Some thoughts on Mark:

Mark used to say that in life you either had time or money, but not usually both at the same time. So you should enjoy whichever one you had at the moment.

Mark taught the little kids how to shop (and all of us really).

We almost buried him in his tuxedo. He loved any excuse to wear it and always felt great in it.

Mark always said you should travel with a $100 bill because you never knew when you might need it for a hotel or something important.

Debugging God's Plans

In 8th grade Mark spent considerable time trying to talk Mom into letting him go to public high school. Since this would be the first Schmitt to go public, Mom was having none of it and off Mark went to U of D high school with Dick and Paul. One day in mid-year, Mark came home on the bus while Dick stayed for band practice and Paul stayed for track. That day on their way home, Dick and Paul were hit from behind and the red VW bug was crushed all the way up to the front seats. If Mark had been in the car he would have been killed. Well, Mark wasted no time trying to convince Mom that this was a sign from God that he should be going to public school! And so he did!

Creative writing

Dale Hardin called one night to talk and mentioned that he had just run across 25 years of cancelled checks in the garage that Mark had saved. I asked him if he had thrown them out and he said yes, except for one. He wanted to save a sample of Mark's handwriting. We talked about how Mark had gotten past the nuns with his flourishes. Dale said that Mark used to practice writing like one of their teachers. (The teacher responsible for signing the hall passes in high school.) Dale says he got pretty good at it and nobody could tell the difference after a while, which came in handy any time they needed a hall pass!

Contributed by Mary

 

Memories of Mark

I made sauerkraut & Keilbasa the other night, and thought of Mark. He perfected Mom's recipe and made it when he had a crowd coming. Mark was appalled that I added carrots!

San Diego

Jon and I last saw Mark September 1997 in San Diego. Jon attended a conference and I went along to spend the week with Mark. He stayed with his friend Holly (the redhead who came to the funeral) at her house in the downtown area. Mark & I would goof off during the day, then meet up with Jon to go out for dinner. Mark helped me shop for our newly remodeled bedroom; I appreciated his good taste and his ability to spend my money!

Old Memory

Summer, 1982. Mark & I took the train from San Francisco to Seattle. It was an overnight trip; we packed a whole suitcase full of munchies! We visited Pam Salvatore and Paul & Cindy (pre-kids). He was a fun travel companion…good natured, game for anything, and full of stories and a fine sense of humor.

Mark came to visit us September 1995. Jack was 2 years old; Karl was 6 month old. He always thought we lived in such a remote area -- and he continued to think that after his visit! He helped us get our front perennial garden planted: Mark pointed and Jon dug the dirt.

Vice Squad

I talked to Mark about once a week on the phone. He was in that earlier time zone, so I'd call him after the kids were snug in bed. He was always chatty, filling me in on his week, latest clinic visit and lab values. During one conversation, he reported how tired he was. He had quit smoking and drinking coffee. My advice was to have a cigarette, a cup of coffee, and call Debbie. (This was about the time it was discovered he was anemic.) He told everyone his sister, an R.N., told him to start smoking again, so it must be okay!

I last talked to Mark at the end of June. He was still in New York City, heading to LA the next day after five weeks of being away. He seemed tired, anxious to get home, and back to his clinic. When I asked him how he was doing, he replied, "I'm not in the most optimistic phase of my disease right now." It was a telling statement, one that made me sad and worried at the same time. Mark had always been upbeat, compliant, and totally optimistic in our conversations previously. I knew he was feeling pretty low to admit this. When I asked what the big project was in New York, he said there wasn't one. He suspected Pat and Steve just wanted him to visit.

Saying uncle

Jack & Karl include Uncle Mark in their "and God bless…" prayers every night. They still do, even after I explained he really doesn't need our prayers anymore. They ask if he is in heaven with God -- and I assure them he is. I was talking to Philip on the phone recently, and I asked Jack if he wanted to talk to Uncle Phil. "Is he dead?", Jack asked! Five year olds can ask a lot of amazing questions!

Jon & I are gong to New York City 12/3/98 to 12/6/98. We had hoped to see Pat & Steve & the flower shop in his honor.

From Martha Jean Christensen

Memories of Mark

On Brown Street, he would be in the Breakfast room and Maria and I would come from upstairs and he would say "You two have put it all together." And give us a big smile.

When he was working with companies on tours, he told me all the ladies would come into a room -- "A vision of polyester."

Jeopardy

Dick had business in LA and so Mark took me around. He didn't want to go to see any show except Jeopardy. Well, low and behold, Jeopardy was hosting the contestants in our hotel and had free tickets to the show. The next day we stood in line and got it to see the Seniors Tournament (two shows were taped). He and I had a great time.

Mark really had a wonderful way about him. You always knew how he felt and he was my best male in-law. I keep his memory alive each day.

Contributed by Pietrina

Mark: the casual rebel

I remember my uncle Mark as the nonchalant rebel. To his credit, he could & would differ from the rest of us (and I'm not just talking about smoking) without need of permission or any hint of guilt or regret.

A flaw on his record

One particular bold move of his that stuck with me was a story I was told (variances from truth owed to my father). This story was told to me (with some possible relevance) about the same time that I was going to be forced to go to the Jesuit high school (= no girls!). Worse than no supper before bedtime, but somehow I survived.

Mark wanted to leave UD High, but his parents wouldn't allow it. He threatened to purposefully fail out, and his bluff was called. Apparently, his threat was not idle, although he was a bit disappointed that he was unable to achieve an F in Phys-Ed. After that, he was then free to carve out his own life. Good for him - but what a character! As I hear it, his younger siblings were then able to freely choose their school without so much need for drama.

Mark: the conscience for style

As far as Mark's aesthetic inputs, he had an endless supply that he liked to share. When he visited Paul & I at Applied Materials, he seemed to have a problem with the "drab" gray cubicles that us Silicon Valley engineers work in. But he very politely stated his own personal disdain for such working conditions without implying what kind of deadpans must tolerate it daily. I'm not sure if he knew that it's easier at these big companies to get away with wasting $10,000 of the company's money than it is to change even the color of your cubicle. But it sometimes takes people like Mark to remind me that there are other things to "work" than just raw function. In many ways subtle and not-so-subtle, he'd state that there is always room for some style.

Not to say that I learned those features that I admired. I'll miss him.

Contributed by John

 

 

From a best friend

Recently I was at an early childhood conference in Anaheim, CA and was asked to build a memory from childhood using odds and ends of collage materials (similar to what we might have a child do)--we then had to share it with the person sitting nearest us. I sat quietly for a few moments, then began to build. Soon I found myself describing what I had attempted to create: I had built the garage behind the house on Brown street and described to the woman next to me--the overnights we would have up there. After dark, we would ride our bikes down Dillon St to Ford Rd -- there was a little party store--Betty's, I think.... and we would buy all kinds of penny candy and take it back to the garage and eat until we got sick--- I also remember taking a few Kent cigarettes from my mom's purse and Annie and I tried smoking them in the little playhouse on the back lot--that faced Marquette St.

