Two Dads

I have been a dad for so long now, I sometimes forget that I was once a son. That’s seems like a long time ago, and it was, but the memories of being my father’s son are a bit complicated, because in a very real sense I and my siblings had two versions of the same father.

Tom Wogan, my Dad, and my namesake was born in 1917, the second of two boys. His father would die in May of 1918, just prior to the Spanish Flu pandemic. He died of tuberculosis, as did many Irish immigrants. My dad never really had a father of his own, and I think in a way it made him stronger, but also gave him no model on which to build his own notion of fatherhood. He was first a and foremost a Chicago Fireman, but he had delivered ice, driven cabs, 18-wheeler trucks, and near the end of his life funeral hearses. He worked two jobs almost his entire life to care for his family.

I remember him in many ways from back then………….    

I think my earliest memory of my dad was in Lake Delevan, Wisconsin when I was about four years old. We rented a cottage called “The Lazy Daze” and our little family (then probably 6 or 7 in number, including the parents) was on one of our annual vacations at a lake. My parents came in from a party and they were laughing and happy and they brought in red helium balloons which fascinated me. He chucked me on the cheek as I lay in my bunk bed and handed me one of the balloons. The string was still in my hand the next morning, but the balloon had expired and was hanging below my bunk.

I see him tip-toeing around the second-floor window ledges of our two flat, changing out the storm windows with the grace, but certainly not the build, of a ballerina, while the neighbors watched in horrified anticipation that he would fall. He never did.

I see him on the golf course in his white t-shirt and black slacks (shorts were for sissies, I was told), taking a swing at a golf ball. He would stride up to it, with his short, square frame, plant his feet, take no practice swing, and then suddenly attack the ball like it owed him money. Sometimes a great shot, sometime not so much, but he loved the game, and he liked having me along for nine holes. And I have been trying to get him out of my own backswing for many, many years.

Though short, he was tough. Once I witnessed a verbal argument between my Dad and a fellow I considered to be a war hero, as he had served in the 82nd Airborne in the war. The guy was clearly intimidated and, though nothing came of the argument, I was confused. My Uncle Jimmy straightened me out. “Your Dad is a tough guy, Tommy,” he told me. It was like a revelation. 

My Dad had no fuse. He could be angered quickly and was not averse to throwing a punch. I think my younger brother Bill, who we lost in 1979, had the same mercurial makeup. I know I don’t. And yet he made friends easily and could be quite outgoing. Over a two-week vacation in Wisconsin, he started a lifelong friendship with a local bar owner named Gus Oberg. His many friends were lifelong companions from his youth and playing baseball.

He could be loving in his own way. When I was seven or eight, I screwed up and lied about it. We were vacationing on Lake Michigan and the lake was well below the bluff on which the cottage lay. He asked me to run up and bring down a tackle box, which I did, but I left the tailgate window up and open on the 1955 Chevy wagon. A thunderstorm came up and the back of the car got soaked.

He asked me if I did it and I denied it, knowing full well that it could only be me, as everyone else was down at the beach. For two days I denied it and he would not budge. I was grounded in the cottage. Even my mom started to lobby for my case, but he was adamant. Finally, I tearfully broke down and confessed. He took my by the shoulders and said, “OK, I just wanted you to tell the truth. Now go play’”. In all these years, I have never forgotten that lesson of tough love.

——————

In the summer of 1960, Dad had a cerebral accident, or stroke, one scary morning in Sister Lakes. We kids were scattered to other families for a few weeks before he was brought home. I next saw him in a wheelchair when he returned from the hospital. He looked smaller, tired, and a bit confused. I was afraid to go near him because he did not look like the robust, outgoing Dad I knew from just weeks before. And I was ten.

He was the same Dad, but different. He still worked full time, but he was more vulnerable, more emotional, at times, less able to control his anger. But in this altered persona was a Dad who learned to accept little acts of kindness, to let some of us do the heavy lifting now and then. He could also be sentimental.  When the 1967 snowstorm hit Chicago, my brothers and I dug out the alley to allow him to get his car into the garage. He was so proud of us he teared up, something you would have not seen before the stroke.   

And then there was the infamous incident in which my mother’s typewritten manuscript caught a gust of wind while on our way to Michigan. It was her story of her first marriage to 1Lt. Gilbert Finn, killed in 1945 over Japan. For reasons I never understood, other than his temper issues, he wouldn’t stop the car, claiming it was unsafe. My mother was distraught, seeing hours of work on her trusty Underwood typewriter suddenly gone. My sister Maureen sent her young husband Pat on an unsuccessful recovery mission of some 50 miles roundtrip, but the manuscript had scattered to the winds.    

