Twenty feet from the Kennedys

Jackie, Jack, Johnson and Stevenson
12/6/1962 Kennedy Foundation Dinner in the Hilton ballroom. Left to Right:U.N. Ambassador Adlai Stevenson, President Kennedy, First Lady Jackie Kennedy, Vice President Lyndon Johnson

This is the story of how my father and I came to be twenty feet from President and Jackie Kennedy. Like all Southern stories, this one begins a while back. I’ll be brief.

My father’s father,Wilmer Sperry Hunt, came of age in the 1890s as the son of a doctor in poor little Ripley, Mississippi, where opportunities were scarce. When he was nineteen, Sperry, as my grandfather was called, was invited to Austin to live with his sister while he studied law at the University of Texas. After receiving his degree, he moved to Houston, opened a law office and married my grandmother, a bright, well-to-do girl named Lucy Brady, who once bragged to me that she had a (corseted) nineteen inch waist on the day of her wedding. Ouch.

Born in 1903, my father Wilmer Brady Hunt was the only boy of three children. By all accounts he grew up to be a funny young dandy who was as comfortable at a black-tie party as he was hunting and playing cards. In 1928 he too received his law degree from UT. He returned to Houston where he joined his father’s firm and married a lovely, artistic woman named Eugenia. Five years later, in the midst of the Depression, my father took over the firm, following Grandpa’s unexpected death. What I skipped over were the four years from 1921 to 1925 when Dad earned his undergraduate degree at Georgetown University in Washington D.C. My father took me to DC in early December of 1962. It was the only trip my father and I ever took alone.

My parents, Wilmer and Eugenia Hunt; my young nephews and me (right) at our home in Houston in 1962
My parents, Wilmer and Eugenia Hunt; my young nephews and me (right) at our home in Houston in 1962

I remember landing at Dulles only because the pilot parked the prop jet at the edge of the airport. Evidently there were some issues with the gate. Walking down the stair truck, we discovered our light wool suits and overcoats, perfect for Gulf Coast winters, were a bit thin for the chill of DC. We boarded a bus which took us a good distance to the spanking new terminal, which President Kennedy had dedicated only three weeks earlier. [For historical perspective I’ve included a link at the bottom of this post to a Wikipedia article entitled “1962 in the United States”]

It was late afternoon when the taxi swung beneath the broad portico of what was then the Statler Hilton hotel, a few blocks from the White House. A very tall black man in a dark, elegant topcoat opened the door and welcomed us. I remember him now for what happened several nights later. A bellman took us through a large glass foyer that sheltered the lobby from the cold. The lobby itself was of plain, white stone as I remember. Wide carpeted stairs ascended to a second-floor landing where a set of double doors opened to a ballroom.

The next morning Dad bought us wool mufflers that made walking around in the breezy forty-degree weather comfortable.

I recall a surprising number of events from this trip so long ago. Most I remember as snapshots; a few other with more clarity. One does remember capital cities, where so many of the buildings are designed and staged to appear epic and symbolic.

The second and more important reason I remember these days so well was that my father was a memorable man. Just over six feet tall, he had piercing blue eyes. He stood very erect in those days, as you can see from the photograph. He was not generally confrontational, but when confronted, he we utterly fearless, as I will write about in a later piece. What is most remembered by the many people who still speak of him, was his humor. He had a way of punctuating a moment that never failed to make people laugh. Further, he displayed a lawyer’s economy of speech that made him an excellent joke and story teller. Let me offer this absurd example of a story he told several times over the years:

My father become a judge early in the year I was born. On the day of my birth, the tale begins, he told his bailiff to bring all of the men he’d put in jail into the courtroom. (There were none, by the way. He was a civil court judge.). Once the jailbirds were assembled, the story goes, he asked if this was anyone’s birthday. No one spoke. Dad said that was a shame, for he was going to release anyone who had the same birthday as his new son. Hands shot up around the room.

Early in our trip we visited the Capitol Building and, of course, the Washington Monument. But it was the Lincoln Memorial that most awed me. Stunning for its simplicity as much as its grandeur, the temple, as it can only be described, honors the plain man who saved the nation and freed the slaves at a personal cost no smaller than the men he sent to their deaths. As I approached the Lincoln statue, I recall my father holding back a bit. Though a hundred years had passed, the Civil War was a ghostly presence in the South. Enoch Newton Hunt, his grandfather, had been a Confederate surgeon. Many Southerners still grumbled. Grandpa grew up resenting the Federal Reconstruction troops who left Mississippi the year he was born. My dad, like most Texans of his day, did not possess the vitriol belonging to the Deep South in those desperate days of the struggle for civil rights. A student of history throughout his life, he always spoke of the Civil War in a solemn manner, as one does of a great tragedies.

