Tag Archives: Eleanor

Distributing Family Stuff

My brothers and I are working out an equitable and peaceable way to distribute family stuff. Unfortunately, we are the descendants of many generations of craft workers, artists, and collectors, so there are a great many things to be considered: furniture carved by our Mother‘s Grandmother, mirrors and stained glass created by our Mother‘s Grandfather, our Father’s Grandfather’s iron train set, our Father’s Mother’s painted set of cider mugs with matching pitcher, paintings and drawings by our Mother, etc.

Having seen several excellent examples of nasty, greedy, and predatory behavior during estate distributions, we are seeking a better way to bestow heirlooms fairly. Our motivation comes from growing up during a family fight over an estate that started in 1990 and lasted for more than ten years; the quarrel about which descendant got what eventually outlasted the lifetime of the original executor.   We hope to avoid that experience in our generation. As our Father says: “I would rather burn it than fight about it.”

I am writing this out because when I searched the web for a good example, a property distribution process to model ours on, everything I found seemed to be associated with contentious divorces. I did not find any models in which the parties were assumed to be on speaking terms. My brothers and I each want some family stuff but we also want to preserve our good relationship more than we want any particular thing. I hope that the system we have developed over the last six years will be of use to other families who share our values.

Our parents are both living and have very generously and foresightedly agreed to distribute a selection of their family possessions in advance of their passing (which we hope will be many years in the future). My brothers and I have been in this distribution process for the last six years and have already sorted out who gets which of the larger pieces of furniture. In addition to getting a family chore done, we are learning more about each other and getting closer through these discussions. In this context “distribute” means transferring ownership but not necessarily the objects themselves. For example, my parents dining room table was given to me several years ago in one of our distributions; however, my parents will continue to use the table for their lifetimes.

At first, the distribution lists were annual and small, with just three or four heirlooms going to each of us. The distribution we are discussing now is our most ambitious, with fifty-four heirlooms to be sorted into three groups of eighteen. Here is an overview of the process we originally used:

  1. Our parents make a list of heirlooms for us to consider and distribute.  Usually, this means my having several discussions with our Mother since I live closest. One of my brothers lives at the other end of California and the other lives across the country, in Massachusetts.
  2. My brothers and I ask questions – how big is it? what condition is it in? where did it come from – is there any special meaning to it? Sometimes pictures are distributed.
  3. My brothers and I check with our spouses to collect their opinions.
  4. My brothers and I have a three-way phone call during which we decide who gets what. The call is only between the three of us, no spouses or parents.
  5. I tell our Mother what we decided in our call.
  6. Our Mother writes each of us a letter giving us the items.

With so many more items to distribute this time, it has been harder to come to a decision. Our Mother sent us a list in August we are still discussing. We had not seen many of the items, so the whole family took a house tour when my brothers visited during Christmas. We walked around the house we grew up in and asked our Mother to point to each item on her list. Last Saturday, my brothers and I had a preliminary phone call.

We discussed what “family furniture” meant to us. If our Mother bought it, does that still count as “family”? When our Great Grandparents’ early Victorian house on Circle Park in Knoxville, Tennessee, was torn down in 1964, our Grandmother removed the front doors. Eventually our Mother had the doors installed on her house in San Francisco. Are those antique doors “family furniture”?

My brothers asked me to sort the fifty four items into three groups prior to our next call. I decided to ignore the potential market value of the items and focus on three important categories: size, history, and who actually wants the thing. I created three groups of 18 items with roughly the same number of things in each of these categories in each group:

  1. Size: Small (antique toys, table clocks, the Cherokee hunting bow, the cider set), Medium (side tables, small chairs, stained glass panels and mirrors, our Great Grandfather’s glass case of stuffed birds), and Large (the front doors, our Father’s white leather arm chair, an 8′ tall hall mirror in a gold plaster frame, a huge wooden ice box, a set of balloon back chairs with seat cushions embroidered by our Great Grandmother).
  2. Special Family Origin: anything made by a family member, the bannister from the Circle Park house, our Great Grandmother’s wicker rocking chair, etc.
  3. Desireability: Anything that more than one of us expressed interest in during the preliminary phone call.