(Authors’ note: Mom rewrote her story in a very moving letter to her late husband on what would have been his 75th birthday. Syndicated columnist Bob Greene ran it in place of his own column one day and it appeared in most major newspapers.)

Once we drove to the south side to see Dad’s cousins, the Becks. Leaving the Dan Ryan at 99th Street, an older, somewhat frail gentlemen behind us misjudged his stopping distance and bumped our car. Dad blew up, and started out the driver’s side door, murder in his eye. My mother nudged me, then at age 17, to stop him, which I did, but barely.     

——————-

The medical world can do so much more for stroke victims today than they could in 1960. By 1968, the stroke caught up with Dad, and one July night, he fell in the living room, gone within a few minutes.

By far the more enduring image of my dad comes from those later years. I see him with his coal black hair, his olive skin, looking more Italian than Irish. I see him at the bar in Wallace’s Tavern at Adams and Laramie in his dark trousers, white t-shirt, smoking his Salem cigarette, and drinking his cold Budweiser. He is shooting the breeze with one of the other regulars, while being served by Ding Dong, the bartender. (See my article on “Joints” to learn more about” Ding Dong.”)

I see him relaxing on the bench outside the cottage at Sister Lakes or hanging on the street level patio with the other “Camp Geraldine” guests, firemen and policemen all.  I see him at his firehouse, polishing the chaplain’s “buggy” as the car was called. I see him surprising my mom and all the guests of the “Fireman’s Club” by coming out of the bedroom costumed as “Reginald Van Gleason,” a Jackie Gleeson character of that time.

Both versions of Dad had this in common: He loved his wife, loved and was very proud of his family, was a courageous firefighter, a tireless provider, and a good man. Was he perfect? No, but then who perfects fatherhood? Certainly not me.

Happy Father’s Day, Dad.  

Some Dads stories……………………

He was stationed at a firehouse at Pulaski and Wilcox, known as “95’s House.” Workmen were replacing the windows along the side of the firehouse and, as it happened, the new windows were longer than the opening for the old ones. The workmen were chipping out bricks at the base of the old windowframe, when a passerby asked his firefighter buddy, Jim McInerny, why they were doing that. Jim, a consummate wise-guy fireman, replied, within earshot of my Dad,” So Wogan can see out.”  My Dad was not pleased.

He played football at Saint Philip High School at Jackson and Kedzie and once told me the story of how the coach told him to “take care” of his opposite number on the gridiron. So on the next play, as the ball was snapped, he stood up and punched the hapless player in the nose. He was ejected from the game, but was convinced he did what his coach asked.

He had a burn scar on his left thigh, roughly the size of a dinner plate. I thought he got it from a fire when I was little, but my mother told me the story of what really happened. My Dad and his only sibling, Uncle Bill, once hung around with a kid they called “Terrible Tommy Finn.” He was terrible indeed, pouring gasoline on my Dad’s pants, and causing the burn, tricking Uncle Bill into looking into an open fuel cannister and then tossing a match in afterward, burning Bills face. His finale involved accidently killing some poor guy on a hunting trip by firing a shotgun as the victim slept on a couch.

Cars were important to him and when I earned my driver’s license, we had a lot of fights. I once asked a girl to a dance and we had a three-day running battle over my borrowing the 1963 Pontiac Catalina. My mom finally got him to relent, but the next day when he discovered a pack of Marlboro cigarettes on the front seat (mine), he came upstairs like Christ into the temple and my mom had to calm him down again. This from Mr. two-packs a day of Salems.  

He had a sense of the layout of Chicago that would rival Google Maps. In the days when he drove the Fire Department Chaplain, Monsignor William Gorman, they would be on their way to a fire. The good Monsignor, who had no sense of direction, telling him where to turn. And Dad was not able to correct the obvious errors.  Invariably, they would be lost, and Monsignor would say “Well, Tom, we made a mistake. “

In his last years, while driving funeral livery, which understandably is day-to-day work, he was always happy to get “a trip” as he referred to a funeral assignment. The calls usually came in around dinnertime and he had given a private phone line to his network of funeral directors. We quickly named it the “deadline.” Unfortunately, my sister Rita also gave the number to her friends. One evening, as the phone rang and he jumped from the table, happy to have work for the next day, the caller asked for Rita. Everyone ran for cover.

