Monday, March 16, 1970

1963 - Move to Richland and Welcome Baby Scottie

1963 is called "the year that changed the world" by some. There was the historic March on Washington, Martin Luther King's "I have a dream" speech, and the early involvement of the U.S. in the Vietnam War. Beatlemania had started up. Then, on Nov. 22, the assassination of President John F. Kennedy. On a more "Westra" note ... 1963 was the year the young Westra couple left Utah for Washington, and added their first baby to the family! LaMar turned 26 on May 28, 1963. Margie turned 21 on Nov. 7, 1963. Scott was born on Monday, Dec. 16, 1963.


In the Spring, Dad/Lamar was interviewing for a new job. 
Here's memories from both Dad and Mom:
From Dad: I started interviewing different companies for a job. There were three main possibilities: IBM in SLC, 14 March. Shell Oil in San Francisco, and Marathon Oil in Denver. In the summer of 1963, I went on two interview trips. One was by myself, flying to Denver, Colorado to interview Marathon Oil, and then Margie and I drove to San Francisco to interview Shell Oil Company. Then we accepted a job offer from General Electric in Richland, Washington, one of the three cities making up the Tri Cities. We moved to Richland, Washington on our first anniversary: 29 June 1963. We moved into a little house in Richland Village, 2031 Rainier. The house was on the corner. It had two bedrooms and a basement and a detached garage. We paid $79 a month for rent. 
 From Mom: Around the time of our first wedding anniversary, we moved to Richland, Washington. LaMar had 3 job offers, one in California, one in Denver, and the one in Richland. He visited Denver to interview, we both made the trip to California to interview----then accepted the Richland job offer from General Electric without even visiting there. I was 3 months pregnant with Scott. It was difficult to find a place to rent. Apartment complexes didn’t want people with children or expecting one. We finally found an old house to rent on Rainier Street. LaMar had to start work, so I had to spend the days in the empty house, waiting for the moving truck to arrive. I had morning sickness and ate barbecue-flavor potato chips while waiting at the house----I haven’t been able to stand them for the next 50 years! We had some nice young couples as neighbors and enjoyed life there. LaMar was a stake missionary and took classes a couple times a week, so I got tired of being alone a lot. I joined a ladies bowling league as I needed to get out of the house. Bowling Tuesdays.
The house (taken a few years later/Chris in the window)

It's always interesting to see how the different write-ups compare *Ü* What details are written down. Here's a little more from Mom and Dad, and more about Scott's birth:

From Dad: 22 Nov 1963 – President John F. Kennedy was assassinated. I was working in the plant, and everyone was in shock. Scott Edward Westra was born: on Monday, Dec. 16, 1963, 12:50 AM. Scottie was born in Kadlec Memorial Hospital, which had been built years before by the government. Margie and Scottie came home from the hospital, Friday, 20 Dec. Christmas 1963 We bought a Christmas Tree, 11 Dec, $4.

From Mom: Scott was born on Monday, Dec. 16, 1963, just before midnight, at the Kadlec Methodist Hospital. It was an old military hospital, all on one floor, with many wings. 3 women in a room. You had to get out of bed and go to the bottom of the bed and use a crank to raise or lower the bed. They didn't do epidurals in Washington--they were behind the times. The husbands couldn't even be in the labor or delivery rooms! I hated being alone in labor and in pain. I remember when the doctor told me "It won't get any worse than this" at one point. He lied! It was a fast labor and delivery. They had to wake LaMar up in the waiting room to tell him he had a son! I remember the ride home from the hospital, feeling scared that this little helpless baby was up to me to care for. My parents came up for a visit after he was born. After they returned to Salt Lake, I developed a fever and weakness on my left side and was re-hospitalized. They did a spinal tap, etc. to check for meningitis, etc. Our pediatrician arranged for baby Scott to be admitted also, so I could nurse him, and so LaMar didn’t have to care for him. The doctor put the bump on Scott’s ear as the reason for the hospital admittance. I had a couple more episodes of the fever and weakness over the next few months and my doctor had me go to a neurologist in Seattle. I was never really diagnosed—just “an inflammation of the brain.” It hasn't reoccurred but has left me with a slight weakness on my left side.




Mom wrote that "Christmas was just a blur for me in 1963, having a baby and all and going back to the hospital." Years later, Jen would have a similar situation with a December baby (Colton) and rehospitalization a week later (but it was baby Colton being admitted ... no excuse needed to let Mom stay, and Dad/Gray was in charge of taking care of four little boys at home!)

Adding to this post with a few finds from the baby book ...

Mom/Margie had mentioned in her memory that Scott was born just before midnight, but in the baby book, 12:50 am is listed as the time. Weight was recorded as 7 pounds 1½ ounces, but noted that it dropped to 6 pounds 14 ounces while in the hospital, and was 7 pounds 3 ounces at discharge. Length was 19½ inches and head circumference was 13½ inches. Not much hair. The baby book kept a very good history of weight and height over the coming years. There will be more to come in another post showcasing Scott!

