The Past Memories of Runyan Lake
By Noel M. Francis
I
have fond memories of when my first cousin Howard and I
lived year round (winter and summer) at the so called
cottage on Runyan Lake.
I can remember when my father, Noel Sr. and Bobby O'Dell
would troll for hours fishing for northern pike.
I remember not having electricity therefore we had no lights
but we did have kerosene lamps; we never had a refrigerator
but we did have an ice-box. We didn't have a radio or
television but we did have each other and occupied ourselves
by building model airplanes, going ice-skating in the winter
or going " frogging" in the summer.
We didn't have school bussing so Howard and I would either
walk to school in the summer or ski there in the winter. It
was only three miles to our one room school house. We had
all eight grades in the same room so you heard each test
from the first grade to the eighth grade for eight years. If
you didn't pass your eighth grade exam, you were pretty
stupid.
I recall Grandpa Lyon taking Howard and me to catechism
every Saturday and taking all of us to mass every Sunday
even though he wasn't Catholic. He would pick us up after
mass and drive like crazy back to Runyan Lake; where he had
already made breakfast and had kept it warm. He'd walk into
the house and say, "I wonder what little angel made
breakfast for us" and than get the biggest grin on his face.
It's ironic that the same church Howard and I went to
catechism in was the same church Willie and I got married
in, fifty three years ago and now after an eighteen year
absence, are now back going to the same church.
I remember when times were real bad at the lake because
grandpa wasn't working a lot of hours at Yellow Coach in
Pontiac. To make ends meet, they started up a beer garden
and sandwich shop. The beer garden was the entire front
porch. Grandma would make homemade soup and sandwiches to
sell. People from all around Runyan Lake made up most of
their customers. On Saturdays, I would ride all the way into
Flint (20 miles) to pick up beer, wine and pop from the
wholesale distributor.
I forgot to mention that Howard and I had chores to do every
Saturday. One of our chores was to clean every kerosene lamp
inside with a newspaper. What a dirty job, but wish we could
do it all over again.
After grandpa Lyon died, Willie, our first-born (Mike) and I
lived with grandma for several years because she could not
drive a car. What fond memories.