I sent the sorted groups to my brothers with the following proposed process:

  1. Step 1 – Before the Meeting – Review the groups, ask questions, talk with spouses, say if there are one or two “heart’s desire” items
  2. Step 2 – During the Meeting – Each of us picks a group (1, 2 or 3)
  3. Step 3 – Accept / acknowledge conditions to replace installed items (such as the front doors)
  4. Step 4 – Discuss trades. Other than trades, the group is distributed intact, where and as is.

I am curious to see how well this sorting worked and whether the distribution discussion goes better as a result.

Note: None of the items pictured are for sale. I do not provide pricing or sales advice for similar items. Please do not ask.

Images Copyright 2008-2016 by Katy Dickinson

13 June 2016: Images retaken and reposted, note added. 4 Feb 2021: photo links updated.

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Silicon Valley Christmas

We had a pleasant Christmas at home with family this year. My parents adopted two young Siamese cats. My daughter Jessica came home from Carnegie Mellon University for three weeks. My two brothers and their families visited for almost a week. We drove north to San Francisco several times: to sing Christmas carols on the cable car and see the city lights, go to the Great Dickens Christmas Fair, gather for a family dinner at the Beach Chalet, and just visit.

We hosted three parties (Christmas, Jessica’s 20th birthday, and New Year’s). Unfortunately, our family photo server got sick and eventually died, so I am just now able to post this blog entry…

John and Jessica and I went to San Francisco Federal District Court on 19 December 2008 to hear attorney Victoria Hall present to Judge Jeffrey S. White on behalf of  Dr. Bob Jacobsen the latest on  JMRI and the KAM Open Source dispute.

St. Andrew’s Episcopal Church had a children’s Christmas pagent, and the craft fundraiser for SAMA (St.
Andrew’s Medical Assistance).  Sun Labs held its Holiday Cookie Exchange (to which John Plocher sent his famous peanut butter K Bars).

On our evening walks around our Willow Glen neighborhood, John and I admired the Christmas lights. One neighbor programmed a wonderful yard display that lit up different parts of their house as well as trees, bushes, and figures (candy canes, a seal, snowman, bear, and igloo) exactly timed to the movements of Christmas tunes. My favorite music was the Vince Guaraldi theme from “A Charlie Brown Christmas”. John and I stood in the rain the hear it twice.

We finally finished glazing and firing all of the ceramics we brought home from camp in August, including three tea cups by Jessica. My best Christmas present was one of a set of three beautiful and
well crafted ceramic cups my son Paul made at school: one each for John, Jessica, and me.

Borte and Khan

Borte and Khan, Siamese kittens photo: copyright 2008 Katy Dickinson

Laura and Borte

Laura and Borte the Siamese kitten photo: copyright 2008 Katy Dickinson

19 Dec JMRI Hearing, Federal Court

JMRI, 19 December Hearing, Federal District Court, Victoria Hall, Dr. Bob Jacobsen, Jessica Dickinson Goodman, Katy Dickinson photo: copyright 2008 John Plocher

Sun Labs Cookie Exchange

Sun Labs Cookie Exchange photo: copyright 2008 Katy Dickinson

sheep practice

St. Andrew's Christmas pagent sheep practice photo: copyright 2008 Katy Dickinson

angel practice

St. Andrew's Christmas pagent angel practice photo: copyright 2008 Katy Dickinson

St. Andrew’s cross

St. Andrew's cross with 3 Christmas trees photo: copyright 2008 Katy Dickinson

St. Andrew’s pagent

St. Andrew's children's pagent photo: copyright 2008 Katy Dickinson

St. Andrew’s children’s pagent

St. Andrew's children's pagent photo: copyright 2008 Katy Dickinson

SAMA craft sale

SAMA craft sale photo: copyright 2008 Katy Dickinson

SAMA craft sale

SAMA craft sale - embroidered purse photo: copyright 2008 Katy Dickinson

Cuthbert’s Tea Shoppe

Dickens Fair

Tea at the Dickens Fair, Jessica Dickinson Goodman, Matthew Holmes, Eleanor Dickinson photo: copyright 2008 Katy Dickinson

Pirates of Penzance

Dickens Fair

Pirates of Penzance, Dickens Fair photo: copyright 2008 Katy Dickinson

Ladies’ Oratorical & Recreational

Society at Mad Sal’s, Dickens Fair

Ladies' Oratorical and Recreational Society, Mad Sal's, Dickens Fair photo: copyright 2008 Katy Dickinson