Sunday, March 15, 1970

Mom/Margie ... Model or Scientist?


Scanning old documents, this newspaper article featuring Marjorie Westra was discovered. After high school, Mom/Margie received a full-tuition scholarship to Henager’s Business College. She was voted by her classmates at graduation as “The Secretary most likely to Succeed.”  She graduated, got married, and started working as a secretary for the doctors (about eight of them) at the Cancer Research Department at the University of Utah. This article would have been published in the last half of 1962 or first half of 1963. Mom remembers ...

Since the doctors were doing research with radioactive things, one of my duties was to go around and collect their film badges each week and give them new ones---to track if the doctors and workers got accidentally exposed to radiation. One of the doctors tested me in this whole-body counter, seen in the background of the photo. It was like going into an MRI testing tube, but without open ends. Locked in. Scary! That's when I realized I was claustrophobic! 



A History of Homes, Certificates & Census Citings


In 1922, Ate Westra built this modest brick home at 2256 South 8th East.  Ate lived in this house until his death, in 1946. For Dad/Lamar ... this was "Grandpa Westra's House". Dad took this picture in 1963 and we are grateful he thought to document it! But this wasn't the only location the Westra family lived here in Salt Lake. Ate Obes Westra immigrated from the Netherlands to Salt Lake City in April 1907, with his wife Geeske and three children (Wilhelmina, Obe and Egbert). Upon arriving in Utah ...
  • Their first residence was at 445 North 12th West in Salt Lake City. They were hosted by another Dutch family. Halbe Hulshoff and his wife, who had two living children.  The Westras were living here when John was born (Dec 31, 1907), and Wilhelmina died (Jan 21, 1908. The two boys Obe and Egbert had passed away earlier). The Hulshoff family was still living at this location per the 1910 census, but the Westra family had moved on ...
  • Another child, George, was born October 13, 1909. On his birth certificate, the home address is listed as 413 W 1st North in Salt Lake City. 
  • In the 1910 census report - the Westra family is listed as living at 565 North 9th West in Salt Lake City. This appears to have been some kind of group home. The 1910 census lists seven families at that address, Ate is listed (incorrectly with the last name Wastra) with his wife Geeske and two sons, John and George.
In the original history written by John (and used to create the histories for Ate and Geeske, found here and on Family Search) he had written "Sometime in the year 1908, a small two-room home was purchased at the end of 8th East, just South of Parkway Avenue, in Forest Dale Ward." However, based on Dad's additional research, this happened not in 1908, but a few years later. There are a number of close but different locations listed on birth/death certificates, and the family seemed to have lived in a few different locations on 8th East ...
  • March 17, 1911 ... there is a death certificate for young George. The family address is listed as 2540 South 8th East
  • October 23, 1911 ... birth certificate for Joseph Westra gives an address of 2432 South 8th East.
  • March 9, 1913 ... birth certificate for Allen Westra gives a 2544 South 8th East address. This same address is also listed on the death certificate for young Allen on June 25, 1914.

Dad thinks that the structure probably had no house number on it, and the family was just guessing at the exact address. The first guess was 2540, and the next guess was 2432, and the final guess was 2544. As that guess was given at two different events, and it was given latest, he surmised that this was the more accurate. He doubts the family moved three times along the street, and there was just one "small two-room home at the end of 8th East, just South of Parkway Avenue" as mentioned in John's history. Continuing on ...
  • In 1914, Ate purchased a small frame home at 2252 South 8th East. Another son (Alma) was born (April 30, 1915) and died (Jan 15, 1916) with the birth and death certificates matching this address. 
  • In 1918, Ate purchased a nice, new brick home at 2496 South 9th East, just across the street from the old Salt Lake Coutry Club, later known as Forest Dale Golf Club. (This address comes up in Google's Street View, check out a present-day glimpse of this house here).
  • In 1919, the family sold the brick home for a profit, needing that money to finance a mission for Ate. They moved back into the small frame home (no plumbing) at 2252 South 8th East. Ate received a mission call to the Netherlands and was gone until May 1922. The 1920 Census records the Westra family living at this address.
  • In 1922, Ate built a modest, modern brick home on the lot next to the small frame house. The address was 2256 South 8th East. The 1930 and 1940 Census do show the family at this slightly shifted address. This home is the one featured in the photo above. 

It's is obvious, but still interesting, how much official certificates and Census reports can help with history. Narrowing down dates of who was where and when. Do you have a list of all the locations you've lived? Pictures of the homes, inside and out? Have you completed the 2020 Census for your family? Learn a little more about the Census at their site (lots of interesting information!)


Here's a link to the GoogleDoc with Dad/Lamar's original writeup on this topic.
It has also been added as a memory/story on Ate's Family Search page.

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