden name was Biscoe, and they spelled it B-I-S-C-O-E.

Nixon:

B-I-S-C-O-E.

Kuklewicz:

Which is the way it was interpreted when my grandfather landed at Ellis Island.

Nixon:

Umm humm.

Kuklewicz:

In Ukranian it comes out to the equivalent of B-I-S-H-K-0. Some members of the family who were better able to communicate the spelling, retained the name B-I-S-H-K-O. We have other family members who live in Pennsylvania, still in the coal mine region of Shenandoah, Pennsylvania, still spell it

B-I-S-C-0. So it’s just a matter of when the people arrived, ah, what the interpretation was, when they landed at Ellis Island.

Nixon:

Shenandoah, Pennsylvania, is that where your grandfather…

20

Kuklewicz Interview

March 16, 1994

Kuklewicz:

That’s were my grandfather was when he arrived. He worked in the coal mines in Shenandoah, and I have many, many relatives in Shenandoah who still live in the town. Most of them are older now, so they’re not active as miners anymore. But they spent their whole life, um… This has nothing to do with my family, but just, just, kind of FYI. Tommy and Jimmy Dorsey’s parents were Irish immigrants, who worked in the coal mines in Pennsylvania too. When they were young boys they and some of my, I call them uncles but they were actually cousins, some of my uncles and the girls who brought us back together formed a band in Pennsylvania. We used to play music at different events there, And Tommy and Jimmy decided that they certainly weren’t going to spend their lives, ah, underground working in the coal mines. So as soon as they were old enough they left.

Nixon:

Umm humm.

Kuklewicz:

But that’s the origins that… that was their origin too. And it was interesting to note that the people on my mother’s side of the family, my grandfather, many of his uncles, brothers, cousins were very musically inclined. The people who lived in the coal

21

Kuklewicz Interview March 16, 1994

Kuklewicz:

mines, I think, because they were underground so much, that when they were above ground, they were very sociable and they had a lot of partying. A lot of, ah, events where music was played. There was a lot more drinking on that side of the family, alcoholic beverages and so forth. It seemed to be their way of release from this horrible existence that they had to deal with in the coal mines. And of course it was very dangerous; there were a lot of accidents and so forth. And I guess that was their way of coping, was to have, ah, more, more, ah, music, laughter, dancing. Part of me on what was my father’s side of the family, you know, not to say that… that was a bad thing, it just seemed that was their way of relieving stress. The music was very, very important, um, you know, for all… for all of the time during the year. Not just on special occasions, but all year long was very important, very important. Ah, things like dance, music, that’s all, you know, ah, celebrated a lot in that branch of the family.

Nixon:

What was your grandfather’s name?

22

Kuklewicz Interview March 16, 1994

Kuklewicz: My grandfather’s name was Alexander Biscoe. I don’t remember him having a middle name.

Nixon:

He spelled it B-I-S-C-O-E?

Kuklewicz:

In the United States he spelled it B-I-S-C-O-E. And my grandmother’s name was Anna, A-N-N-A. In parenthesis, her maiden name was Gouden, G-O-U-D-E-N.

Nixon:

G-O-U-D-E-N.

Kuklewicz: And her last name was Korpita, K-O-R-P-I-T-A.

Nixon:

K-O…

Kuklewicz: R-P-I-T-A.

Nixon:

Was she Ukrainian too?

Kuklewicz: Ah, I’m not sure if she… The Korpita side of the

family is Ukrainian. The Gouden, I think, might have been Czech or, um, Austrian. I’m not sure. I never new my grandmother and so, consequently, I don’t know as much about her. She had passed away before I was born.

Right.

Nixon:

Kuklewicz: Umm.

Nixon:

Now she’s got her… She was married before she left Alexander?

Kuklewicz: No. Her mother had been married twice.

Nixon:

Oh, I see.

23

Kuklewicz Interview March 16, 1994

Kuklewicz: So she had the Gouden and Korpita name.

Nixon:

Okay. Did Anna Korpita come from, ah, from the Ukraine, or was she born here in the United States?

Kuklewicz: No, she was born there and came over to this country.

And I… I would have to assume from what I know, and again, I don’t know the total history… And this is something… This is something, as we get to talk to some of the other people that I want to have you interview, ah, we may find more background out on that. But it’s delving. It’s not something that I really researched that much, but I assume she came, ah, to the United States as a young child…

Umm, humm.

Nixon:

Kuklewicz:

and then her parents settled in the Sunderland area. When we go out to do interviews in that area, I can show you, you know, some of the… I can show you the area where they lived. Umm, but, she came over here and they lived in the south part of Sunderland. It used to be called Hungarian Avenue, where they lived.

Nixon:

Umm, humm

Kuklewicz: And that was because there were a lot of people who were Hungarian. Umm, there were a lot of Lithuanian

24

Kuklewicz Interview

March 16, 1994

Kuklewicz:

people who settled in that particular part of Sunderland, plus Ukrainian, some Czechs. It’s now renamed, and it’s called North Silver Lane. South Silver Lane. Excuse me, South Silver Lane. But that’s what it was known, it was sort of like… It was like a little section of the town, sort of like a little village and they all sort of congregated there. And I’m sure that when they came, because they didn’t have a lot of money and so forth, they probably lived in what we would consider communal housing now. Simply in order to survive and have a place to stay. So that was sort of like a little section of the town that, um, had gotten, sort of nicknamed Hungarian Avenue. Then when the streets, you know, got really named, the town, the town group, it was then called South Silver Lane.

Nixon:

Kuklewicz:

Why did Alexander move from Pennsylvania to Sunderland?

Well, he didn’t… He decided that coal mining definitely was for him. Wasn’t for him. Umm, as I said, they had the tavern, which he had worked in with a couple of partners. And I’m not sure exactly why he left there, but his background again, was, was

25

Kuklewicz Interview

March 16, 1994

Kuklewicz: farming. And so he decided, umm, that he wanted to

get back into farming. He came to Massachusetts and started farming in Sunderland. And that was where, I would chance that he met my grandmother. Nixon:

So, you don’t know why he chose..

Kuklewicz:

I don’t know why he chose Sunderland. Um, I… I

think that, as far as I can remember, the men in the Biscoe side of the family were people who like to… They like to travel, for one thing. They like the outdoors, they like hunting, and they like fishing. So, I’m wondering if, um… If maybe they were led to New England because of those aspects. sure. And this is something… I’m not As I say, this is something I haven’t been able to really find out. I’ve asked with my remaining older brother and sister, and they don’t seem to… They don’t seem to know. So, I’m hoping that when we talk to some of the other people, maybe we can find out more…

Umm, humm.

Nixon:

Kuklewicz:

as to why… why this took place. As I had referred to before, he did have a small farm, but he was what my father always called a gentleman farmer. He wasn’t as serious about building a big farm… or

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