Memories

There's a flood of childhood memories--all that include Annie:

playing dress-up in my basement--with my brother, Mike and Skip DeGeorgio spying on use through the "cellar" wall--they had drilled holes through the walls--

The Thanksgiving parades in downtown Detroit--Anne was always afraid we'd get lost

The acorn wars with the kids from both streets--Annie and I would always be the spies from Marquette Street--watch where the "Brown" kids hid their acorns--

making "stink bombs" in basement-- mostly for Pam Roberts--down the street

These all sound like we were "bad, little mischief-makers"-- but really we were just normal little kids growing up at a great time in a great neighborhood.

Anne and I always ended up playing whatever my brother and his friends talked us into--army, GI Joe, making forts on the empty lots across the street, baseball, .....

Teen years

Our trip to Washington DC when we were 14--the airlines went on strike so we had to take a bus--we thought we were so big-- we stayed at my Aunt Ruth's apartment on Scotts Circle--we took the bus everywhere--Georgetown etc.

Teen Club--up at Saint Raphael's--lots of dances and parties--deciding who liked who and making sure we didn't like to same guy--going to Lake Kensington park-- we sure had some great times together

Valentine Days Suprise

The day Annie called me while we were both in Lansing and asked me to meet her and Chuck at the courthouse--they were getting married--I think it was on Valentine's Day--then Anne and Jeanne and I all getting married (Annie and Chuck having the marriage blessed) all within 6 weeks during the summer of '72.

Anne was a big part of my life and I've always been sorry my children never knew her--I still have the little silver scissors she gave me when I graduated from high school--she etched my initials in them with one of Dr. Schmitt's drills. I still carry them in my purse.

Contributed by Mary Zimmerman Zuzich

 

From the Oldest Little Kid

This picture captures the essence of my relationship with Mark. Mark was a special brother because we grew up together. Yeah, I grew up with all of you, but not in the same way I grew up with Mark! He was the Last of the Big Kids, I was the Oldest Little Kid. Everyone knew that only the Big Kids had any status. Mark was special because he was friends with me anyway. He is my last sibling to share my unique perspective of growing up a Schmitt, so there won’t be anyone to reminisce with about things like going to O’Kula’s Variety Store, Shrineland (one of his favorite childhood memories), playing Mass in the basement with Neccos, playing dress up, etc.

Thanks, Nancy

He and I had a saying we used since childhood, but usually he was the one who used it: "Remember, we’re Friends!" In childhood this was used when one was really mad at the other; as adults, it was an expression of love, usually used at partings. An example of his compassion for me involved his lending me his convertible one afternoon when I was 16, since Mom and Dad weren’t about to turn me loose on one of their vehicles. I ran out of gas with it before I reached Bock Street and had to walk back home (but it was a nice gesture!). He was also good at torture techniques. For example, he was able to savor his Halloween candy for MONTHS, and would haul it out and select a piece in front of the rest of us, smacking his lips, and delighting in the chocolately goodness of each piece! Another of his famous expressions was, "Thanks, Nancy!" (Used on everyone) and "I live for that!" (used to describe anything he really liked.)

Diverse was true

Like Mom, Mark always had a "certain sense of style." He was able to mix with people of all cultures because he always appreciated diversity even before the days of political correctness. For instance, he had fond memories of Mrs. Blackman. He loved her colorful language which was so different from ours, and really enjoyed having her be a part of our family. He always hoped that she would remarry someday, preferably to Mr. Whitewoman! He could remember lines he tried on her when Mom & Dad were on Chicago trips, but she was always way ahead of Mark ("Oh, (doubtful) I don’t think Mrs. Schmitt would want you doing THAT!") He had an eclectic group of friends that were loyal to him for life (quite an accomplishment for anyone).

Shoe guy

His great style included an eye for design. He always knew what shoes went with what outfit, what hairstyle worked, etc. He is the only brother to have ever gone shoe shopping with me! (Hey, boys, there’s still time!) He was a connoisseur of fine dining, flower arrangements (both fresh picked and the live growing things!) and a schmoozer extraordinaire. He could have been a fine trial attorney, as he had a way of getting people to do what he wanted them to do (in the nicest possible way, of course!)

He used to come to my homes and help me do various planting projects. In recent years as his energy waned, he still came to check the progress of all my living things, and would give design, planting and trimming advice. He has planted many things here at the house that will always remind us of his presence in our lives (especially ferns and myrtle). In his bag that he packed on his last trip to the cottage at Stoney Lake, he included his precious pair of clippers. I cried when I found them.

Some hit with the sisters

He was a great guest and a gift-giver extraordinaire. He was an official sponsor of the Schmitt Sisters Summit. He always had the perfect gift for every occasion (mostly convention loot!). On his trip to Stoney Lake, his hostess gift was a big tin of Saunders Chocolate Topping (he and I were life-long admirers), cookies that Alice had made for his 50th birthday party (he had frozen them and brought them on his trip to Michigan), and pizzas from the Italian bakery in G.C. (he assured me that Dad had provided all financing!). He was a fabulous organizer of people and events, was great at spending money or helping someone else spend it, and what did you expect of the former CEO of the annual Brown Street Fairs? He also was an information man ala Liz Smith. He always knew all the scuttlebutt on all former neighbors, classmates and hangers-on and was a blast to sit with at any social function.

On the beach

The evening he and Dad came to Stoney Lake, he seemed fine and in good spirits, but I noticed he seemed weaker than when he had come to borrow the car three weeks earlier. He couldn’t walk down to the edge of the water, and yet at our house he had walked the whole grounds, checking our trees and plants. It was pretty crazy there, with Mort’s Mom and Dad and brother still hanging on from the weekend (having too much fun to leave) and all the kids had a friend too. I convinced Dad and Donna (Mort’s Mom), Emma and Kristin and Mark to accompany me over to Lake Michigan to sit on the beach until dark. We went over, parked at the edge of the beach, and plunked the lawnchairs right in front of the car so the invalids wouldn’t have to walk across the sand. It was overcast, but we just enjoyed sitting there, listening to the waves pound the beach. Mark’s comment, "This is so soothing! Michigan’s ocean!" I’m so glad we went.

Later at the cabin we were partying, and Mort was shooting off fireworks down by the water, and Mark and I went on the other side of the house, near the cars, so we could hear ourselves talk. He was so weak when we got over there, I reached in my car trunk and got him a lawn chair to plop into. A minute or so later, he started vomiting, and kept it up long enough that I was getting a little alarmed. He then confessed he had done that four nights in a row. Other than the weakness, he had no other symptoms, and we theorized he had pick up a flu bug. Soon after we retired to bed. He was on a daybed in the hallway off the kitchen. It rained three inches that night, and in the morning he expressed his relief that the rain would have erased the evidence of his vomiting on the grass.

Practicing for the funeral

was sleeping. He got up once for a few minutes, then said, "I think I’ll lay back in my casket for awhile." He was just so upbeat, cheerful and dignified, even when he was sick! We called his caregivers in CA to consult about the vomiting, and Dad went to the store to get the recommended Gatorade. Mark spent the afternoon trying to make it from the daybed to a chair in the living room and sipping Gatorade. He tried to move to a different chair to get more comfortable, and started experiencing shortness of breath, which started getting progressively worse. We talked with California a couple more times, and eventually headed for the local ER after everyone got home and had dinner. If I hadn’t been so distracted by fourteen people in the house I might have realized earlier that he was in serious trouble, but he had no nausea or chest pain, so we really thought we were dealing with the flu and dehydration. In retrospect, I see his system was starting to shut down.

