Tag Archives: Eleanor

80th Birthday Celebration – Eleanor Creekmore Dickinson

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My mother Eleanor Dickinson will celebrate her 80th birthday next month. My brothers and I are planning a big party featuring a video with pictures from her family life and accomplishments as an artist. For the last month, I have spent every spare moment going through all of the family photos: of people, of cats, of places and houses that are meaningful in her life. The family has been sending me scans of old pictures and digital images to add to the collection. My daughter Jessica and brother Peter have picked out songs to go with the images.

Working with these pictures has given me a new understanding of my mother and her life. When I look at pictures from many years ago, I can sometimes remember how that sweater felt or what was happening when the camera snapped. Some of the people have died and all have changed in one way or another. It is a rewarding if very time consuming experience.

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Images Copyright 1962-1994 Katy Dickinson

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Camp Clay

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One of our annual August activities at the Lair of the Golden Bear family camp is playing with clay. Most of the family ends up in the Lair’s Art Grove sooner or later, either to keep my mother (Eleanor Dickinson) company while she is drawing and painting, or to do art of our own. This year, I bought four bisqueware plates at the camp store. (Bisqueware is once-fired clay.) Recruiting Jessica, Matt, Paul, and John, I traced one of each of our hands on a plate.  I painted in between the lines in colored glaze, then covered the whole with clear glaze.* I fired the plates once at camp and then painted over the hands for deeper color and fired them again after vacation at Clay Planet (Santa Clara, California).

My mother mostly painted tiles and sketched in her traveling journal. This year, she painted a special bowl in honor of my son Paul’s 18th birthday. It features images of rock crystals and a large beetle.

* actually, John painted on the clear glaze for me because he smudges less than I do

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Images by Katy Dickinson, Copyright 2010

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SAMA Auction, Whirling Dervish, Middle Eastern Feast

Our committee at St.Andrew’s Episcopal Church is working hard to prepare for the annual SAMA (St. Andrew’s Medical Assistance) Dinner and Auction, to be held Sunday, 28 February 2010:

  • Starts at 5 pm
  • The event includes Entertainment by Gregangelo Whirling Dervish who has been dazzling audiences worldwide with his uniquely secular adaptation of the whirling dervish for over two decades, plus a Middle Eastern Feast, Live Auction, and Silent Auction
  • Tickets are $35/person or $100/family
  • Location: St. Andrew’s Hall, 13601 Saratoga Ave., Saratoga, California
  • Childcare or transportation provided on request.
  • Call: 408-867-3493 or 408-252-5211
  • All are Welcome!

SAMA exists to provide hope and healing to a hurting world.
In 2010, SAMA sent funds for medical relief in Haiti.  
SAMA also supports health programs in Africa.
Medical Programs SAMA has supported long-term in the Holy Land include:

For more information, see the SAMA web page.

SAMA Auction Items (partial list)

    Robert Lewis New Vinyard, Old Manor New Vineyard, Old Manor 

    – Plein Air Oil Painting on Canvas by well known Pacific Grove artist Robert Lewis, 20″ x 24″, Catalog# 597, Gilroy, California. Signed and Framed.

    WP668 with new Western Pacific herald photo: copyright 2008 Katy Dickinson Caboose Brunch 

    – by John Plocher – Brunch for six in a private 1916 historic railroad caboose (Western Pacific Feather River Railway WP668) in
    Willow Glen, San Jose.

    DSCN9710 Wine – 1994 Treasure from Louis M. Martini 

    – Martini Family wine collection – Vineyard Selection Sonoma Valley Cabernet Sauvignon, Monte Rosso Vineyard Heritage Collection.

    DSCN9712 Wine – 1994 Treasure from Louis M. Martini 

    – Martini Family wine collection – Russian River Valley Reserve Merlot.

    DSCN9713 Rabbit Etching by Eleanor Creekmore Dickinson
    – Original delicate and realistic red and white etching of rabbits by famous San Francisco artist Eleanor Creekmore Dickinson. 1983. 7-3/4″ x 5-3/4″. Etching 12 of 20. Signed and Framed.

Images Copyright 2008-2010 by Katy Dickinson, and John Plocher

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Getting Ready for Christmas

My daughter Jessica arrived home a few days ago but soon left on a ski trip with her fiance Matt and his family. She comes back this afternoon. While she was briefly home, we went to the Great Dickens Christmas Fair at the Cow Palace. My mother and I also went to the Dickens Fair after Thanksgiving with my brother Pete and his family, so we have had quite the Victorian Christmas so far. (I have seen Gilbert and Sullivan’s Mikado twice this year!) I have also visited family, participated in the annual Sun Labs Christmas Cookie Exchange, and enjoyed the SunCaroler’s Menlo Park campus walking concert, the 1st annual Willow Glen Lions Holiday Party, and other delights of the season.