Send Lawyers, Guns and Money

“Send Lawyers, Guns, and Money, for the shit has hit the fan.”

-the late, great songwriter Warren Zevon

When I was 14, I robbed a train. Don’t look for it in the storied annals of Chicago Crime. You won’t find it in the dusty files of some long-gone police station or in the basement of the old City News Bureau. It never made any newspapers;  the story exists only in my memory, the memories of my two accomplices, and maybe some really old 15th District coppers who were once young 15th District coppers on that long ago day.

It was in the spring of 1964, I was a freshman at Quigley South, a preparatory seminary for adolescent boys who thought they wanted to be priests. I was fourteen, and I’m not sure how fourteen year olds could have had a life plan that went much beyond their next meal, let alone a whole career plan, but that’s the way it was back then. We arrived at Quigley as celibate virgins and the priests that ran the seminary system wanted us to stay that way, not that there was much chance of losing either status at that age. They wanted to minimize our contact with the opposite sex, so they gave us Thursdays off and had us come to school on Saturdays. In this way, they would sabotage Friday night and minimize our exposure to makeup, curves, eyes and those “near occasions of sin” known as girls.

We loved it. We weren’t interested in girls yet anyway and besides, as we would find out in a few years when the hormones fired up, there were girls for whom Wednesday night worked out just fine for the right guy. And we enjoyed unfettered access to everything each Thursday while the rest of the world worked or was being schooled: empty bowling alleys, gym floors at nearby parishes, movie houses, wide open golf courses and Wednesday night poker games. Because it was only the Quigley guys, it was natural that you made your plans on Wednesday, as those magical teenage communication tools known as cell phones and texting were then still the stuff of science fiction.

My plan on that nice spring day was to bike it over to Danny’s house and then a group of us would bike to Saint Francis of Rome’s gym in Berwyn, where the gym was open to us all day. When I got there, his mother told me he had left and wasn’t sure where he had gone.  I 7knew where he was. Danny lived a block from a wide train switchyard that ran east to west, south of the great ditch now known as the Eisenhower Expressway, but then as the Congress Expressway.  We had spent hours there among the slow moving boxcars and tank cars of the big switching yard, placing pennies on the tracks and letting rail car wheels flatten them out into razor thin copper wafers as large as silver dollars. There were few railroad workers on foot to chase us away, and most of the others were not inclined to get down from their locomotive perches.

Our other pastimes included hitching short rides by jumping on the train handler’s ladders on the slower moving box cars and throwing stones against the tank cars to create a “bonging” sound. Rocket scientists we were not.  Our parents had all warned us to stay out of the train yard, that a boy had lost a leg there and that it was no place for kids. In fact, in this time before “Safety” was invented, it was a perfect place for kids, and besides, no one could quite remember who that unlucky boy was and when it had happened.

I spotted Danny and another Quigley guy, Patrick, both walking down a line of stalled boxcars on one of the many sidings. They had dropped their bikes by the side of the fencing and were about a block away. Every so often they would stop, work some little piece of bright silver off the boxcar door lock, then grab the big door handle and swing it outwards from the car. With a push, they would slide open the boxcar cargo door and expose the cargo inside. Curious, and sensing some new form of rail yard hilarity, I decided to give it a try.  I stayed on my bike, having had one stolen not long before that, and circled around to another opening in the fence, then shackled my bike to the fencepost and joined the fun. We were about fifty yards apart, and I yelled over to them asking if they had found anything interesting. They hadn’t and told me so.

So I picked out a big brown boxcar for myself, eyeballed the little tin strip that secured the door lock in the hasp, and began twisting the metal strip. After a few twists, it broke, and I opened up the big car. It was filled top to bottom, nose to tail with Diamond matches, the well-known brand printed in red on the cases.  I had no use for matches, certainly not tens of thousands of them. I turned to the next car and started to perform the same operation. This time I noticed the word “Federal” printed on the little tin strip. I didn’t give it much thought.

Two gunshots rang out. I don’t think I knew they were gunshots at first, but then I saw a man in a suit standing behind my friends, a still-smoking silver handgun pointed in the air. I started to back away, thinking my friends were in deep trouble. That’s when I felt a hand on my shoulder. Another man in a suit, also holding a gun, yelled ”I’ve got the lookout!”

