| EDGAR VARLEY PRESTWICH
6 FEBRUARY 1922 VINYARD, UTAH |
Member CCC, US Navy, Utah National Guard, Coast Guard and Navla Reserves and was a decorated World War II Veteran |
| Chief Commissary Steward Chef, accountant, data processor and LDS custodian | |
| Developed one of his many hobbies into a small business, Ed's Custom Bullets | |
| Married 50 years and sealed in the LDS Salt Lake, Utah Temple on 27 April 1964 |
Autobiography of Edgar 'Ted' Varley Prestwich
Born in Vineyard, Ut. February 6 1922, Died in Bountiful, Ut. February
9, 1987
I was born February 6, 1922 in Vineyard, Utah, in my grandmother, Harriet Parkin Varley's home, in the same bed my mother was born in. I was a blue baby and had difficulty breathing. However, with the care of my grandmother and my Mother I survived. This home was located south of the old Geneva Resort and was sold to U.S. Steel for the building of Geneva Steel in early 1940's to enhance the World War II effort.
My father is Horace Emerson Prestwich, b: Dec. 24, 1896 d: May 6 1988, and my mother is Zipporah Varley Prestwich, b: Mar. 31, 1896 d: Apr. 16 1977. I was the fourth child of eleven children, 6 boys and 5 girls. Their names, birth and death dates are:
Jean V. b: 18 July 1915 d: 23 July 1953
Emerson Lamar b: 1 Aug. 1917 d: 30 Aug. 1971
Horace Lester b: 16 Sep. 1919 d: 4 Apr. 1987
Edgar Varley b: 6 Feb. 1922 d: 9 Feb. 1997
Lowell Melvin b: 25 July 1924 d: 17 Feb. 1958
Morris Keith b: 17 Apr. 1927 d: 12 Ian. 1988
Robert Glade b: 12 June 1929
Marilyn b: 22 Mar. 1932
Shirleen b: 3 Aug. 1936
Louise b: 8 Nov. 1938
Gloria b: 8 Nov. 1940
MARBLES
I remember the apple tree out in the orchard and I would always climb
up the tree and played on that tree. I fell many times but was uninjured.
I recollect Christmas, we would have an orange and one toy and some fruit
and nuts. I remember going to school walking down the dirt road from
Orem bench to Vineyard School. In the winter time we would ride our
sleds down the hill and pull them back up after school. I remember
winter more than summer because in the summer time I had to herd cows.
A big canal run through the farm and we would herd the cows up on the ditch
bank. I remember one time I was up herding the cows and I saw my
first airplane sailing through the sky. Also I can remember laying
on a bridge looking down in the water. The water was flowing under
the bridge and soon it seemed the bridge and I were moving.
LOWELL
Mom would always say to us, "Wait 'til your father gets home, you'll
catch it," and that's why I was always afraid of my Dad.
PROVO
I remember going to the Maeser Elementary School in the third or fourth grade. Some of the girls were: Macksene Harding, Beth Elliott, Ruth Ercanbrack, Leda Stevens, Dorothy Hatch, and Leona Holder. I was teasing one of those girls and three or four of them got me outside of the school and beat the h___ out of me at recess.
My buddies were Vernon "Bun" Cheever, Dix Hardy, Ray Hall, Miles Basset, Walter Prusse, Wally Ripple, Grant Larsen, Bruce Jenkins. We just played marbles, and got into mischief.
I went to Farrer Jr. High at the age of 12. I was kicked in the
groin while playing football, and my enthusiasm was cooled. One day
when I came home for lunch, I learned that Principal Bjearegard had slapped
Lowell around. I got so mad that when he came from lunch to go back
to school, I caught him on the street and beat him up. He never
walked down our side of the street again.
