Howard Berger Sr.

A Husband, Dad and Grandad



Born in 1900 in South Dakota and left us in 1963 in Petoskey, Michigan. He was raised in an orphanage. He ran away from his foster home when he was 15 and joined the Army. He was stationed at Fort Hood, Texas and took care of horses on the base. Grandad and Grandma were married in 1925 in Petoskey, Michigan and spent there lives together there.


A letter from my Mother to her Dad:

WELL DAD, HERE I AM, YOUR LITTLE GIRL, WOULD YOU BELIEVE ALL GROWN UP AND WITH GREAT-GRANDCHILDREN ... THE YEARS GO BY SO QUICKLY. DAVID WAS JUST A LITTLE BOY WHEN YOU LEFT US AND IS NEARLY 40 NOW. REMEMBER HOW HE LOVED TO PLAY WITH YOUR CANE? WISH YOU HAD STAYED LONG ENOUGH TO SEE THEM ALL GROW UP ,BUT GOD HAD OTHER PLANS FOR YOU..MAYBE THEY NEEDED A SANTA IN HEAVEN FOR ALL THE LITTLE ONES THERE. YOU WERE SUCH A GOOD ONE HERE ON EARTH. WINTER HAS LINGERED ON THIS YEAR BUT SPRING CANT BE TO FAR AWAY. I KNOW I WAS A REAL HEADACHE AT TIMES FOR YOU AND I AM SORRY FOR THAT ..YOU WERE ALWAYS SO PATIENT WITH ME, AS WAS MOM..YOU WERE WONDERFUL PARENTS AND I AM SO GRATEFUL FOR THE LOVE YOU ALWAYS GAVE , AND SORRY FOR THE TEARS YOU SHED BECAUSE OF ME. I KNOW MOM IS WITH YOU NOW SO YOU ARENT ALONE.I THINK ABOUT YOU OFTEN..YOU LEFT US SO QUICKLY I NEVER HAD A CHANCE TO TELL YOU HOW MUCH I LOVED YOU, GIVE MOM A HUG FOR ME.I MISS YOU BOTH SO VERY MUCH,BUT KNOW YOU ARE HAPPY NOW AND AT PEACE..

I LOVE YOU, LOUISE





Dear Grandad,
God took you when I was young. I do have wonderful memories of you tho. I just wish I had yu longer. I dont think God made any man more loving and compassionate than you were. I never heard an unkind word spoken by you or about you. I dont recall that you ever raised your voice or a hand at anyone. You had so much love to offer and brought so much happiness into our lives and many others also. You loved kids in a special way. I remember every Christmas you were Santa Clause downtown in the cold and always jolly!! I dont remember when I knew it was you but you were a perfect Santa. I will never forget how you tickled us kids until we cried. Playing with us in the living room floor. You loved the sound of laughter and created a whole lot of it! I remember the cold winters how you worked to keep the furnace full of coal at the newspaper office and always kept us supplied in comic books and paper dolls. It was such a treat! The warmest room of the house was the dining room. You would work puzzles, facing Grandma's tiny violets that were every color of the rainbow. I remember watching you work puzzles and sneaking up every now and then to try to put a piece in myself. My arm was so short I would drag pieces off onto the floor. You never told me to go away. Never. Grandma or Mama would get us busy on a puzzel of our own across the table or on TV trays. When you were busy with a puzzle it was my opportuity to sneak up the stairs behind you to your puzzle clauset. It was a tiny room filled with so much beauty. Puzzles and pictures stacked beyond imagination. My memories of you and Grandma are more precious than life itself to me. To touch and hold you again will be my day of glory in heaven! Oh how I love and miss you so.

Love, Eileen


A Letter From Heaven



Grandad left many years before Grandma
but this poem reminds me of the love and devotion
that they shared for one another.

A Shmily For You


My grandparents were married for over half a century, and played their own special game from the time they had met each other. The goal of their game was to write the word "shmily" in a surprise place for the other to find. They took turns leaving "shmily" around the house, and as soon as one of them discovered it, it was their turn to hide it once more. They dragged "shmily" with their fingers through the sugar and flour containers to await whoever was preparing the next meal. They smeared it in the dew on the windows overlooking the patio where my grandma always fed us warm, homemade pudding with blue food coloring.
"Shmily" was written in the steam left on the mirror after a hot shower, where it would reappear bath after bath. At one point, my grandmother even unrolled an entire roll of  toilet paper to leave "shmily" on the very last sheet. There was no end to the places "shmily" would pop up. Little notes with "shmily" scribbled hurriedly were found on dashboards and car seats, or taped to steering wheels. The notes were stuffed inside shoes and left under pillows. "Shmily" was written in the dust upon the mantel and traced in the ashes of the fireplace. This mysterious word was as much a part of my grandparents' house as the furniture. It took me a long time before I was able to fully appreciate my grandparents' game. Skepticism has kept me from believing in true love-one that is pure and enduring. However, I never doubted my grandparents' relationship. They had love down pat. It was more than their flirtatious little games; it was a way of life. Their relationship was based on a devotion and passionate affection which not everyone is lucky experience.
Grandma and Grandpa held hands every chance they could. They stole kisses as they bumped into each other in their tiny kitchen. They finished each other's sentences and shared the daily crossword puzzle and word jumble. My grandma whispered to me about how cute my grandpa was, how handsome and old he had grown to be. She claimed that she really knew "how to pick 'em." Before every meal they bowed their heads and gave thanks, marveling at their blessings: a wonderful family, good fortune, and each other.
  But there was a dark cloud in my grandparents' life: my grandmother had breast cancer. The disease had first appeared ten years earlier. As always, Grandpa was with her every step of the way. He comforted her in their yellow room, painted that way so that she could always be surrounded by sunshine, even when she was too sick to go outside.
Now the cancer was again attacking her body. With the help of a cane and my grandfather's steady hand, they went to church every morning. But my grandmother grew steadily weaker until, finally, she could not leave the house anymore. For a while, Grandpa would go to church alone, praying to God to watch over his wife. Then one day, what we all dreaded finally happened. Grandma was gone.   "Shmily." It was scrawled in yellow on the pink ribbons of my grandmother's funeral bouquet. As the crowd thinned and the last mourners turned to leave, my aunts, uncles, cousins and other family members came forward and gathered around Grandma one last time. Grandpa stepped up to my grandmother's casket and, taking a shaky breath, he began to sing to her. Through his tears and grief, the song came, a deep and throaty lullaby. Shaking with my own sorrow, I will never forget that moment. For I knew   that, although I couldn't begin to fathom the depth of their love, I had been privileged to witness its unmatched beauty.
 S-h-m-i-l-y: See How Much I Love You

Unknown







Mable Emma Berger


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