My story starts out back in the early sixties. Charles Deese Jr. and Jo Ann
(Cotton) Deese decided to make a trip to Baptist Hospital one day to birth their
second child. Upon their return home my sister, six years my senior, was
introduced to Charles Van Deese. Now of course, I can’t tell you a whole lot
about my welcome home party due to the fact that I was asleep as newborns
generally tend to be (at least the ones down here in the South).
The “South”, that don’t tell you a whole lot, nor does it describe exactly
where. As I said, I was born in Baptist Hospital but I guess every city in the
U.S. has at least one Baptist Hospital. But to be “persactly” accurate, as a
buddy of mine used to say, it was Pensacola, Florida which is up in the
northwest end of the state. They call it “The Panhandle”. For years I searched my mother’s cabinets for a frying pan with a handle that shape (never found one by the way!). But anyhow, let me continue with the introduction of the people who
had such a profound effect on my early childhood and adolescence. My father was also born in Pensacola, Florida to Charles Deese Sr. and Jewel Deese. They were hard working people and raised their only son to be honest at whatever the cost and to be a hard working man of his word. Bust most of all, my grandmother, whom I called “Nana”, raised him to be a Christian.
My father met my mother at Mississippi College, a Baptist college
just outside of Jackson, Mississippi. Jo Ann Cotton was born in Jackson, Mississippi to Van and Nell Cotton. (Note the coordination of the names of the
two grandfathers to mine). Anyway, Mr. and Mrs. Cotton, otherwise known as
“Porter and Fluffy’” had both known hard times coming up but they too taught
their two daughters (Jo Ann and Sylvia) that life is not always fair but to trust
in the Lord and hard work will keep you happy as well as honest.
Sylvia Suzanne Deese - what more can I say. This is my
sister who, by the way, just turned forty. Happy Birthday Sis! Being six years
apart we were not real, how can I put it, “close”, shall I say. I was the younger
bratty brother. So we never really got along. She more or less tolerated me,
which really shows character. I would not have been so nice if I had been in her
place dealing with such a “Royal Pain In The Keester”.
I guess my youngest memories are of a precious little colored lady named Dorsey. She helped my mother around the house with the cleaning and the tending to me. I really don’t know how many days a week that she was there. In my mind it seemed that she was always there but knowing the financial strains that two children and life’s necessities can put on a young couple, I think she may have only been there one or two days a week.
I remember lying on our hardwood floors in the mornings watching “Captain Kangaroo” and eating raisins. One morning Mama comes in all excited to tell me that Daddy had gotten me into Pensacola Christian School. I did not know what cursing was at that age but I knew what wanting or needing to curse felt like. That started my hate affair with formal education. Not so much a hate affair but it seemed like such a waste of time to learn things that had no practical use such as diagramming a sentence. To this day I think that English teachers all
over the United States got together to see how useless a process they could
conceive to absolutely waste time. Henceforth, “Class let’s diagram a
sentence”!
My educational experiences saw me start off in Pensacola Christian as a
proud kindergartner. I continued in Pensacola Christian until third grade where I had to tell Miss Orthwein goodbye! (Oh yeah, Orthwein, it ain’t exactly a southern
name.) Then I proceeded to invade the ranks of Escambia Christian School where life became more southern and serene. You see, Pensacola Christian had a dress code and hair code. In Pensacola Christian the acceptable boy’s hair cut would have made any Marine D.I. proud. In fact, I always thought that some of the teachers at P.C.S. doubled as Marine Corps D.I. fill-ins. Anyway, back to E.C.S. where I expanded my mind in a relaxed environment until Sixth grade. I also learned (around fourth grade) that those weird looking things in class with me and the guys could actually be more interesting to talk to than any of my
buddies. In fact, when seven or eight girls started calling your name from the
sidelines and cheering for you, you tend to run faster than before.
About this time Mama took a job as Librarian at a beautiful little
country school at Barrineau Park School. Three or four weeks before sixth grade started, me and a buddy were playing out back at the house when I had a slight
miscalculation in physics which resulted in a misintuned carpicular refraction
of the radius and the ulna. So this posed a little - what’s that? Oh! I fell and
broke my left wrist (keep in mind I said my left wrist, cause I’m right-handed).
But as I had said, I started Barrineau Park School after six weeks of sixth
grade. When I transferred to my new sixth grade class I found out that my mother
had already told all the girls that I had blonde hair and blue eyes, so their
curiosities were already sparked when I walked in that first day. I found that
all over the classroom seats had been saved for the new boy. Well I figured I’d play this for all it was worth. By the end of the day l had four or five new
girlfriends and all of them were anxious to do my writing for me. Due to the
fact that Mrs. Roberts said ” Van can’t write that well with his right hand so we
will write for him”. Now some how they understood that I was left -handed when
all I said was that I can’t write too well with my right hand! Which really is
the truth. My penmanship is terrible but who was I to break their giving spirits?
They finally forgave me after they found out the truth but it was worth getting
to sit so close to five girls in the sixth grade.
Later years found me at Tate High School, where at the end of ninth grade football season; actually it was the start of spring training for Junior Varsity, I was playing Free Safety. Now keep in mind, in ninth grade I was 5’lO”, wore a size 11 shoe and weighed 104 lbs. I was not your typical All American material. But at spring training, after a year of sitting the bench due to size and inexperience, the new defensive coach, who was built similar to me when he was in school, decided to sit me down and give me a few pointers. I found out how to blind side a receiver or a running back or in this case the Varsity quarterback . Well the ball was snapped and here comes the fullback with the quarterback right behind him. The cornerback took out the fullback which left me to tend to the runner. The Defensive Coach called out “Deese he’d better not get up”, which meant I had to drop all 195 lbs. of this future senior quarterback. Well I’m proud to tell you that dynamite comes in small packages. After the trainers helped him off the field I couldn’t help but think, “that was easy!!”
After practice I went to talk to the quarterback. I suggested that we go get a cold drink. His reply was “I can’t, I don’t have any money. To which I replied, “well, I’ll loan you the money ‘til tomorrow”, to which he said, “ Well, I won’t have it then either”. What he was getting to was that he would have to ask his mother or father for coke money when they gave him gas money each week to which I replied, “Well, don’t you have a job?” As it turned out he nor any of the other “star football players” had money or jobs. When I asked how they took girls out on dates they said the girl either paid or they got it from their parents.