The hospital was one of those dinky ones with two ER beds. I had called ahead and they were trying to get me to go somewhere bigger with him, but California assured me this was the place to go. They were busy with an auto accident upon our arrival, and because Mark only had the shortness of breath when he was trying to move and didn’t exhibit it while sitting in the wheelchair, they cleared up the AA mess before assessing him.

Sliding away

The doc came in and examined Mark and almost immediately diagnosed the low hemoglobin. He said that would account for the shortness of breath. He ordered bloodwork and left, and while the nurse was preparing a the IV outside the door, I said to Mark, "Wouldn’t it be great if you just needed a few units of blood, and then you could start feeling good again?" He didn’t respond, and I looked over at him and he appeared to be sleeping. I thought, "Oh good," because I knew he hadn’t slept much the previous night. So I picked up my quilt magazine and started reading. A minute later, I realized Mark’s breathing was the Cheyn-Stokes pattern (a very distinctive breathing pattern people have just before death—I remember Mom also describing Anne doing this the night before she died). I looked over to the nurse just outside the door, and before I could say anything to her, she walked in with the IV, roused Mark to put the needle in, and he immediately responded. "Oh, " I thought, "I must have imagined that." So they drew blood and got some Oxygen going, and soon lab was back to repeat the blood draw because the hemoglobin was so low. I said, "Well, that would explain a lot and it’s probably not an error", but they persisted in repeating it. Well, they couldn’t draw from his "good" vein, since it already had an IV going, so the lab tech and RN were on the floor on Mark’s left side, trying to find a nonexistent vein, and I was at his head, trying to keep the O2 rebreather mask from smothering him, when I realized he was going bad on us (they had me right in there since I seemed to actually be of help, it was 12:50 by then and no one else was around, and I didn’t seem too hyper!). I hollered, "Girls, he’s going bad on us!" and he died right then. The doctor heard the commotion and came in, and while they were checking his vitals, the nurse asked, "do you want him to be a DNR (do not resuscitate?)?"

This was a very difficult moment for me. My heart wanted him back, but the previous day, when he seemed so ill, I had already thought to myself, "if this goes on much longer he is going to want to die." I thought about how the quality of his life had decreased the last year, and how peaceful and private and dignified it was here, with only the doctor, the nurse and myself (the lab tech had run for her life as soon as Mark started heading south). "Mark, this is about as close as we’re going to get to you dying with your boots on—we’d better take it," I thought, and I told the nurse, "yes, DNR." They both put their arms around me and said, "You’re doing the right thing. This was a very peaceful way to die." He was cooperative, cheery and inquisitive right to the end, and made a point of knowing both the doctor and nurse’s name. He had such dignity and grace, the ER doc said he would never forget that night (also because this was the first AIDS patient he had treated). It was a sudden but merciful end. (Time, around 1:50am)

I had to hang around while they decided if the coroner needed to come (he didn’t), and wait for the undertakers to arrive, so I had a couple of hours to spend with Mark and come to terms with his death. I didn’t get back to the cabin until almost 4:20am. That was such a lonely trip back from the hospital! I tiptoed in the kitchen door, and Dad was up waiting for me. I was totally exhausted. "What happened with Mark?" he asked. "Dad, Mark died," I responded. I was too tired to soften the blow much. We sat at the kitchen table and talked until 5am, at which time I crawled into bed (after convincing Dad he should NOT start calling people yet).

I will love him and miss him for the rest of my life.

Contributed by Lucy

On my Aunt Anne

I was only 3 years old when my parents told me that my Aunt Anne had died, and all that I remember was that there was a nice woman who lived in Grandma Schmitt's house who was my aunt and that she had made me a curious george doll out of a stuffed stock. That doll was my favorite stuffed animal, with skinny arms that were perfect for sucking and chewing, and black button eyes and big red lips. I didn't know much else about my Aunt Anne, and it's all pretty blurry from back then. I remember liking her, and knowing that I didn't have to run away from her like I did from other aunts who were chasing and hugging and kissing little kids when I was little.

Contributed by paul fredric

 

Anne

At age 5, I think I was perhaps (for the better) purposefully sheltered from some of those tough realities surrounding Anne. I remember when Chuck would come by with a big friendly dog. Since my Mom and big brother were both allergic, that was the only dog I got to play with. I remember seeing Anne sitting on the couch on Brown street - the same spot where I'd play with my cousins. In my eyes, there was always a certain warmth around her that was a bit calmer than the usual chaos of the house.

Contributed by John

 

A few of my favorite things about Mark

Mark Joseph was a funny man,

Some might say he was kind of sassy.

No matter what you say about him,

He was always concerned with being classy.

He had a wit that was so sharp

Some would say that it was cutting

Sarcasm was his primary method

To keep those around him laughing.

He worked in the travel business

His stories were always astute

One of his favorite things

Was sharing his program loot.

Mustard, chili and honey baked ham,

Were all a part of his diet.

If it contained mushrooms or raisins,

This picky eater wasn’t likely to try it.

He was very skilled at floral design

Took his clippers wherever he went.

When I got married in ’89

He did all the flowers for the event.

He moved to sunny LA in ’83

Near the city view and the ocean breeze

One December night as we rode in his car

Over the radio it was said to be "a bone chilling 60 degrees."

I spent my first Christmas in the West

At Mark’s one bedroom hilltop nest.

Mary and Jim joined in the fun

With all that action, we didn’t get much rest.

For the past 10 years he’d head to New York

To work at Salou, was the reason,

He’d decorate trees for the rich and famous

Throughout the holiday season.

When it came to brothers

He was as good as they get

He treated me like I was special and

He always called me his "little pet"

When I was little he moved home one summer

To nurse his health and see the family,

We spent many a day playing cards, drinking water

And listening to "Hello Dolly."

His mind was always working

He loved to read, work crosswords and play games,

Jeopardy and Skip-Bo were among his favorites

And most of all, he loved to drop names.

He loved to listen to the Motown Sound

Aretha Franklin was one of his faves.

He could name most any car model and year

Those from Detroit really got the raves.

He laughed when I told him we were expecting twins

It tickled his funny bone,

Now he’s gone and we’re left here

To take care of things on our own.

We’re very sad that Mark is gone

We really miss him a lot,

But we’re very grateful for the life he lived

And will always cherish the time we got.

 

 

Contributed by Alice

 

 

 

 

 

Anne and Anna

Reading the old letters from Anne, I am reminded of her intelligence, wit, beauty, and how she was always ahead of her time. She never cared a whit what anyone thought of her. She was quilting, recycling and organic gardening in the early seventies, and man, could she make a pie! Looking at her pictures from high school and early college years, I see that Anna has a lot of Anne's features.

