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I first heard
about my Uncle Sam from my grandparents, Morris and Rachel Eskin, with
whom I spent a great deal of time when I was a child. I looked through
photograph albums and saw pictures of my father and Sam as children.
Sam had long blond sausage curls, and when they were cut, my grandfather
saved one of them in a white box on cotton wool. They didn't talk much
to me about Sam, but I knew that he had left home at an early age and
had been around the world. There were gifts, such as carved ebony elephants
with ivory tusks and a beautiful Japanese kimono in shades of lavender,
which I inherited and wore several times when I performed arias from
"Madame Butterfly". (Ruth was quite an accomplished Opera singer in
the 40's and 50's). There were also pictures of Sam wearing a cowboy
outfit with sheepskin chaps, and one in a boxing or wrestling ring -
he had had many types of jobs as he worked his way around the country.
He came to visit us for a short time every few years, but all I remember
is that when he left, he usually gave a half dollar to me and my brother
(Bob Eskin). This was a large amount of money since I used to baby-sit
for the neighbors for an entire evening for a quarter!
My grandfather
was always in touch with Sam and used to send checks to Stanley and
Otho on their birthdays - sometimes he would ask me to write out the
checks. This was strange since they were my first cousins but I had
never met them. My mother was one of ten children, all still living
in the Baltimore-Washington area, and we got together with them and
their children almost every weekend. So I grew up feeling that there
was something strange about Sam's lifestyle which my family didn't approve
of. My grandfather visited Sam in Woodstock from time to time and I
have an audiotape of him being interviewed by someone at one of Sam's
parties, on which he talks about how proud he is to have lived to see
blacks and whites socializing together. (You can hear the ringing of
the ship's clock bells in the background on the tape.)
During the depression
years, my father had a hard time making a living. He lost his job with
a Baltimore newspaper when it was taken over by Hearst publications.
Then he tried a number of business ventures, which did not succeed.
Eventually, Sam was instrumental in getting him a job with United Parcel
Service, which was quite a feat since until that time, the company frowned
upon nepotism. This was in 1940, and all during the war years, my father
worked for UPS for a modest salary because tires and gasoline were rationed
and it was not the best of times for the company. However, the company
issued stock to its employees in lieu of money and because of this,
my father was able to retire comfortably at age 62.
In 1943, Nathan
Skurnik and I were married - my daughter Rita was born in 1950 (Nat
having been overseas for four years during the war) and my son Michael
was born in 1953.
Our first visit
to Woodstock was in the summer of 1957 - Sam had come to visit us in
Manhattan, where Nat operated a small supermarket. He dropped in one
afternoon, had a cup of coffee, and ordered some case of Macadamia nuts,
which Nat offered to get for him wholesale. He invited us to Woodstock
and so we went. We slept in the trailer, which he kept next to his house
for his guests, and nine months later our son, Harmon was born. We often
kidded Sam about being responsible for this event.
Our next visit
to Woodstock was when Harmon was about four years old (1962) and it
was an unforgettable one. Sam fixed one of his famous paellas in a huge
pan, which hung by the fireplace, and we drank a lot of beer and bourbon.
He played and sang "Cigareets and Whiskey and Wild Wild Women, They
drive you crazy, they drive you insaaaaaaane." About 10 o'clock, when
my children would usually have been in bed, he decided to take us all
down to town to the Little Brown Jug to hear a jazz band, where we had
more beer. The kids loved the place and the music. When we got back
about midnight, he put on more music and started dancing on the table
with Harmon right behind him. Every once in a while, he turned and gave
out a mighty lion's roar, which scared everyone half to death, but then
we laughed hysterically. There's never been another night like it, before
or after.
On another visit,
Sam decided to ride back to New York with us. He packed a few things
in a red bandana tied to a stick, hobo style, and told us to drop him
off on Ninth Ave in Greenwich Village. It was midnight by the time we
got there and we were reluctant to leave him but he said he had friends
he could stay with. We called him our 69 year-old hippie uncle!
Another visit
we made to Woodstock was with our daughter Rita and her newlywed husband,
Don Collins (they are now divorced), who is a real libertarian, believing
in freedom for the individual above all, with the government responsible
only for the defense of the country, public safety and the court system.
He and Sam were having a conversation about economics and Sam interrupted
Don early on, mistakenly thinking he was going to express some socialist
view, and said, "if we could take all their money away from the rich
people of the world and give it to all the poor people of the world,
it would last about a week, and then everyone would be poor." We can
assume he had given up his communist views by then. Of course, Don said
that he did not believe in taking money away from anyone for any purpose.
Needless to
say, we tended to idealize Sam. He was so different than my father,
who was a quiet, conservative, disciplined man who had to work hard
all his life and took life very seriously. I enjoyed reading Stanley's
memoirs because I realized that Sam had faults similar to my father's
and they were both only human.
In 1966, our
son, Michael was 13 and we planned a party for his Bar Mitzvah and sent
Sam an invitation. We were happy that he attended and he seemed to enjoy
being with all of us. Not long after that, we received a letter from
him informing us that he was about to set up a trust fund for each of
our children and also for my brother's two children. It was to be used
only for educational purposes until they reached the age of 25, at which
time it could be used for anything they wanted. This was a stunning
gesture and, while it was not a large amount of money, it had the psychological
effect of giving my children the confidence of knowing they had a nest
egg to fall back on. We did not find it necessary to use that money
for their education and they did not spend any of it until after they
were married. Rita and Don used the money to invest in their honey bee
business, which has paid off well over the years. Michael and Harmon
and their wives, Lori and Judy, used their savings for a down payment
on their first houses. I'm very grateful for him - it was a very kind
and caring thing for him to do and has had a far-reaching effect on
all my family.
When Sam died,
I called my father and offered to go to the funeral with him, but he
said he had called and that there was not going to be a funeral. I still
feel sad that I did not pay my last respects to a remarkable man. Sometime
later, my husband was driving in the Kingston area and decided to drive
to Woodstock to see the place. It was deserted - the doors were open
and he wandered into the barn. There was stuff piled all over and he
suddenly felt a desire to have something of Sam's, so he took an African
mask that was lying on the floor. We hung it over our piano, and our
granddaughter Lisa used to get frightened of it when she climbed up
on the seat to play "Chopsticks" with me. I always felt Sam was there
roaring like a lion. I miss him.
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To see larger images,
click on each picture:

Ruth Skurnik with Morris Eskin in 1952.


Ruth Skurnik in 1928.

Ruth in 1941.

Ruth and Nathan Skurnik
in 1943.



Ruth's three children
in 1963.



Ruth and her three
children in 1963.

Nat and Ruth Skurnik
in 1988
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