Me, a lookout? Obviously not a very good one. The suit who had me in tow was a serious Italian looking guy, black hair, five o’clock shadow and an expensive looking leather jacket. He smelled like too much cologne. He held me while the other suit, also Italian looking, brought my friends over to me. Patrick was shaking and staring to cry. Danny was trying to hold it together and looking at his feet. The suit who fired his gun, Detective Smug, just exuded self-confidence; he informed us that we were in huge trouble and would most likely be going to jail. Danny lost it and joined Patrick in tearing up. For some reason, maybe because I hadn’t yet processed it, or maybe because they were the ones he was near when he fired his gun, I didn’t. My suit, Detective Serious, said nothing.

They marched us to where their car was parked and placed handcuffs on Patrick and Danny. Patrick was so skinny the cuffs slid off. Pissed, Detective Smug placed them on him again and told him he had better not let them slide off again. Patrick held his arms out straight.  I thought the next set of cuffs would be for me, but they only had two sets. “Don’t try to run or we’ll have to shoot you”, Detective Smug warned me. Detective Serious turned away, so I couldn’t see him smile, but I caught it. They drove us to Chicago Avenue’s 15th District Police station, hauled us out of the car, Patrick still holding his arms out straight as if sleepwalking. They paraded us up the front steps, coppers glancing at us curiously as they came in and out. I guess we didn’t fit the profile of true regular thugs. They sat us on a wooden bench in a hallway and Detective Smug went in to make his report. Detective Serious lit up a cigarette and kept his eye on us. It began to sink in, and I started shaking, too. I could see the Angel of Death hovering high above me, looking for me. He was a large black bird-like thing, but he also resembled one of the countless WW II model warplanes my brothers and I had assembled in our coalbin-turned-hobby room in the basement on Monroe St.

Detective Smug came out and told us we could use a phone in the office he had just come from to call our parents. The Angel of Death turned, starting down on his bomb run, wings flared and teeth bared. I got my mom on the first try, tearlfully telling her that I was in a police station. She was shocked, I could tell, but asked if I was OK and told me to wait. Patrick and Danny made their calls. Here is what I didn’t know. My mom made three calls, one to my father, and one to each of her brothers, my uncles Tommy and Jimmy. Tommy was a fireman who lived close to the station. Jimmy was a police sergeant, and not just any old police sergeant, but the desk sergeant at the 15th District, my current location and my first stop on the way to a life of imprisonment. My father was a fireman, too, but he worked as the Chaplain’s driver and, not being tied to an engine or truck, had a greater degree of freedom than most others in his firehouse. I later learned that he stopped home, probably to calm my mother down, and when asked by one of my siblings where he was going, famously told them, “I have to go spring Capone.”

Tommy arrived first, within minutes, it seemed. Tommy, God love him, went straight  at Detective Smug, got right in his face and began to ask him questions. Detective Smug rattled off all of the charges he was planning to file. I didn’t really understand what he was saying, but it sounded like he was charging us with every crime going back to the Chicago Fire. Tommy cranked it up a bit and Detective Smug got louder and rattled off more charges. I think he now wanted to include us as accomplices in the Fort Dearborn Massacre. The argument began to draw a crowd of young coppers getting ready for a shift change. The Angel of Death was screaming down now, his ragged finger on the release button.

Here’s something else I didn’t know: not all coppers are created equal. Detective Smug and Detective Serious were known as “Railroad Dicks”, an inferior life form among the Chicago Police. The fact that they were in the private employ of the railroads meant somehow they weren’t good enough to be CPD, or maybe they just got paid better.  And they were Italian to boot, awash in a sea of Irish faces. The crowd parted as Uncle Jimmy arrived, not in uniform as it was his day off. This 15th District office was his domain. He was the desk sergeant and his primary job was to keep order and make sure nothing bothered the Watch Commander in his office. He looked over the Detectives and looked over us. He asked me if we were OK. I choked out a yes. The crowd of young coppers was drawing closer now, growing in number, perhaps anticipating that this was the main event.

Uncle Jimmy asked which one was in charge. Detective Smug assured him that he was, smugly. He told him to start at the beginning and tell him what happened.   Smug began to tell his tale, warming to the task as he went on, but when he got to the gunshots, Uncle Jimmy stopped him. He asked, very slowly, to repeat what he had just said. Smug was a little thrown by that. His face inched closer to Smug and there was something different in Uncle Jimmy’s tone, as if somewhere a fuse was lit.