Sleeping the line

We grew up together, sharing a room and being the nemesis of each other. I always felt I was in competition with her for Mom's love, especially since Anne always needed "special care." I especially remember being resentful that we all used to have to "harvest" ragweed in the neighborhood so it wouldn't affect Anne. I never cared what anyone else got, but if Anne got something, then I'd better get it too!! I remember more than once enforcing that imaginary line down the center of the double bed!

When we were teens, everyone always thought she was older than me, which irked me to no end!! So you see, I was really always irritable about having to play second fiddle to Anne!

Anne was always a very noisy sleeper (due to hay fever and asthma) and her breathing always kept me up all hours of the night. I hated her guts!!!

L'Anse'd a lot

Anne was the kind of guy that older men were attracted to. In high school, when she was just a freshman, I remember one incident where a date with a senior ended up with her making a break for the door and walking home!! She always had what I would call an "old spirit." Maybe this was from spending so many months up at the lighthouse in L'Anse, where she learned to make pasties, pies, and other pastries. This was a fortunate accident for our family, since Mom didn't "do" pies.

Hole in the head?

When she was about 15, she got her ears pierced. I'm sure she must have forged something that said she was 18, because this was STRICTLY against Mom's rules. As I recall, she got grounded, but I do believe Mom didn't quite believe she had actually done it, and Mom didn't quite know how to handle it. Her perfect child!!

How to get over your daughter getting her ears pierced

In about her third year at MSU, she and Chuck got married at the courthouse. The purpose was to obtain a legal marriage certificate so they could qualify for married housing. Anne never told Mom she was legally married, so poor Mom spent a year or so in agony because Anne was "living in sin." Well, this is because Anne herself didn't recognize the marriage as a legal one, since it wasn't performed in the Catholic Church. I don't think Mom knew about the first marriage until after the second one was performed on Brown Street.

The first year she was married, she lived in Lansing, and we used to hold joint garage sales at her house on the main drag in Lansing. Her Japanese mother-in-law was always unloading cool stuff on her, so Anne's take for the day would be something like $300, and mine would be $50. I would work the till nonstop while she worked the crowd. She really knew how to do that!! She also had a large sign posted, "FRESH FLOWERS," and cars would screech to a halt when they saw it. The garden she had on that little city lot was a showstopper.

It was very hard to lose Anne. I spent just about the whole year and a half of her illness in denial, and had to take to my bed for a week after her death. Even now I really miss being able to call her up, or spend weekends at her and Chuck's place in Bangor. She had regretted that she hadn't had children before she died. She had her funeral planned, down to the cloth casket (cheapest). I'm sure she was upset when she found out she couldn't use a recycled one!

Reincarnation?

After Anne's death in December 1977, I promptly got pregnant and Anna was born the following October. The way Anna and I get along, I think there's definitely a little of Anne's spirit in there somewhere!

Contributed by Lucy

On my Uncle Mark

They say it never rains in Southern California, but uncle Mark was sure to warn me. Uncle Mark was Mr. Hospitality, on or off the clock, and he made me feel at home in his own home, or whichever home we happened to be in together.

Garden Slave

When I was in college at the UofM, I'd visit Grandpa Schmitt in Garden City during the summers, and when serendipity rang, uncle Mark would be around for the weekend. I was always put to work in the yard under his kind tutelage and was impressed at his ability to travel graciously. His relaxed air stays with me to this day as I travel to inviting destinations.

When I moved to California 3 years ago, Uncle Mark rolled out the welcome mat from 300 miles away. The day I arrived, my brother John handed me a letter from Uncle Mark telling of his friend Susan, her imminent move to Illinois, and how I would do well to attend her San Jose garage sale.

A chili reception

I wasn't in California long before I knew that I had to fly down to see the golden state in my uncle's eyes. I took my brother John down for a labor day with Uncle Mark, with Uncle Mark giving the sunny "tur" from behind the wheel of his grand bonneville. He gave us a sample of Hollywood, and fulfilling meals with Denise & Gilbert as well as a signature pot of chili of his own devising which I can taste to this day. Uncle Mark always described my experience living in a cooperative house at UofM as: "you know, he lived in one of those communes where you only eat brown rice" but he made sure to feed me some heavy food whenever he was in the kitchen.

Haberdasher Extraordinare

At the end of every visit to NoHo, Uncle Mark would take me out to the curb, pop open the trunk of his Bonneville, and have me pick through all of his shirts and belts on their way (some doing a round trip) to the second hand stores. I think of Uncle Mark every time I open the closet, as 1/3 of the shirts in there are his. For those that know my closets, that includes the work closet and the play closet. He was always encouraging my sartorial soirees, from Garden City to North Hollywood.

Word Schmitt

What impressed me most about my Uncle Mark was his penchant for the right words at the right time. He was always direct with me, and with others in my presence.

This way with words woke me up when he called to arrange our last meeting. He had called my house to invite John, Francimar, Carolyn, and I to a party in honor of his 50th birthday, and John had told him that we wouldn't be able to make it, as our parents were coming on that day from Houston. When I got the message that Uncle Mark had called I was interested in the party, but wouldn't think of jetting off while my parents were in town for a visit.

A few days went by and I received another call from Uncle Mark letting me know that I wouldn't want to miss his party, and he was pretty clear that I wouldn't miss it. I explained the business about my parents coming, but he was sure that I would figure out a way, and he detailed a couple of options for getting down to his pad. As it happened, my parents had plans to visit someone else for a day while they were with us, so Carolyn and I drove down to LA in a hurry (not so fast, you have to take detours when the hills are on fire). His party was fabulous.

DNAdvice

My father always says the key to doing well in life is to pick good parents. My Uncle Mark did that, and went further to pick good brothers and sisters and friends and nieces and nephews.

This nephew is happy to have spent some rainy days listening to Diana Ross on a cozy couch on Camellia St in good company.

Contributed by paul fredric

Lansing Eyewitness

Thanks for all the goodies on Anne and Mark. I remember that little house Anne wrote about "on the main drag" I was lucky enough to be missioned (Diocesan Office) in Lansing during the years Lucy and Anne were at MSU. That little house was like a doll/play house-so tiny. Whenever I stopped in , for whatever, I had very interesting tales to share with my office cohorts. Anne always had something interesting going-and I DO remember the "vegetable stand". Some of our office personnel bought from it!

Contributed by Auntie Ev

 

Mark Joseph Schmitt

June 4, 1948 - August 5, 1998

As I start, a little ancient history of our family seems to be in order.

Life before the family tour guide arrived

Eileen Mary LaBranche and Francis Mathias Schmitt were married in the Post Chapel, Ft. Bragg, North Carolina on January 7, 1943. We had planned the wedding for January 6, but Eileen’s checked luggage did not arrive from Flint when she did. That was the first big event in our lives where we went to an alternate plan, now sometimes called Plan B.

Tom arrives; allies lose

As sometimes happens in a marriage, a child was born. We named him Thomas Martin. When Thomas was about 7 months old the Allies were losing the war in Europe. The United States was in a massive Military buildup and I was ordered to a new unit then forming at Ft. Bragg. The 114th US Army 1000 Bed General Hospital which had the capability of expanding to 2000 beds if the need arose. The personnel came from all over the U.S. After a short time together we departed from Ft. Dix, N.J. in a large convoy.

