“Grandpa,”
fourteen-year-old Scott approached his aged companion. “I need a
dresser for my room.”
“Is
that so?” Richard responded thoughtfully. “Lets head to the barn
and see if we can find something we can work with.”
The
pair walked out of the small workshop door and took an immediate
right. They trudged slowly up the grassy hill to the gravel driveway
and turned left, towards the barn.
The big
bank barn stood silhouetted against the cloudy sky. The walls of the
barn had originally been painted gray. They were still gray, but it
was hard to tell if it was colored from the paint or from years of
exposure to the various Ohio weather patterns. The bright, corrugated
aluminum roof shone in the intermittent sunshine as a number of black
and white heifers milled about in the barnyard. A green pickup truck
sat on the slope of the east bank, rust slowly creeping across it's
surface. The primary feature of the barns north side was it's
oversized sliding doors.
Richard
walked up to an unmarked man door and pulled a string. The string was
attached to a hook on the inside. Once the hook was disengaged, the
door was able to swing open towards the outside. The younger Henning
hung back until his grandfather unlatched the hooks that secured the
larger sliding door. Richard pushed it open to his right, allowing
the daylight to flood into the upper floor of the barn. Scott stood
in the doorway for a minute taking in the sight. His grandpa's flat
bed wagon sat in the middle, in front of an old corn picker that
hadn't been used in years. A forage wagon and a bale wagon sat in the
west bay. The west haymow was stacked with hay bales. The east mow
was used primarily for storage. That was the mow of interest on this
particular day.
They
walked down an unintentional isle through a large variety of odd and
somewhat obscure items. There was an old lawn tractor to the right,
an old fashioned traveling trunk to the left. A stack of fifty-five
gallon drums stood against the east wall while picnic tables stood on
end against the south wall. They sorted through the elder Henning's
stockpile of obscurities until Richard came upon and item that caused
him pause.
“What
do you think of this?” Richard asked as he gestured to a slightly
odd looking piece of furniture.
Scott
looked it over carefully before answering. The piece was made out of
wood. It stood about three feet tall and four feet wide. The face of
the piece had four panels with a handle in the middle of each one.
The teenager reached forward and tugged on the handle of the top left
panel expecting it to pull out like a drawer. Instead, the panel
pivoted at the bottom and revealed a strange control panel of sorts.
“What
is this thing, Grandpa?” Scott inquired with confusion thick in his
voice.
“This
is an old radio cabinet,” Richard explained. “Radios used to take
up a lot more space so they made them into furniture. This door here
is the radio. The one right next to it used to be a record player.
This door on the bottom used to be the speaker and the other one was
used to store records.”
“Wow,”
Scott marveled. “That's pretty sweet. It kinda reminds me of the
old wooden TV's but cooler.”
“So,
what do you think?” Richard pressed.
“I
think it's pretty cool,” Scott responded with excitement. “Are
you sure you want to change this into a dresser?”
“Well,”
Richard responded in his trademark deliberation. “I don't suppose
it's doing anyone any good just sitting here in the barn, now is it?”
The
next few weeks were fairly busy for the cross-generational team. They
loaded the radio cabinet into Richard's garden cart and rolled to the small, back room workshop. The radio cabinet took up a large
percentage of the workshops floor space, but nobody seemed to mind.
They removed the radio components from the one compartment and
removed both front panels. They built boxes that were attached to the
face panels which created drawers. The back of the cabinet had
sustained some water damage and had to be replaced with a new panel.
Richard insisted on staining and varnishing the new back panel even
though Scott insisted that the back of the piece would be against the
wall and nobody would ever know it wasn't finished.
“Ahh,
but you'll know now won't you? And someday that'll bother you.”
Richard had responded.
There
was a small spot on the top of the piece that had been damaged by
water. Richard stirred together a mixture of sawdust and wood glue,
referring to the mixture as plastic wood. Using a putty knife,
he worked the mixture into the cracks and crevices of the damaged
portion until he was satisfied with the results. After it dried, he
instructed his young assistant to sand it smooth. Applying just the
right amount of stain, the elder man was able to blend the
imperfection into the rest of the top panel to both of their
satisfaction.
Finally,
the job was done. Christa, Scott's mother, drove the family van up to
her father-in-law's house trailer and stood by expressing concern for
his welfare as the grandfather and grandson team loaded the bulky
piece of furniture into the back of the van. Christa insisted that
her oldest son would help Scott carry the newly converted dresser up
to its destination, and left Richard to his own devices.
Caleb
and Scott unloaded dresser and carried it into the house. As they
passed their father, who was reading in his easy chair, they paused
to show off the piece of furniture. Dale looked it over and smiled
ever so slightly.
“Leave
it to Dad,” he chuckled. “Leave it to Dad to give up the antique
value of an old radio cabinet so that one of his grandkids could
have a dresser.”
Awwww, Scott, what a great story! Your grandad was terrific!
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