ICE CREAM CARTS
RUNAWAYS
MAX & IRENE ROBERTS
CCC CAMP -PROVO, UT AH
We used to chase the women in Kamas. The girls in Provo were not
pretty enough and we had to go out in the sticks. ("How come you
married a girl from Provo, Old Man? Were you still hard up?" -Nina)
("Try to answer that one, Dad!" -Clint)
NATIONAL GUARD
U S NAVY
We came home on leave for a week, then returned to San Diego and were transported on the old USS Enterprise, an air craft carrier which shipped out to Pearl Harbor, Hawaii. I was then assigned to the Pensacola, which was a heavy cruiser. I was a First Striker, then I made Third Class Cook. The watch was divided into two watches, 24 hours off and 24 hours on. And Ray was assigned on the USS Houston. This was the last time we saw each other.
Our crew shipped out November 28, 1941 bound for Manila, and we accompanied nine (9) Troop Transports. This was the only Man-O-War with the convoy. We did not have any live ammunition but were armed with only all-target ammunition.
When we got word of the Japanese strike against Pearl Harbor, we left the convoy and stripped the ship of all unnecessary things, right down to anything in excess of our immediate needs: i.e. razor blades, bedding, Captain's ward room furniture, anything we did not need went over the side to make the ship light and go faster.
We arrived in Brisbane, Australia the 24th of December, the day before Christmas. We were the first Man-O-War to visit Australia after Pearl Harbor. What a liberty port that was. All the Australian men were up on the North Coast of Australia, because they were afraid the Japanese would come down the Torres Straits, a strip between Australia and New Guinea.
As I stated above, Ray and I had taken our first leave together.
When we returned he was assigned to the USS Houston, a heavy cruiser, which
was bombed and sunk in the Torres Straits. All aboard were lost.
My life-time friend also lost his life. There were probably men with
life preservers on, but the Great White Sharks got them.
AUSTRALIA
When we went on the dock wearing our white uniforms, the women fought over us. A mother and daughter grabbed me and put me in a cab and took me to their home for Christmas. I spent 24 hours with them, spending Christmas Eve and Morning with them, then I went back aboard to stand my watch at noon. I got liberty again after 24 hours and they met me on the dock and we went sight seeing all around Brisbane. No one in Australia would let us spend any of our own money for street cars, restaurants, or taxies. They would not let us spend any money. The thing I remember in Australia, the toilets were down below the street. Men used one side separated by a wall, and the women the other side. I remember the women didn't have good teeth. They didn't have the calcium to make good teeth. We stayed in Australia until we took on fuel and ammunition. We then headed for the northern coast of Australia.
We were hit by a bomb in the bow, and we limped back to Pearl Harbor, another month at sea. We were transferred off at Pearl when the Pensacola was in dry dock for repairs. Les was a yeoman 1st class, Admiral Nimitz secretary, because he had studied typing and shorthand at Provo High. He was able to pull strings and had me transferred to an Aircraft Carrier in San Diego, the USS Von Homme Richard. I was placed in a fighter squadron and I stayed on there for a couple of months, and Les had me transferred to Mare Island, Vallejo, California aboard the USS Stockton, a Naval Training ship. I was there until we got a billet to Treasure Island. There I worked for a couple of years in K Galley and I was in charge of the night watch. I had made 1st Class Cook by then. Daily I could take a crab net and catch crabs, which I would then boil and make crab Louis, cracked crab, crab salad and cocktails in the officer's mess.
We witnessed a body pulled from the bay that was eaten by crabs. So one day a big black mess cook was cleaning tables in the mess hall. I had caught a mess of large crabs, and I took one in my right hand and held it behind and pinched his rear end with my left hand. He turned and saw the crab, let out a yell, leapt upon the tables and ran the full lengthof the mess hall. I was afraid he was going to kill me. But he was good natured about it and we had a good laugh about that.