In the five days before we reached a safe port in Scotland our convoy was protected by Destroyer Escorts which we could see circling on the Horizon. German Submarines sunk many ships as they tried to reach European Ports. We arrived at our destination near Kidderminster, England Early in July 1944. We quickly set our hospital together and were soon treating Army personnel who had been injured in combat.

After we left Ft. Bragg, The Quartermaster Corps packed all our belongings, including a waste basket with all its contents, and shipped them to Flint. Eileen and Tom went separately by train to Flint and established their home at 609 W. 3rd Street in a small upstairs apartment above Grandpa and Grandma Gatschene, also in July 1944.

Dick & Mary arrive; allies win

Time passed and we learned that our second child was to be born. On March 4, 1945 in Woman’s Hospital in Flint where Eileen had been a Nurse, Richard was born. And then the Doctor said, "There is another baby there." That baby is now Mary Frances Masal.

Time passed, the War in Europe ended on VE Day, May 8, 1945. I came home and was immediately given 30 days leave. During that leave, in August 1945, Japan surrendered and the war ended with VJ Day August 15, 1945. It took some time but I was discharged about September 16, 1945. That meant I was unemployed with a wife and three children.

Lookin' for work

While in the service I had read with interest about the Children’s Fund of Michigan which had been established by former Senator Cousens to provide dental care for underserved children in several counties in Michigan. They had a training center in Royal Oak which I was able to reach by Greyhound Bus from Flint. During the indoctrination period I quickly learned that their mission did not fit my mission.

me to Doctor Vogel. Dr. Vogel’s primary office was on Michigan Avenue near Livernois. 29627 Ford Road was his satellite office where he also was solo. He agreed to give me the two small rooms in the NE corner of his building, and we would share the waiting room and the lab and basement. After consulting with Eileen we decided I would locate my practice at 29627 Ford Road. We would try it for 5 years hoping we would be accepted in the community. If not, we would have to seek our fortune elsewhere. As Doctors Steiner, Procalo, Rowe and Jaynes joined Dr. Vogel they built larger quarters at the corner of Ford and Brandt. They were going to include a small office for me. I asked if I could stay where I was and use the rest of the lease. They agreed. Later I was able to buy the building and stayed there for about 45 years. The 5th year of our 5 year plan passed unnoticed. We had been accepted and never thought of leaving. That’s how we happened to live in Garden City.

April fools day

Since I had no car, and new or old ones were not readily available in late 1945 and 1946, I went to Flint by bus on week ends. I had a room in "The Bomb Cellar" on Ford Road near Shodka. April 1, 1946 I saw my first patient and had patients every day after that.

Veterans received some breaks in those days. Soon we reached the top of a list for a small house in Norwayne which I could also reach by bus. We were happy to be together again at 34032 Caseville Court, Wayne, Michigan. Soon the Jeep Dealer in Garden City was able to get me a Jeep Station Wagon and we were really living again.

Five kids -- two bedrooms

In 1947 Paul Michael was born. He was a cute baby and his crib occupied only a small corner of our little 2 bedroom house. In 1948 Mark Joseph joined our family. It was time for more change. Our children were getting bigger which made our little house seem smaller.

The blather on Lathers

We had been looking for a house in Garden City, but now we really looked. Soon we found 5910 Lathers which was just what we needed on a large lot in a nice neighborhood close to my work. We moved later in 1948 and were very happy there. Our children went to Mrs. Sweet’s Kindergarten on Harrison Street and then to St. Raphael’s School. On Lathers Street, the children had nice playmates in the neighborhood. The adults were friendly, especially the Donners, Wycors and Smiths.

31211

October 1957 we moved to 31211 Brown Street which has been a great place. The children have grown and left home which is a normal pattern. However, when the children come home with their children which happens on holidays this house becomes small. Normally I could do with smaller quarters, which I consider, but so far there is no great pressure to move again. We have a good neighborhood. We look out for each other¸ but we have lost too many spouses. But enough of history.

The famous Mark bike accident

This is supposed to be about Mark who was about 9 years old when we moved to Brown Street. One of the pluses for Brown Street was that the kids could walk to school, which they did. Mark loved life on Brown Street as I think all of us did and I still do.

When we lived on Lathers, Mark sometimes rode a bike to school. Once on his way home, by the Garden City Maternity Hospital, next to the Bomb Cellar, he was hit by a car leaving the Hospital. When he reached home he made no mention of it. His mother noticed his clothes were dirty and asked why? Then he told her about it. I guess he didn’t ride his bike to school after that.

Mark had many friends at St. Raphael’s. His classmates and other friends often had get-togethers, a practice that always continued whenever he would come to town.

A subdued version of the UofD High story

Mark followed his brothers Richard and Paul to U of D High School. He completed 9th grade there but then elected to go to Garden City High West which I think had just opened.

He enjoyed a better social life at West and when they later had reunions he seemed to be one of the organizers.

Starting in the travel business

Mark went to Washington, D. C. soon after High School. I have been in touch with Anne Davies of South Salem, N. Y. who knew him there. She said that Mark was her first Boss.

She said she was sorry to learn through life that not all bosses were like Mark. She now works at a Travel Agency in NYC. It was through her that Mark arranged for tickets for his final trip home, and she was able to get a refund for his return ticket, which I think might have been a non-refundable ticket. He had good friends in many places in this world.

Working at the right clip

Mark loved to come to Brown Street, which he did a couple of times each year. He always brought his favorite clippers, a Felcro, and ideas to make Brown Street prettier. He planted most of the myrtle beds we now enjoy. He loved the ferns which come forth each Spring. He enjoyed sharing with Mrs. Hammer. She has so much shade that some of the plants he shared didn’t prosper.

The last trip home

Mark came for a visit on July 15, 1998 and planned to return August 10. He trimmed the hedges and other bushes and did the usual other seasonal things he would do around the yard. He noted that the stairs were a bit difficult for him. They had never bothered him before. I noticed his work periods were shorter, but so are mine, and I thought nothing of it. Mark used to enjoy using my Citation when he was home. When I passed it on to Crissy he was somewhat reluctant to use my car which I was willing to share with him. Early this visit we went to Lucy and Mort’s. They loaned him their Pontiac (formerly Cheryl and Philip’s). He visited his friends as usual. He made a trip to Naperville, IL for a wedding of one of his travel friends. In fact he took his tux and gave away the bride. She sent some pictures of Mark. On the return he stopped overnight with Joe and Veronica in Chicago.