SF Cable Car Carols

San Francisco Cable Car Carols, Eleanor Dickinson photo: copyright 2008 Katy Dickinson

Seeing the SF Hyatt’s decorations

Seeing the San Francisco Hyatt's decorations, Eleanor Dickinson, Jessica Dickinson Goodman, Matthew Holmes, Paul Dickinson Goodman, Wade Dickinson photo: copyright 2008 Katy Dickinson

Jessica and Paul

Jessica and Paul, San Francisco Hyatt photo: copyright 2008 Katy Dickinson

Hyatt lights, elevators

San Francisco Hyatt lights and elevators photo: copyright 2008 Katy Dickinson

decorating our tree

Jessica and Paul decorate our tree photo: copyright 2008 Katy Dickinson

giving tree advice

John Plocher giving tree advice photo: copyright 2008 Katy Dickinson

Jessica, Paul, tree

Jessica, Paul with tree photo: copyright 2008 Katy Dickinson

Willow Glen lights

Willow Glen Christmas lights photo: copyright 2008 Katy Dickinson

Paul’s mugs

3 mugs by Paul Dickinson Goodman photo: copyright 2008 Katy Dickinson

Jessica’s mugs

Jessica's mugs photo: copyright 2008 Katy Dickinson

Jessica’s 20th

Jessica's 20th birthday party photo: copyright 2008 Katy Dickinson

Images Copyright 2008 by Katy Dickinson and John Plocher

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Caboose Art Tour

I am still decorating the inside of WP668,
our backyard caboose. The last big piece of furniture, the

Victorian fainting couch
, is still not finished. Below are pictures of
some of the art currently inside. Two of the artists are in my family:
Eleanor
Creekmore Dickinson
is my Mother, and

Evelyn Van Gilder Creekmore
was my Grandmother.
Elkmont
is where our family cabin was in the Great Smoky Mountains, near
Knoxville, Tennessee. Some of the furniture in WP668 was hand carved by
my Great-Grandmother, Ellen Bolli Van Gilder.

“Gay Street, Knoxville”

with Eleanor Dickinson

1951

Gay Street, Knoxville by Eleanor Dickinson, 1951 painting and artist
photo: copyright 2008 Katy Dickinson
“Gay Street, Knoxville”

by Eleanor Dickinson

1951

Gay Street, Knoxville 1951 painting by Eleanor Dickinson
photo: copyright 2008 Katy Dickinson
Victorian Etchings – Shakespeare’s Heroines:

Katharine and Cassandra

circa 1900

Victorian Etchings circa 1900 - Shakespeare's Heroines, Katherine and Cassandra
photo: copyright 2008 Katy Dickinson
Dream of Evelyn V. Creekmore,
Elkmont

by Eleanor Creekmore
Dickinson


1970

Dream of Evelyn Creekmore and Elkmont 1970 painting by Eleanor Dickinson
photo: copyright 2008 Katy Dickinson
Elkmont,
Tennessee, Creek Paintings

by Evelyn Van Gilder Creekmore

circa 1980

Elkmont Creek Paintings circa 1980 by Evelyn Van Gilder Creekmore
photo: copyright 2008 Katy Dickinson
Inside WP668

Inside WP668 Caboose
photo: copyright 2008 Katy Dickinson
Inside WP668

Inside WP668 Caboose
photo: copyright 2008 Katy Dickinson
2008 WP668 Caboose drawing

by Eleanor Dickinson

WP668 Caboose drawing 2008 by Eleanor Dickinson
photo: copyright 2008 Katy Dickinson
WP668 Caboose

today

WP668 Caboose today
photo: copyright 2008 Katy Dickinson

Images Copyright 2008 Katy Dickinson

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Win Ng Chicken

For my birthday, my mother gave me two books and a chicken. The chicken is an elegant ceramic cooking pot made by Win Ng in the late 1960s. It is practical and well made and has cooked many family dinners.

Win Ng was a family friend, ceramicist, and co-founder of the popular Taylor & Ng store in San Francisco. When I was a little girl, he adopted one of our Siamese kittens, which gave us something to discuss when we visited his store. Long after the store closed, my mother rented studio space from Win Ng on Belcher Street in San Francisco. She still has one of his larger ceramic sculptures on her garden deck.