In November 1946 Les, Betty and I took leave and went home to Provo the second week of November. On the 11th, Veteran's Day they had a parade in Provo which I led carrying the American Flag. That night there was a dance at the Utahna and that is where I met the love of my life, Nina Ann Luke. We danced the whole night and I took her home in my 41 Chevy convertible. I determined to stay over one more day and took her to lunch, and that night to dinner at the Alpine Villa in Pleasant Grove. We corresponded and I returned at Christmas, and we dated. I enrolled at the BYU college and took classes in Accounting, Religion, and Music. It was a very hard time financially, because I was not receiving my college funds and didn't return on the next quarter. I cooked at Freddie's Cafe on North University. Nina and I were married at Uinta County Court house in Evanston, Wyoming on the 12th of March 1947. Rhodes and Orvilla Jeppesen (Nina's sister) drove us there. We returned to Provo and lived with her mother and I had a gas stove installed in the kitchen as I had always hated building fires in coal stoves.
I made a trip back to San Francisco to take care of my Navy papers and my discharge. In August we bought a small trailer and we took Nina's sister, Ruby with us for the trip to San Francisco. She had Roberta and Joyce with her. I took them allover San Francisco and Ruby and children left after a few days for Los Angeles to visit Nina's brother, Roy, wife Hazel, and Mal, wife Ellen, and Victor, wife, Beryl, and all their children.
We had settled in a trailer court in San Francisco, but found a better place in Daly City, which was always fog-ridden. I got a job doing accounting at War Assets Administration and we survived. Sandra Jean was born at the San Francisco County hospital and Nina almost lost her life because was over dosed with ether. They did not let Nina see her for a day or two, nor would they let me see her or the baby because several babies had recently died of diarrhea. Nina and baby were there 10 days, and oh, the joy I had seeing my little one for the first time. I nearly died when the nurse put her in my arms. She was a beautiful baby.
Nina surprised me by taking the baby on the bus from Daly City into S.F. and came into War Assets Admin to show the baby to my co-workers. They had given a beautiful sweater set to our baby and Nina felt she would like to thank them personally and let them see our little doll. After Sandy was six weeks old, Nina found a good job with Jackman & Co. doing bookkeeping and secretarial work in down town San Francisco, and it was an 8-hour a day job. At that time we found a Mormon couple in Daly City who tended Sandy and we had diaper service (no paper ones at that time).
Shortly after this I found a very good job at U.S. Steel in down town San Francisco. In February of 1948 we moved into San Francisco public housing at Hunters Point. It was sparsely furnished with twin beds, a day bed, two dressers, a kitchen table, and four chairs. The stove was a small gas one with an oven. When Sandy was five months old, Ted was ornery and mean with Nina about the coffee. Nina called Betty, who came out and helped her pack a suitcase, and went with her to the bus station, where Nina bought a ticket to go home. At the last minute Nina called me tell me she was leaving. I must have run every red light from work to the bus station. I came and cashed in the ticket and drove to a safe parking and told Nina I was sorry and how much I loved her and our baby and to make a good life for us.
Our baby sitter soon became pregnant and we found another lady in our housing area who took Sandy for us. They had a little dog, this is how Sandy became fond of dogs. Nina became pregnant with Ricky and in September we packed to take her home to be with her Mother and have the baby in Utah. Richard was born in Utah Valley Hospital on October 30, 1948 at two minutes to midnight. I was over-joyed to have my first boy. Columbia Steel Co. wired a lovely bouquet to her at the hospital. I sacrificed much so she could stay there until December 28, 1948 when she flew home to San Francisco. The plane was very late as it could not land because of fog. I could hardly wait to hold my new son and cherished our darling little girl, who called her little brother "Gicky"
In February 1949 I came down with infectious hepatitis, and went to the Navy hospital for examination and they told me I could not go home. At this time telephone service was nil and I could not call Nina. I told them I must return to tell my wife where I was. I came home and packed my toiletries and took my car to Les and asked him to bring Nina to see me. It was a difficult time. I was fed boiled steak, could not have chocolate or sweets, and stayed there for two months. Columbia Steel paid my salary and I was covered by Navy Insurance. This was a difficult time for Nina, but she braved busses and street cars to visit me. It would take her all afternoon.