|
From Pioneer Stock
Nancy Rodman lives in two worlds
By Colleen Slater
KP News
|

Nancy Rodman with her father, F. Howard
Rodman,
in 1972.
Photo courtesy Nancy Rodman |
Nancy Rodman has a home next door
to the original house her Rodman grandparents built when
they came to Vaughn in 1900. She doesn’t know how much
land her grandparents owned, but says, “I think it was
half of this side of the (Vaughn) Bay!”
Her grandfather died within a few
years of his arrival, leaving his wife, Clara, with four
young children to raise.
“She was a staunch German. She died
when I was 7. I can’t remember her face, but she was a
love of a woman,” says Rodman.
“She cooked on an old wood stove,
used heated flat-irons to iron, and made just wonderful
food,” including bread puddings, breads and cookies.
Grandma Clara had an orchard of apples and cherries, a
big garden, and a large apple cellar.
The bulk of the property was sold,
piece by piece. Many local landowners on the south side
of the bay have Clara Rodman’s name on their deed to
tidelands.
Nancy Rodman, daughter of Fredrick
Howard Rodman, better known as Howard, spent her early
years in Tacoma. Every summer, they stayed with her
grandmother. Once Rodman and her brother, Howard,
graduated from high school, her father moved to Vaughn.
F. Howard had a huckleberry business in Tacoma for many
years, and invented a berry-stripping machine.
Helen, the oldest child of Clara,
lived in Tacoma with her husband, Ernie Miller.
Marjorie, child No. 3 (affectionately called Mudge), and
her husband, Charlie Powell, lived on the other side of
Nancy’s current home for many years. Dewey, the
youngest, lived most of his life in Vaughn.
“Uncle Dewey was the fun one,”
Rodman says, noting the rest of the family was quite
serious. They did enjoy family gatherings and singing
together. There was a lot of musical talent in the
family.
Rodman’s former husband, Mario, a
noted musician, composed “The Icy Mountains” at the old
piano in the original Rodman home.
When Rodman’s father died at the
age of 82, she and her brother split the property on
Vaughn Bay. He got the old house, now owned by his adult
children. She had her piece cleared, moved in a
manufactured home, and immediately set about to change
it, inside and out, into a comfortable place with her
own imprint on it.
“I come here and spend my vacation
working,” Rodman says, with an obvious pride in what
she’s accomplished. Shrubs, including roses and
hydrangeas, and many flowering plants adorn the multiple
decks and grounds.
A gazebo on the deck nearest the
water is her place to relax with a good book. For many
years, she had a local companion whenever she went down
there. A large seal flopped onto the deck, rocked on his
tummy, and barked at her. Rodman approached, and barked
in return. She called him Sammy. When she stood up to
leave, he returned to the water. Sammy hasn’t been
around for several years now.
Rodman, a former film and
television actress, is now an agent in Mexico City. Her
clients include some of the top Mexican film stars.
She never had children of her own,
but raised Pedro, a foster son, from birth. His
daughter, a large-eyed beauty, is, of course, the
prettiest and most special grandchild there ever was.
Fourth of July picnics, as well as
other family gatherings, were standard procedure, even
before Rodman was born. She continues the tradition, and
this year, had about 100 Rodman relatives enjoying her
decks and gardens. She takes lots of pictures, and loves
watching and snapping the youngest members of the clan.
Rodman may not spend a lot of time
at Vaughn, but it’s the home with ties to her family and
her roots, both important to her.
©Copyright 2005-2008, Key Peninsula
News, all rights reserved.
|
|