Win Ng Chicken Cooker:
Win Ng Ceramic Chicken Cooker owned by Katy Dickinson

Win Ng Ceramic Chicken Cooker owned by Katy Dickinson

Win Ng Ceramic Cube:
Win Ng Ceramic Cube owned by Katy Dickinson

Images Copyright 2008-2011 by Katy Dickinson
Updated 17 August 2016

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Dickens Christmas Fair & Cable Car Carolling in San Francisco

Last weekend, we enjoyed many of our family’s traditional Christmas events, including: going to The Great Dickens Christmas Fair and singing carols on a cable car in San Francisco. We picked up my daughter Jessica and her boyfriend Matt at SFO airport on Wednesday. (They were due home from college Tuesday night but their second flight was cancelled and they had to stay over in Dallas, Texas, courtesy of American Airlines.)

On Saturday, Jessi and her friends dressed up to go to the Dickens Fair at the San Francisco Cow Palace. My mother and friend Laura went too. Sunday, we went to the Lessons and Carols service at St. Andrew’s Episcopal Church in Saratoga, then picked up Matt and drove to the city to sing carols with my parents. (Jessica revised our carols book this year.) We rode from Van Ness and California up and over Nob Hill to the Embarcadero. We walked around there to see the decorations before taking the cable car back. Today, my mother is coming to San Jose to assemble and bake fruitcakes. Tonight, we go to Christmas Eve service at St. Andrew’s. Christmas is at our house tomorrow; we are expecting 12 for dinner.

SFO: Jessica and Matt

home from college

Jessica and Matt home from college, SFO 2007 photo: copyright 2007 Katy Dickinson

Dickens Fair – Mad Sal’s Ladies’

Oratorical and Recreational Society

Dickens Fair - Mad Sal's Ladies' Oratorical and Recreational Society 2007 photo: copyright 2007 Katy Dickinson

Dickens Fair – Gilbert & Sullivan’s

Pirates of Penzance

Dickens Fair - Gilbert & Sullivan's Pirates of Penzance 2007 photo: copyright 2007 Katy Dickinson

Dickens Fair –

Pirates of Penzance

Dickens Fair - Gilbert & Sullivan's Pirates of Penzance, 2007 photo: copyright 2007 Katy Dickinson

Dickens Fair –

Jessica and Friends

Dickens Fair - Jessica and Friends 2007 photo: copyright 2007 Katy Dickinson

Dickens Fair –

Dark Garden tableau

Dickens Fair - Dark Garden tableau 2007 photo: copyright 2007 Katy Dickinson

Dickens Fair –

Dark Garden tableau

Dickens Fair - Dark Garden tableau 2007 photo: copyright 2007 Katy Dickinson

San Francisco

cable car sign

San Francisco cable car sign 2007 photo: copyright 2007 Katy Dickinson

Family Christmas

carol song book

Family Christmas carol song book 2007 photo: copyright 2007 Katy Dickinson

Eleanor and Paul

with cable car

Eleanor and Paul with cable car 2007 photo: copyright 2007 Katy Dickinson

San Francisco

cable car view

San Francisco cable car view 2007 photo: copyright 2007 Katy Dickinson

John and Paul

singing

John and Paul singing 2007 photo: copyright 2007 Katy Dickinson

John and Eleanor

singing

John and Eleanor singing 2007 photo: copyright 2007 Katy Dickinson

John and Jessica

singing

John and Jessica singing 2007 photo: copyright 2007 Katy Dickinson

Family with

cable cars

Family with cable cars 2007 photo: copyright 2007 Katy Dickinson

Paul and Eleanor

on cable car

Paul and Eleanor on cable car 2007 photo: copyright 2007 Katy Dickinson

Cable car on

California

Cable car on California 2007 photo: copyright 2007 Katy Dickinson

Giant red ornament

plaza decorations

Giant red ornament plaza decorations - San Francisco, 2007 photo: copyright 2007 Katy Dickinson

Paul inside

red balls

Paul inside red balls 2007 photo: copyright 2007 Katy Dickinson

Jessica inside

red balls

Jessica inside red balls 2007 photo: copyright 2007 Katy Dickinson

Matt inside

red balls

Matt inside red balls 2007 photo: copyright 2007 John Plocher

Family with

red ornaments

Family with red ornaments - San Francisco, 2007 photo: copyright 2007 Katy Dickinson