A few seconds later, the fuse had run its short course. “You mean to say that you fired your weapons over the heads of these unarmed, underage kids?” he fairly shouted and snarled. I think we all jumped a bit on our bench. Detective Smug felt the ground shift under his feet. He stammered that these were only warning shots, fired harmlessly into the air. The Angel of Death suddenly veered off the bomb run, unsure of his target.

“How do I know you didn’t just shoot at them and miss, you dumb son of a bitch”? Jimmy yelled in his face, his own face a bright red. Detective Smug was near panic now, and the crowd of young coppers began to grin, sensing where this was going. Detective Serious glanced around, looking for an escape path. None appeared. Some of the coppers were inching forward, hands on the butts of their revolvers. Jimmy had heard enough. “Lock these two assholes up”, Jimmy said with a tone of total disgust to his more-than-willing minions. As one, the coppers moved on the Detectives, who by now had completely surrendered.

Serious put his hand up and spoke for the first time. He said this was a big misunderstanding and that he was sure something could be worked out. Smug was devastated, beyond the point where he could even look up or speak. “In my office”, said Uncle Jimmy.

The door slammed, I could hear more shouting, mostly Jimmy, and some mumbled comments from them. Ten minutes later, the Detectives emerged, broken, with eyes downcast. A smirking patrolman returned their handcuffs to them and they had to leave via the front stairs, past two rows of Chicago’s finest, who shook their heads sadly and muttered comments about railroad dicks. The Angel of Death appeared to be returning to base. “Your Dad’s on his way”, Jimmy told me. The Angel of Death veered back onto his bomb run.

Patrick’s and Danny’s parents had arrived, taking their wayward and now suspect seminarian sons home. I looked out the window and saw Uncle Jimmy talking with my Dad. I dreaded having to meet him like this. My Dad came into the station, looked at me, hooked his thumb over his shoulder and said, “Get in the car, goofy.” Goofy, by the way, was a mostly firehouse term used by my father and his fellow firefighters and maybe some coppers to describe crazy people, politicians, criminals, people who took unnecessary risks, and imbecile children.  I am sure Walt Disney never saw a penny in royalties.

And that was it. He didn’t say a word about it in the car, that night, nor ever again in the four years he had yet to live. I wondered what awaited me at home, and when I got there, my siblings sort of backed away from me as if they might be accidentally struck by some parental disciplinary shrapnel, or maybe suffer collateral damage from what was soon to be my certain destruction. But it never happened. My mother looked me over, told me I had certainly had a big day, and went back to cooking dinner. Confused, and certain that the Angel of Death must still be about, I served early mass the next morning and the pastor,

Monsignor Doyle, told me to come by the Rectory after mass. This explained it. My family was just being kind to me, knowing that my doom would come from a different, and much higher quarter.  I sat in the Pastor’s office and he came in with a cup of coffee and sat at his desk. “What happened yesterday?” he asked. I told him of the prank that had gone bad…really bad. I told him no one was charged. I told him we were all real sorry. He sipped his coffee and listened. The Angel of Death was loud in my ears now, moments away from releasing his ordnance. ”Don’t do anything like that ever again”, he said. “Now go on to school”. He dismissed me and went back to his coffee; the Angel of Death exploded in mid-air, pieces and parts raining down all around me, but none hitting me.

I’m guessing that night that the story of the Great Train Robbery got a good laugh out of the priests in the rectory, sitting around sipping their twelve year-old scotch. My father probably told it to a few buddies at Wallace’s Tavern, and maybe his buddies shared stories of the capers of their own idiot children.

———————

What a wonderful thing it is to have a big family, and to have them close around you and ready to take up your defense. My uncles, responding to their big sister’s phone call, dropped what they were doing and were there to take my part, to see to it that adolescent stunts don’t need to be taken somewhere they shouldn’t go. How much was I loved when people like my uncles got so worked up on my behalf?

There was one other thing I didn’t know or appreciate that day: I had witnessed firsthand the art of parenting. People who had been through Great Depressions and wars could distinguish between Trouble and Real Trouble, decide which one it was, and give it only the attention it deserved. I have tried to remember that lesson in my time as a parent, when my children made their mistakes, but it was usually only my wife’s good heart that could gentle my anger and force me to remember that I was far, far from the perfect child.

The difficult business of being a parent to children is a very complex series of tasks. It’s all about providing, nurturing, planning, coaching, enforcing, guiding, encouraging, commiserating, and creating the stable base of a home. And in most homes you only get two people to share all of that work.Only when you get into trouble do you get the chance to see parenting at its best.  The art, the true of art of parenting, like all art, will always live more in the heart than in the mind.

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