Dickens Fair

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Marley confronts Scrooge

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Pirate’s Cove

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Dark Garden Tableau

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Images Copyright 2009 Katy Dickinson and John Plocher

Pete and family at the Dickens Fair

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Ko-Ko and Katisha, The Mikado

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Ballena Bay Pewter, Dickens Fair

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SunCarolers annual walking concert

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Willow Glen Lions Party

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Sun Labs Cookie Party

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Family visit

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Uncle Wayne’s Workshop

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Paul, Lynda, Daniel (cousins)

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Paul and Jessica

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Paul and Jessica

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Jessica and Matt

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1007 Circle Park, Knoxville, Tennessee

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1007 Circle Park Drive Knoxville Tennessee 1007circle.knoxville.1964 . DSCN6989

My mother, Eleanor Creekmore Dickinson, grew up at 1007 Circle Park Drive, Knoxville, Tennessee. This address does not exist any more. In the mid-1960’s, the whole neighborhood was torn down to make room for the University of Tennessee. You can check out Circle Park on Google Maps: the satellite view shows that Circle Park itself is still there but the round street around it is now called Circle Park Drive SW or Circle Park Drive. Originally, Circle Park was a private open space owned by the houses around it.

It is surprising how much of a presence a house that does not exist still has. 1007 Circle Park stood on its own acre of land. It had towers, secret passages (an air gap between inner and outer walls), and a teardrop-shaped carriage drive in the side yard with a porte-cochere to keep the rain off. There were stables and three servant quarters in the back. My great grandfather, Walter Van Gilder, bought the house around 1910. It was ornate Victorian in style, built around the time of the American Civil War.

After 1965, when Evelyn Van Gilder Creekmore and Robert Elmond Creekmore (my grandparents) knew that their home would be torn down, they took as much of the house with them as they could when they moved. This included doors, architectural trim, windows, banisters, and ironwork as well as furniture. Over the years those pieces have been installed in a variety of our family’s houses in California and Tennessee.

My husband, John Plocher just finished bolting the extremely heavy black iron fireback (featuring Poseidon and seahorses) into the exterior wall of his new workshop. In our house, we also have furniture carved by Ellen Bolli Van Gilder (my great grandma), a parlor screen with six paintings by my ancestress Mary Esperandieu, the newel post from the 1007 Circle Park staircase, a heater grate, a metal fire screen, several panels of stained glass and clear leaded glass, and a variety of mirrors that Walter Van Gilder made himself for 1007 Circle Park.

A photo below shows the front door of 1007 Circle Park on the day my mother married my father in 1952. In the picture, she is being escorted to the wedding by her father, R.E. Creekmore, flanked by my other grandparents (B.W.O. Dickinson and Gladys Grace Oakes Dickinson) and Ellen Bolli Van Gilder. The doors and stained glass panel in the back of that 1952 photo are the same doors and stained glass panel in my parents’ house in San Francisco in 2006, shown below with my mother at the door. Walter Van Gilder made the glass panel.

26 December 2012 blog – The Walter Van Gilder stained glass panel was installed in our home in Willow Glen, California, after being re-leaded and restored.

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Images Copyright 1938-2009 by Katy Dickinson and Eleanor Dickinson

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Lair of the Golden Bear, “Twilight at Pinecrest”

We got back last week from our annual camping trip. Every year since 1993,
my family has vacationed at the

Lair of the Golden Bear
, the family camp managed by the
U.C. Berkeley Alumni Association.
The Lair is in the Sierras near
Pinecrest.
There are 3 camps within the Lair: Gold, Blue, and Oski.

As usual, John, Jessica, Matt, Paul and I picked up
my mother
Eleanor
in San Francisco and visited Poot’s House of Cactus in Ripon on the drive
to Pinecrest.

In over 50 years of Lair camping, each week has developed its own style and
traditions. Our family is always well represented in the 10th week Camp Blue Review –
the Lair’s Wednesday night talent show. This year, Jessica sang “Losing My Mind”
by Stephen Sondheim (she studies Music at Carnegie Mellon), Matt did gymnastics (he is on the Gymnastics team at
William & Mary
), and the whole family acted in a Cal vs. Stanford vampire skit written by

my brother Pete
, called “Twilight at Pinecrest”.
We celebrated Paul’s birthday with his traditional Lair Cake.