Final days

The following Monday we drove to Stoney Lake, near Lake Michigan, where Lucy’s family had a cottage for the week. Mort’s parents and brother were there and some of their grandchildren the first night. Mark slept very little, if any, that night. The next day, Tuesday, he exhibited a severe shortage of breath. If he walked a few feet, he would have to sit and breathe deeply for several minutes. We communicated with his care givers in LA. About 10 PM Debbie who had followed him in LA advised us to get him to an emergency room, she thought he was having a recurrence of pneumonia. Mark needed help to get to the car. Lucy did not want me to go with her, she said she could handle it. When they got thru Admissions and into the ER an Xray was taken which showed a clear chest. However, his hemoglobin was very low, and they wished to take another blood sample. Lucy assured them that it could be that low, like 3.3. The Doctor proceeded with his examination. Mark was lucid, had an answer to each question except one which he misunderstood. The doctor ask what his normal pulse was, and Mark said 130/80. Lucy said, "No Mark, your pulse rate." Mark answered, "Usually 72." At that time his pulse was 110. A very short time later Lucy said he sort of rolled his eyes upward and was gone, very peacefully. Lucy stayed to make necessary arrangements. This was well after midnight. The local morticians were called. Soon two well dressed men, a father and son appeared and took Mark’s body for preparation for the trip to Garden City. Santeiu’s sent two men who did not return from the round trip on a rainy day until about 10:30 PM. on Wednesday.

The family was at Santeiu’s to receive Mark’s and our many friends on Friday. All Mark’s siblings came home for his funeral as well as several of his friends from California and Illinois. James Schmitt came too as did Joe and Veronica, Paul Frederic and Carolyn, and Susie. Saturday Father Prus said a Mass for us at Santeiu’s Chapel at 10 AM. A wedding had been scheduled for St. Raphael’s. Many of us went for the burial at Holy Sepulchre Cemetery, Auntie Eve led the services there. We then gathered back at St. Raphael Activity Building where the Ladies had prepared a lunch. Richard and Pietrina had a color picture of those present on the last family newsletter. It is a very impressive group. Eileen and I, in our fondest dreams never had a vision like that.

I wish to thank all of you who are and have become a part of our family. We have had many sorrows which we would like to forget so we can get on with our lives. We have had many more happy memories.

The Family of St. Raphael Parish has offered many Masses and prayers for all of us.

I will list them as soon as I get back to Garden City and send them to Richard and Pietrina.

Contributed by Francis Mathias Schmitt

The Practical Catholic

When we went out to L.A. to visit Veronica's Uncle Mark, we went to church and brunch with our Mark. On the way to church, Mark related a favorite story (which he told us again the last time we saw him): A Mexican couple he knew asked him to be godfather to their newborn. He was asked to fill out a form, giving dates of sacraments, etc. He said it was translated into broken English, and not too well. One question asked, "Are you a practical Catholic?" He answered YES, with much satisfaction. "That's just how I like to think of it," he told us, "Practical."

A lettered man

We all grieve in our own way, and I made mine that I would finally start to deliver on my promise to him to put the old family letters into a format we could all share online. I typed in all his letters back to 1973, and even though I had read them before ten years ago, have learned more about him. I noticed that he started his job in "incentive travel" when he was the same age as I am, and that coincides with when I remember seeing him more at Thanksgiving.

I thought going over all those letters would depress me, but reading his letters always cheered me up. I hope it does for you. He always had a positive attitude and an infectious enthusiasm, and I think comes through in his letters. I feel like I read him and he is still talking to me.

Mark, like many of his other siblings, liked to use odd pieces of stationary for his letters. The funniest was 11/9/77 when he typed it on the back of a 1973 Inaugural Parade flyer for Nixon and Agnew. He typed the back half of the letter right across their faces.

Bummin' on Brown

I won't lie and say Mark was my favorite uncle, but my relationship with him was special. Unlike Phil, Alice, Martha, Michael, Tom, Bev, and Grandma and Grandpa, who were a part of my life back farther than I can remember, I can remember when I began to know Mark well. After my second tough year of college, I spent a week on Brown Street around Father's Day before returning to Chicago for my summer job. I thought to hang out with Philip, but he was away that week. Mark and I seemed to be waking at the same time (much later than the other residents), so I just tagged along with him all week. I had a lot of fun, and got to relax, which was what I needed. As I write I realize that that was just ten years ago. At that point I had little money, and since it was summer, more time, and so it was probably the right time to spend a week with him.

Parting advice

We were both grateful that we got one last hour with Mark on his way back to Lucy's from a wedding out in the western suburbs here. Veronica will always remember his last words to us were to tell me that since we both work, we should get a housekeeper.

Contributed by Joe

 

From the newest in-law

My first Thanksgiving at Brown Street (2 years ago), Mark had sent gifts to people-- he sent Joe five Christmas stockings that Mary had made for Christmas in California.

California Visit

I remember having dinner at Chinois, with both our Uncle Marks & Dan, after which we went out to Santa Monica pier. He is the first person I know who can't ride a roller coaster due to a heart condition. When we went to mass at St. Delores in Tuluka Lake, he tells us that Bob Hope's wife, Delores, goes to mass here. After mass we went to breakfast, and he ordered "everything that was bad for me." At his house he went through his baby book and family pictures with us, and gave us all the "dirt" on everyone.

I loved hearing about his job at Salou-- Mia's tree, paid for by Woody; Yoko's apartment in the Dakota; Springstein's girlfriend; etc.

Last sighting

The last time I saw him we were sitting right where I am now writing this. He was thinner and had lost some hair, but I never thought it would be the last time I would see him. If I had any idea, I would have thrown my arms around him and told him how special he was and how much everybody loves him. But really he already knew. I feel so fortunate to have known him, even if it was for a very short time. I am so happy my family got to know him a little as well. My family was so sorry to hear the news. I told Grandpa Schmitt once before, he has such a wonderful family and everyone is so sincere and genuine, I am so proud to call myself a Schmitt. He thanked me for the flattery and told me it was all true. And although I never knew Anne or Eileen (my loss, as Auntie Ev told me, and I know it), I am very thankful for the chance to know Mark and all of the Schmitts (and Outlaws). Mark was a wonderful example for people to see how one should live life. He will be missed by many.

I agree with Auntie Ev, that God is going to have a fabulous Christmas this year.

Contributed by Veronica

Doris Duke Story

You must remember Doris-- the wood framed antique cigarette poster ad that Mark cherished. Ha..... it doesn't seem remotely possible that its been 30 years since we were at St. Vincent de Paul Thrift Shop in Washington DC; a Saturday afternoon and we were out interior decor shopping. We probably had $14 between us, if that, and I felt that a better use of our funds would be on a nice dresser or chair. But there in the basement leaning against a wall was the lovely Doris Duke -- evidently staring at Mark, or so he claimed. So that was it. He was not to be dissuaded from having her. She will be worth a lot of money some day. So we laid out our funds and Doris came home with us. -- on foot. (he was SO convinced of her value, our bus fares paid the tax. :-) And she's been with us ever since.

Antique Appraisal

This past year a show started on PBS called Antiques Roadshow. It is an hour each week from a different city in America of antique appraisers inspecting the heirlooms and trinkets of hundreds and hundreds of people who wait in line for hours for an estimate of what their treasure is worth. We are both absolutely fascinated with it. Some of the most amazing JUNK that would be worth thousands; and an occasional grand dame with her heirloom dynasty vase...... which turned out to be bad forgery. (Cheap thrills I expect, but we both loved those great moments.) Monday nights at 8:00pm , never missed it. It was Mark's plan, goal, Dream to finally once and for all PROVE Doris' worth when the Roadshow came to the LA Convention Center this fall. This past winter as we watched the show, he seemed to become more attune to the long lines of people waiting in each area of the show, art, jewelry, furniture..each one had long lines. It is a popular event. And in the past few months as we had to stop and rest on benches in the shopping mall, AND , for the FIRST time ever he wanted to be dropped off at the front entrance of the movie theatre instead of walking from the parking lot, I knew he wondered if he'd make it to take Doris for the moment of truth. :-)

So Doris and I will go alone. Oh I doubt that they'll pronounce her priceless...... but I'll bet they'll say better than #12 and bus fare.

