Showing posts with label Chambley. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Chambley. Show all posts

Thursday, December 1, 2011

Nancy, France










In December, 1961, Mary and I were tired of hitchhiking in the cold so we found jobs at a newly-reopened U.S. Air Force base at Chambley, France. It wasn’t easy. We searched from Paris to Frankfurt, listening to rumors, following hunches, filling out paperwork, until finally this job opened up for us. I was hired as the Service Club Director and Mary was my half-time assistant and half-time French helper. I got the lead job because of having been a counselor at numerous YMCA day camps.

One of our jobs was organizing field trips to interesting places. Chambley is a tiny town in the northeast Alsace-Lorraine section of France with Metz being the nearest big town. To the south, but still in Alsace-Lorraine, is Nancy. It has an opera house, and since I like opera, I arranged a trip to see an opera there. That’s all I remember. I hope that the guys who went on the trip were impressed by Nancy, because when Mary and I returned in April this year, we found it absolutely glorious!

We arrived at the train station, having gotten up early enough at Lydia’s to catch the 6:30 train from Colmar. The map to our hotel looked like an easy hike down just one long street, no turns, no chances to get lost. Sometimes, I admit, that backpack made me feel like a little old lady, and Mary, with bad feet, felt the same. Valiant, we plodded onward and onward and yet a bit farther onward. The map showed our hotel to be just past Place Stanislas, so every time we’d come to a little park where four streets met, I asked someone if that was Place Stanislas. The answer was always an amused smile and “Non. Tout droit.” Meaning keep going straight ahead.

There is no mistaking Place Stanislas. An enormous open space gently rises to the center where stands a magnificent statue of Stanislas, the last King of Poland, on his majestic horse. Regency style (?) buildings flank the square, and the ubiquitous outdoor dining tables and umbrellas flutter around the edges like lacy doilies. Ornate gates of real gold painted wrought iron are at each corner and the two places where the main street enters and exits. Fountains on the north side corners are spectacular in their exuberant display of water! water! everywhere. Each is composed of statues caught by the sculptor at the peak of energetic action. They guard the entrance gates to the large grand park.

Place Stanislas is a glorious, happy, rich space where commoners and kings can meander or sit and enjoy the sunshine or an aperitif. Mr. Stanislas is the one who made it all possible. He became the Duc de Lorraine after his daughter married the future King of France. Blessed with lots of money, he had grandiose plans for turning Nancy into a showplace to rival Paris or any other large city, and he succeeded, at least during the times he lived.

Residents are rightly proud of Nancy. They keep it spotless, which was refreshing. The morning after our arrival I was up early, as usual, and walking. The hotel was only a block from Place Stanislas, so that’s where I headed, passing the opera house on the way. It was about 7 a.m. and the paving stones, laid out in patterns, were being scrubbed clean by a street sweeping machine.

The weather was cool, so I headed into the grand park and sat in the sun by the rose garden to warm up. So peaceful. Then back to the hotel to pick up Mary and start our day.

We definitely wanted to see the Musée des Beaux Arts, one of the buildings on Place Stanislas. But first we had to find a boulangerie for our morning apple turnover and an apricot non-fried donut sort of yummy thing.

The Beaux Arts is laid out beautifully and intelligently, by themes, except for lighting that in some areas bounces off paintings, making it difficult to see the entire work all at once. The main focus is on artists from Lorraine or artists who worked in Lorraine. These lesser-known artists were, in our opinion, equal to or better than many of the more famous ones.

The use of color in the impressionists and pointillists is so intriguing! Spots of cools and warms mold the shape. Mary taught that technique in her middle school with the same results I had when I tried it – mud. But not these artists. They achieved crispness and definition.

The sculpture of the woman’s head is one of the most beautiful things ever seen, partly because of the light shining from above onto her upturned face. Imagine, from the photo, how it looks and forgive the two-dimensional picture for not conveying the full effect of the three-dimensional graceful miracle of marble.

After the Beaux Arts, we visited the Ducal Palace museum which shows how trees became furniture in the old days, and iron became artistic curves and points. Early photographs of many Lorraine villages were proof that life used to be hard work and dirt. In the adjoining church are tombs of dukes and others. I gloss over this museum only because I was getting tired of looking at things. It’s truly educational in the best way – enjoyable.

The day was cold, so we found an outdoor café and sat in the sun eating a pave of apple, nuts and caramel, warming ourselves up. Then there was another long walk, exploring here and there and finally the big park where we saw peacocks strutting about. It was then 7:30 p.m.. We were tired and hungry, but didn’t want to take the time or energy to find a restaurant so chose, instead, the snack stand by the entrance to the park. It was a great choice, because my chicken and raclette cheese Panini eaten outdoors on the park bench was heaven-sent. A good price, too, not like the onion soup and chevre chaud salad the night before which cost me around 20 Euros ($24?).

That night, I bundled up with extra blankets and a bedspread until sometime in the middle of the night when I finally warmed up. That was the coldest I’d been since we got to France.

Saturday, January 22, 2011

Why France?


“Why France?” Thrim asked as we took our walk in the desert.

The question was so strange to me that I couldn’t think of an answer. I didn’t blurt out my first thought, a puzzled “Why not France?.” I kept walking and, odd for me, tried to figure out “why?” I’m impulsive rather than analytical.

Why, indeed, did Mary and I want to ramble around France for five weeks?

Stalling for time instead of answering his question, and curious, I asked, “Where would you go?”

Without hesitation, he replied, “England. The castles, the history, the stories. England.”

What a great idea, I thought. Why didn’t we decide to do that instead of France?

Maybe it’s because France is where we first hitchhiked, taking just a week to get in close touch with people and places. It was such a good experience that hitchhiking became our main type of transportation throughout Europe except in Spain and southern France where we rode our motorscooter.

We had so many friendly, harrowing, exciting experiences that the time stretches in memory to take up a much larger space than ordinary weeks or even years do.

In addition to that first week, we found jobs for six months near Chambley, a tiny town in Alsace-Lorraine, at a U.S. Air Force Base. Waking up every morning in the French countryside, walking the farm road to St. Julien, eating at Renee’s tiny restaurant where I first discovered quiche Lorraine, shopping in Metz and Nancy, also endeared France to me.

The jobs came about because Russia began constructing the Berlin Wall in August 1961, and in October detonated a 58 megaton hydrogen bomb known as Tsar Bomba that still holds the record for the largest man-made explosion. President Kennedy, judging those to be unfriendly acts, called up the Air Force National Guard and sent them to Europe to man a few old unused bases from WW II.

In that same bleak December we hit a low point in our adventure, hitchhiking on icy roads, cold and maybe even a bit homesick. When we heard that the Air Force might be hiring, we immediately went to Wiesbaden (or Frankfurt?) to apply. I was hired as the Service Club Director and Mary was my Assistant. For the six months the base was open, we ran the recreational activities and planned trips for our guys all over France and Europe.

Since we were being paid on a U.S. government payscale and had housing on the base, we were able to save enough to keep us traveling cheaply and slowly for another five months as far as Japan.

“That’s what I mean,” Thrim continued, still puzzled. “You went all the way around the world, you saw all those places, and yet you want to return to France?”

“Yes. Yes, we do.” France, in a way, was home.