After our week at the Lair, we drove our truck and Yuppie Wagon trailer over
Sonora pass (9,624 feet above sea level) through the stark and lovely
Emigrant Wilderness
to Nevada’s capital Carson City, where we
visited the Nevada State Railroad Museum.
We then drove to Vacaville to see the newly-in-use
Nut Tree train (on a very tiny
track, alas!) and the

Consolidated Rock & Mineral
shop. We stopped off in San Francisco to
drop off my mother and pick up our

two new birds
and then drove home to San Jose.

Entering San Francisco

Entering San Francisco
photo: copyright 2009 Katy Dickinson
Matt, Jessica, Paul, Yuppie Wagon

Matt, Jessica, Paul and the Yuppie Wagon
photo: copyright 2009 Katy Dickinson
Picking up Grandma

Picking up Grandma in San Francisco, Eleanor Dickinson
photo: copyright 2009 Katy Dickinson
Visiting Poot’s House of Cactus

Visiting Poot's House of Cactus, Ripon California
photo: copyright 2009 Katy Dickinson
yucca

yucca, Poot's House of Cactus, Ripon California
photo: copyright 2009 Katy Dickinson
hippo cactus

hippo cactus, Poot's House of Cactus, Ripon California
photo: copyright 2009 Katy Dickinson
cactus flower

cactus flower, Poot's House of Cactus, Ripon California
photo: copyright 2009 Katy Dickinson
Camp Blue Road

Camp Blue Road, Lair of the Golden Bear, Pinecrest California
photo: copyright 2009 Katy Dickinson
wine & cheese

Pete Dickinson, Eleanor Dickinson, wine & cheese after unpacking, Lair of the Golden Bear, Pinecrest California
photo: copyright 2009 Katy Dickinson
John in hammock

John in hammock, Lair of the Golden Bear, Pinecrest California
photo: copyright 2009 Katy Dickinson
jay bird visiting

jay bird visiting, Lair of the Golden Bear, Pinecrest California
photo: copyright 2009 Katy Dickinson
squirrel in bucket

squirrel in bucket, Lair of the Golden Bear, Pinecrest California
photo: copyright 2009 Katy Dickinson
our tent

our tent, Lair of the Golden Bear, Pinecrest California
photo: copyright 2009 Katy Dickinson
Jessica

Jessica Dickinson Goodman, Lair of the Golden Bear, Pinecrest California
photo: copyright 2009 Katy Dickinson
Jessica and Matt

Jessica and Matt, Lair of the Golden Bear, Pinecrest California
photo: copyright 2009 Katy Dickinson
Wheel and Deal in the lodge

playing Wheel and Deal in the lodge, Lair of the Golden Bear, Pinecrest California
photo: copyright 2009 Katy Dickinson
visiting butterfly

visiting butterfly, Lair of the Golden Bear, Pinecrest California
photo: copyright 2009 Katy Dickinson
my nephew Daniel

my nephew Daniel, Lair of the Golden Bear, Pinecrest California
photo: copyright 2009 Katy Dickinson
Blue Review skit audition

Blue Review skit audition, Lair of the Golden Bear, Pinecrest California
photo: copyright 2009 Katy Dickinson
my niece Lynda

my niece Lynda, Lair of the Golden Bear, Pinecrest California
photo: copyright 2009 Katy Dickinson
Lynda’s girl pack

Lynda's girl pack, Lair of the Golden Bear, Pinecrest California
photo: copyright 2009 Katy Dickinson
Paul, Jessica, Matt

Paul, Jessica, Matt, Lair of the Golden Bear, Pinecrest California
photo: copyright 2009 Katy Dickinson
Pete, Eleanor, Katy

Pete, Eleanor, Katy, Lair of the Golden Bear, Pinecrest California
photo: copyright 2009 John Plocher
Family with Oski the Bear

Family with Oski the Bear, Lair of the Golden Bear, Pinecrest California
photo: copyright 2009 Katy Dickinson
Jessica

Jessica, Lair of the Golden Bear, Pinecrest California
photo: copyright 2009 Katy Dickinson
Matt, Blue Review

Matt in Blue Review, Lair of the Golden Bear, Pinecrest California
photo: copyright 2009 Katy Dickinson
Jessica, Blue Review