Contributed by Dale Hardin

The Holiday Guy

To me, Mark was a holiday. We didn’t speak every week, or even every month, but there were certain times of the year that you knew he was coming and it would be entertaining. The time of year would usually be Thanksgiving and around his birthday. He would always call, invite himself out, and show up with the perfect gift.

Flower man

At Thanksgiving he would be on his way to New York City, with a stop over in Garden City. He was the florist to the stars and other "rich people". He would often come back to Garden City with the latest in Christmas decorations and the stories of how the other half lived. He loved to spot the stars both in New York and L.A., but of course, he would always respect their privacy.

Mark would come back to Michigan right around his birthday, which was also the time of year that my peonies bloom, I can still see him taking a dozen white peonies, cutting them and placing them in a vase, and say, "Viola! $150.00 arrangement in New York City!". The year that Mark was diagnosed he didn’t come home for his birthday, so we sent him peonies via UPS Next Day Air. Mark was going out of town on the day they were shipped, but they lasted until he came home, and he enjoyed them for about a week after that.

In the budget

Mark always enjoyed gardening and when he was in town, he was the plant delivery guy, bringing me some of Bev’s Sweet Woodruff, and then taking plants from my place to swap with Bev, or to take up to Lucy’s, or to take back to Dad’s house. He would help with placement, the old point to a spot and Amy plants, and when we were done, we would congratulate ourselves and he would always say, "And, it was in the budget!". Anything free was, "in the budget," and I will use that expression for the rest of my life.

Greg is my soul mate, but Mark was my teammate.

A new tradition

At Mark’s funeral I asked if I could take the vase from Mark’s friends in California. I dried all the flowers I could and the rest went into a potpourri basket with the rest of his funeral flowers. The vase is perfect for peonies in June, and I plan to use it for that purpose every year in celebration of his birth.

A wise man once told my husband and I, on our wedding day, to enjoy the holidays. He told us there would be a lot of regular days in between, and to take care of those also, but then enjoy the holidays. I have watched my wedding video many times, and each time that message has a different meaning. We have enjoyed the regular days, and our holidays are so special. We never thanked that wise old man for his remarks, but will now. Thanks, Dad. Mark was a holiday to me, and one that I don’t want to give up, but must .

Contributed by Amy

Remembering Mark

 

 

Mark was my little brother growing up. Our childhood days were spent on Lathers, making our way home from kindergarten through the semirural areas of Garden City (long gone). We were in Cub and Boy Scouts together and had the same friends during those years (Terry & Larry come most readily to mind). He was always much more relaxed than the rest of us, and suffered a bit for marching to a different drummer. We rode our bikes to and from St. Raphael (2 miles from Lathers). I remember the bike crash Dad mentioned in his notes. We were riding home from school when a car pulled out of an alley between buildings and nailed him. Luckily he wasn't hurt, just surprised, and we continued home. I think it scared me more watching it happen, I don't remember him being too upset. It happened near where the mini golf is now on Ford Road. No helmets in those days.

High school days

When we went to UofD High he definitely saw the light, and it wasn't there. He needed a more social life and less of the academics. I always thought he had a pretty nice life in high school, much different than the one I had of books and athletics and those long hours of homework.

Autos

He had a series of interesting cars: an '51 Buick, the Dodge Dart Convertible, a big Thunderbird, and a neat red sports car, an Alfa Romeo (I think) that I remember riding around with him on a sunny day in the S.F. Bay area. I remember one day borrowing the Buick to go to my summer job at the Dearborn Engine Plant and forgetting that the starter was on the floor. When I got off work I had to call him and he came out with one of the brothers to correct the problem. He got mad that time. He ended up with that Bonneville which never seemed to quit and was the perfect urban assault vehicle.

Picketing in luxury

I remember visiting him at his apartment in D.C. a year or so after he moved away. I was at U-M and it was the "March on Washington" during the Vietnam War. I spent the 1st night in an apartment with about two dozen people sleeping on the floor. Quite a scene. It was a relief to get out of there and spent the rest of the weekend at Marks high rise and luxo digs. It had quite a nice view, especially at night with the city lights, and a sofa.

When Mark started working in the travel industry we knew he had found his calling. He loved the travel and bossing people around. His artistic sense was very fine, and he was great at decorating, especially for Christmas. That job he had in New York was pretty neat, and we all loved to hear the stories about the celebrities homes that he decorated every year.

Northwest visits

For the past 6 or 7 years Mark was making an annual trip to our home. I sent him a ticket and he usually came in the spring or fall. He would come for a week or so and spend some time with Pam Salvatore in Seattle as well. He was a real help with the gardening which he enjoyed and he spent a lot of time sitting on our porches enjoying the outdoors and the views. The kids would require him to play games of Candyland and Monopoly Junior and anything else they could get him to play. They got to see their Uncle Mark more than any other uncle for which I am grateful now.

We are all missing Mark now but he lives on in our hearts and memories as one wonderful human being who knew how to be with people, and make them laugh.

Contributed by Paul Michael

 

On Anne and Mark

Michael's birth was the first that I remember and so Anne was the last of the little kids who was permanently in my memory as always just "being there." My bed was closest to the wall we shared with Anne and Lucy's bedroom (Lucy was right, we never said Lucy and Anne's room, it was always Anne and Lucy's room--no wonder everyone thought Anne was older!) Therefore I'd hear the Anne and Lucy squabbles which were fairly regular but never about much of consequence -- at least if you were in the next room.

So I remember Anne as little, as getting scared by the dark and running home at the Lathers house, and doing all the little kids things in the great Brown street backyard. And I remember Anne the young adult coming over with Chuck while we'd work on their income tax while Anne and Pietrina would visit the garden. Unfortunately I don't have the photographic memory of Mark or Mary to remember all those myriad details that add up to home life which are immediately recognizable when someone else mentions them. I do remember Anne's hay fever and helping to put the air conditioner into her bedroom window so she could breathe the filtered air and get a restful night's sleep. But I missed all of Anne's teenager years as I left for college when she was 12. Luckily we have Lucy as the expert eye witness.

Insurance Man

As mother said, Anne, for as sick as she was all the time, looked great. Even the famous picture of her with Chuck and her dog taken probably during her last year shows her radiating good health. Long after her death when I was scanning pictures of Mother in her 20s, I was struck by how, of Eileen's five daughters, Anne resembled her the most.

I saw more of Anne one-on-one during her last years than ever during her healthy years. Besides just quick visits in the hospital or at Brown Street, I'd help her with the insurance papers which tended to overwhelm her. The State of Michigan was giving her better coverage than she realized and she was immensely relieved when she discovered that. (Now 20 years later I am just sifting through this inch thick file as Pietrina and I sort through what we must take to France and what we will store until God-knows when).