Hyatt Regency

sculpture and lights

Hyatt Regency sculpture and lights 2007 photo: copyright 2007 Katy Dickinson

Jessica and Matt

pool reflections

Jessica and Matt pool reflections 2007 photo: copyright 2007 Katy Dickinson

Hyatt lights

and tree

Hyatt lights and tree 2007 photo: copyright 2007 Katy Dickinson

Hyatt tree

and hanging lights

Hyatt tree and hanging lights - San Francisco, 2007 photo: copyright 2007 Katy Dickinson

Paul and Jessica

and Matt at Hyatt

Paul and Jessica and Matt at Hyatt 2007 photo: copyright 2007 Katy Dickinson

Wade at

Hyatt

Wade at Hyatt 2007 photo: copyright 2007 John Plocher

Images Copyright 2007 by Katy Dickinson and John Plocher

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Last 2 Fruitcakes in Oven

After decorating the Christmas tree, our family held its annual fruitcake assembly and baking party last night. My son Paul mixed pounds and pounds of dates and nuts and candied fruit in a big new gardening bucket I bought for the purpose. After much discussion, raisins and apricots were left out but dried figs were added. We have used the same recipe (from Mrs. Benziger of Knoxville, Tennessee) all of my life but the particular mix each year varies by the taste of the cooks. Everyone wore a tea cosy or Santa hat for the event.

My daughter Jessica and mother chopped and measured and mixed and discussed modifications. We baked one of the cakes in a rose-shaped Bundt pan this year. The tips of the petals are dry but otherwise it worked well. My daughter is brushing honey on the top now to moisten it. There is one big round fruitcake but the other 6 are loaf shaped. The last 2 loaves are in the oven now. They take over an hour to bake and no one wanted to stay up past midnight for two more to cook.

Today we visit the Dickens’ Christmas Fair at the Cow Palace in San Francisco. Jessica has assembled a costume of sort-of Victorian clothes since she likes to dress up. My mother is looking forward to sitting down with mulled wine and listening to sea chanties and bawdy songs in Mad Sal’s Alehouse. I plan to spend some of my fair time shopping and some listening to the songs or maybe watching a play by Gilbert and Sullivan.

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Bronze Head Molds

My parents drove down the peninsula from San Francisco for dinner
last night, as they often do on Sundays. John cooked a wonderful
Italian stew (see the December 2006 issue of
Sunset
magazine for the recipe) and steamed artichokes. Paul helped by
peeling potatoes, zesting lemons, and being the Sous Chef. We all enjoyed the
evening until it was time for them to go. Then the parents mentioned that
they had a few things to bring in from the car.

What they had in the car was five large plaster and rubber molds for
bronze heads that my parents decided I wanted to store. This is the
downside to having an artist in the family. My mother is Eleanor Creekmore Dickinson, retired Professor of Life Drawing from the California
College of the Arts (CCA). CCA was the California College of Arts and
Crafts (CCAC) when she started teaching there.

She is best known for her line drawings and paintings but artists like
to try new media and about thirty years ago, my mother was working in bronze.
She created two portrait heads: one of the model Lillian and the other of
my father, Wade. Four of the plaster molds go with the Lillian and
Wade bronzes. I was in college at the time but I remember that my
younger brother Peter made good money polishing Wade’s bronze head.

Here is my mother’s bust of my father and a photo of Wade about that time:


1972 Wade,
photo: copyright 1972 Eleanor Dickinson

1976 bronze head of Wade,
photo: copyright 1976 Eleanor Dickinson

The fifth mold is smaller and if you fold back the black rubber you can
see that it is of just a face, not a whole head. This one was sculpted
as a life mask of my mother by her friend
Ruth Asawa. Ruth made a fired red
clay face mask as well as the bronze face itself. My mother said that
Ruth was using all of her friends as models for a show of bronze faces.
You can see Ruth Asawa’s current work at

The Sculpture of Ruth Asawa: Contours in the Air
,
18 November 2006 — 28 January 2007, at the de Young Museum in
San Francisco.

All I can think to do is to buy some big plastic storage boxes and
put the molds in my basement. Maybe some day someone will want to make more…

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