Jessica in Blue Review, Lair of the Golden Bear, Pinecrest California
photo: copyright 2009 John Plocher
Jessica and Matt

Jessica and Matt, Lair of the Golden Bear, Pinecrest California
photo: copyright 2009 Katy Dickinson
Paul watching a movie

Paul watching a movie, Lair of the Golden Bear, Pinecrest California
photo: copyright 2009 Katy Dickinson
sunset tree

sunset tree, Lair of the Golden Bear, Pinecrest California
photo: copyright 2009 John Plocher
the creek

the creek, Lair of the Golden Bear, Pinecrest California
photo: copyright 2009 Katy Dickinson
water skeeter

water skeeter, Lair of the Golden Bear, Pinecrest California
photo: copyright 2009 Katy Dickinson
Pete, Eleanor, kids

Pete, Eleanor, Daniel, Lynda, Lair of the Golden Bear, Pinecrest California
photo: copyright 2009 Katy Dickinson
pinecones

pinecones, Lair of the Golden Bear, Pinecrest California
photo: copyright 2009 Katy Dickinson
Jesscia and Paul, Nut Tree Train 1994

Jessica and Paul, Nut Tree Railroad, 1994 Vacaville California
photo: copyright 1994 Katy Dickinson
Nut Tree Railroad 2009

Nut Tree Train, 2009 Vacaville California
photo: copyright 2009 Katy Dickinson
Nut Tree Railroad flyer 2009

Nut Tree Train flyer, 2009 Vacaville California
photo: copyright 2009 Katy Dickinson

San Francisco in the fog

San Francisco in the fog
photo: copyright 2009 Katy Dickinson

Images Copyright 2009 by Katy Dickinson and John Plocher

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57th Wedding Anniversary

Last Friday was my parents’ 57th wedding anniversary. They were married in June 1952 in Knoxville, Tennesee. My father grew up in Hickory Township,
Pennsylvania. He met my mother at a Knoxville dance while he was working at the nuclear center at Oak Ridge.

My younger brother Pete Dickinson was in the Bay Area this week to visit clients, so we had a family celebration. Yesterday’s highlight was a walk through the amazing Cantor Center for Visual Arts at Stanford University where we visited the world-class Rodin Collection. Cantor has a huge collection of art by
Auguste Rodin:

    • “This exhibition presents the Center’s entire Rodin collection, 200 works in all. The Cantor Arts Center’s collection of Rodin bronzes is the largest in the world outside Paris, second only to the Musee Rodin. The majority of the collection remains on the ground floor, occupying three galleries. Approximately 170 works by Rodin are on view inside the Center, mostly cast bronze, but also works in wax, plaster, and terra cotta. Twenty bronzes, including The Gates of Hell, on which Rodin worked for two decades to complete, are outside in the Sculpture Garden. The Burghers of Calais are nearby on campus. The Rodin Sculpture Garden is open all hours, with lighting for nighttime viewing. Admission is free.”

We also got to see a Deborah Butterfield bronze cast driftwood horse in Cantor’s front hall.You may have seen another member of sculptor Butterfield’s herd at SFO, the San Francisco airport. Another favorite sculpture at Cantor is “Stone River” by Andy Goldsworthy.

Wade and Eleanor in 1952 

Deborah Butterfield's bronze cast driftwood horse, Cantor Center for Visual Arts at Stanford<br /> photo: copyright 2009 Katy Dickinson

Deborah Butterfield’s horse 

Deborah Butterfield's bronze cast driftwood horse, Cantor Center for Visual Arts at Stanford<br /> photo: copyright 2009 Katy Dickinson

Katy, Pete, Eleanor, Wade 

Katy Dickinson, Pete Dickinson, Eleanor Creekmore Dickinson, Wade Dickinson<br /> photo: copyright 2009 Katy Dickinson

Iris by Rodin 

Iris by Rodin, Cantor Center for Visual Arts at Stanford<br /> photo: copyright 2009 Katy Dickinson

three Rodin busts 

three Rodin busts, Cantor Center for Visual Arts at Stanford<br /> photo: copyright 2009 Katy Dickinson

Caryatid by Rodin 

Caryatid by Rodin, Cantor Center for Visual Arts at Stanford<br /> photo: copyright 2009 Katy Dickinson

Goldsworthy’s “Stone River” 

Stone River by Andy Goldsworthy, Cantor Center for Visual Arts at Stanford<br /> photo: copyright 2009 Katy Dickinson

Images Copyright 2009 Katy Dickinson

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