Cut ups

To cheer Anne up, I'd bring her pictures of my kids, then at pretty cute ages. One time we had a picture of a two-year-old John with a toy stethoscope that he was blowing into trying to expand his ears. After a minute she had to quit looking at it because she was laughing so hard that she was afraid she'd pop a fresh stitch. (This was at Beaumont hospital and there were a lot of them to pop on that day).

Anne's death was a horrible shock; we all thought it was grossly unfair. Our maker had a lot of 'splainin to do. Besides, Schmitts didn't die, especially that young. Modern medicine had until then spared our generation from the frequent family deaths so common to our ancestors' lives. Anne's death seemed so arbitrary and unnecessary -- as well as so slow and painful. Life would later teach some of us some hard lessons but up until that time most of us had been spared by the sheltered life of Brown Street.

The Rugged Individualist

Perhaps my memory is faded about Anne because Mark is so firmly etched into the remaining memory cells. Mother called him her "rugged individualist" and he was. Looking back, Tom, Paul, and I (the true model for boys) seemed so white-bread then (and today, too!) Mark was different from the beginning. He loved to dress up, probably from the time he could dress himself. He loved to get his picture taken and we would scream at him when we got the first set of pictures back after staging the annual Christmas card photo and find that whenever everyone else looked good, Mark would be looking the other way or have his eyes closed -- and that meant a dreaded reshoot.

Anything to get into a picture

Mark loved being the center of attention and looking back, he had some creative ways of doing so even though he was a middle child in a large family. The best story is when he swallowed a thermometer, requiring Eileen to take him every day to the medical center where they would Xray his digestive track hoping that the glass tube filled with poisonous mercury would make a routine exit. (If it didn't I guess there would be emergency surgery). Mother, of course, would have to monitor every spool in the meantime. Finally the Xray showed that the thermometer had disappeared. When probed, Mark admitted to using the bathroom at the medical center while Mother and all the doctors were examining the Xrays. What a character!

Mark Shakespeare

Mark loved words. In later days he would claim to do the New York Times Sunday crossword puzzle unassisted (but we all knew he would cheat) and seemed to never miss a Jeopardy show. (When work took me to LA, Pietrina and Mark got Jeopardy tickets and Mark wore a sports jacket in case they needed a last minute sub for a contestant!) At an early age he would coin words such as "gar" which seemed to be an all purpose adjective which we all adopted without much idea what it meant. In his travel days he would coin whole phrases such as describing a Saturday night party for the Avon Ladies Incentive Award Tour as being a "vision in polyester." No one loved the family letter more because it combined words and family -- and he kept and treasured everyone. (No one was also as late in making deadlines as Mark either, which is saying something when you consider how many procrastinators he had to outdo.)

Shriner

His love of gardening showed itself early but I don't remember too many gardens at Brown Street because the heavy forest kept the sun away from most spots. Mark was the inventor of the "shrine" which usually consisted of a garbage can lid tipped upside down and sunk into the ground and then filled with water to make a tiny pond. At the edge would be a statue of Mary (not Masal). Shrubbery, flowers, plants, and whatever else Mark could get his hands on would then landscape the rest of the area. Later when we were raising our brood inside the city limits he would come and transplant fauna back to Brown. Yes, this is where he got the original Brown Street Ferns which he planted around the bike shed (and which seem to have been transplanted throughout Southeast Michigan.)

High School Days

Mark spent considerable energy being lazy. Francis was very creative in finding ways to get his many boys outside working at Brown Street and whenever there were leaves to rake or tree limbs to cut, Mark seemed to be present without doing much of anything. The story of his deliberately flunking out of U of D High was so good I told it once-too-often at the dinner table, and so my kids used it in their letters and I can't include it here without being accused of plagiarism. After his brief year at "the High," he then went on to a remarkably successful career at Garden City High, including being president of the student body and leading a campaign to keep the school from being named for the superintendent of schools. He was not all that high on authority -- ever. It seemed to me that he didn't really want to go to college (heresy for a Schmitt in those days), and adopted the same approach at Schoolcraft. Eventually though he got his associate degree and then promptly moved to Washington, D.C.

A ward winner

But the Schoolcraft years were also the Eliose years. Somehow Mark had gotten hired as a psychiatric hospital attendant there (a civil service job) and gotten Paul and then myself in the door on a part-time basis. ("Those nurses just love the Schmitt boys." he would say in his typically modest way.) It was the first job that Mark took seriously and he was very good at it. Everyone loved him including the nurses who ran the place and especially the patients. When I came on a ward, some would mistake me for Mark and come running up, only to be disappointed when they found out it was me.

Exploiting a hole in the head

Those of you who lived through this period would wonder how a mediocre student with no dependents would avoid the draft, especially when they had a lottery and Mark's birthdate was picked as 20th (out of 365). Fortunately, Mark had a minor injury to his forehead from an auto accident while riding with Judy Bedard. (These were the days before mandatory seatbelts for you newcomers). This injury required visits every six months to a plastic surgeon. This went on for years until we pulled out of Vietnam. I doubt that we would have won the war with Mark in it. Most of us felt that out of the 7 Schmitt boys, Mark would have made the worst soldier.

And our thanks to Lucy who has now lost the sibling on either side of her. Mark could have had no one better to be with him at the end. He avoided the kind of death that Anne suffered through. He was able to stay Mark until then end. While we're not happy with the timing of his exit, his last year of life showed that he took Frank Sinatra's advice and quit while his audience was still begging for more.

The procrastinator who left too early

While working with Joe to load Mark's pages to the web, I found myself rereading all of his missives. Some are classics. Typically during the round-robin letter days, he begins his letter explaining why he has been holding the letter envelope so long or, on the rare occasions where he completes it in a few weeks, complaining to the rest of us about how long the letter takes to circulate. That's Mark -- totally outrageous but you love every minute of it. (We'll leave the letters online for a while so all can get the chance to reread them. Out of decorum, I thought I would dispense with the usual snide headlines for this edition. But Mark's letters reminded me of how much he loved that editorial interference. So like Pietrina wearing her biggest hat at Mark's funeral to honor his love of style, I once again determined to caption my siblings' words.

Amen

It would be so easy to quote from Mark's letters but I have resisted the temptation up to this point. However, let me close with two thoughts taken from Mark's letters: First, a reread of Mark's last few letters shows that he was fading and the disease was winning. When we first read them, we may have blown by some rather pessimistic sentences at the time, denying that this could really be happening to Mark. But now that we can use hindsight with our reading glasses, it's apparent that his days were numbered and we appreciate Lucy's wisdom during Mark's final moments.

Second, I'll end with Mark's words from twenty years ago: (He would have wanted the last word.)

"I have always been proud to be a Schmitt, but never more so than at the time of Anne's funeral. The behavior and attitudes of family and friends of the family has strengthened my character and my respect for all of you. We really are lucky to have such a large and strong family, and I think that Anne's death will bring us closer together."

Contributed by Dick