Over the next couple of days we visited the National Art Gallery and the National Cathedral of the Episcopal Church, both at the insistence of my mother. This is not her story, but it’s worth mentioning that Eugenia Hunt was an artist, which made her feel a little isolated from the rest of us. As the final of her four children – the caboose, as my father called me – I was her last hope of having an artistic companion in the family. Further, unlike my Catholic father and siblings, she was an Episcopalian. At some point during the premarital preparations, she promised to raise her children as Catholics. In the end, she reneged on the last one and took me to the Episcopal church “for company,” as she said. That was my mom.

One morning was reserved for a visit to the Supreme Court. Well before the trip, my mother told me that Dad wanted to be presented to the court, a process that would end in his being able to argue before it. He had already filed a petition and collected letters of recommendation from certified attorneys in Houston. Grandpa, he explained, had received his own certificate on one of his visits to see Dad in Washington.

Court was not in session that day. The huge white marble room was almost completely empty. At the back of the chamber stood a field of red theatrical drapes behind a row of white columns. Before the columns was a plane wooden desk perhaps forty-feet wide. Nine black, high-back chairs sat behind the desk. Dad placed me in one of the empty rows at the back of the gallery. Carrying a soft valise, he approached a man seated at a small desk to the side of the wide table. Their conversation was loud enough to hear but too reverberated to understand. Moments later the man handed my father a piece of paper which he placed carefully into the valise. He returned to collect me, and we left without speaking of the event.

In the years since, I’ve come to believe that that trip was in part designed to instill in me a sense of awe and tradition, that might lead to a third attorney in the family. My sisters were mothers, by then. My older brother, was well on his way to becoming a biologist. As with Mom, I was the last hope. I respected and admired my father and what he did. I recall watching countless courtroom dramas on television with him and thinking how important his job was. He told me his opinions of how trials of the day were decided. I know now, as I knew then, that Dad sincerely wanted me to chose my own path, whatever that might be. And I’ve come to think that this trip was Dad’s way of showing me how happy he was with his career in law. And it did.

As I recall, it was on our final day in Washington that we took the White House tour. Jackie Kennedy had taken it upon herself to restore and redecorate her new home. For structural reasons the house had been gutted and reconstructed during the Truman years, and was in need of redecorating. A year later, on Valentine’s Day of 1962, my parents and I watched as Jackie Kennedy conducted the American public on a televised tour of the White House. Being escorted through the mansion was thrilling for me, not so much for the tour itself, but because we, as citizens, had been invited into the home of our President.

One of the best parts of the trip happened the last evening. We took a cab to dinner. Traffic was heavy as we approached the Treasury Building, which brought a smile and a story to my father’s lips.

His father, Dad said, had visited him at college. It was the early days of the Roaring Twenties. Dad said he enjoyed squiring Papa around town, as he put it. They too visited all the monuments – certainly the Lincoln Memorial, which was completed during those years. They saw famed Walter Johnson of the Washington Senators pitch to Babe Ruth’s Yankees. At one point, my grandfather lamented that it was too bad that Prohibition was on, as he’d like to have something to drink. According to my father, Grandpa felt it was his duty as an attorney to be an example and did not drink.

Dad said they could, in fact, have a drink. He knew of a speakeasy nearby.

“But it’s the nation’s capital?” Grandpa said surprised..

Dad promptly took him to a warehouse joint and bought a pint of whiskey. To my grandfather’s amazement it only a few blocks from the Treasury Building, which housed the principal enforcers of Prohibition. Shocked, disgusted, and likely pleased, Grandpa returned to Houston and had a barrel of whiskey placed in his attic forthwith.

Over dinner Dad told me that he would often take a ship to and from college. The route, he said, followed the Intercoastal Waterway stopping at ports like Miami and Charleston.

“Why not take the train?” I asked, feeling certain that was faster.

“The twelve mile limit,” he said with a grin.

I had to smile picturing my father at nineteen on a ship, just outside of US territorial waters, drinking and gambling the night away.

Leaving the restaurant, we discovered snow falling on the dark streets. I was thrilled. I had only seen snow once – in 1960 when four inches fell on Houston. We made snowmen that day which melted completely in hours. I had never seen snow at night. I still remember the flakes floating in the streetlights that night in DC.

As our taxi approached the Hilton, we could see a policeman diverting traffic onto the cross street. The driver let us out at the side door. Entering the hotel we discovered a crowd in the lobby standing six-deep behind a rope line separating the lobby from the entrance. Two policemen stood off to the side.

My father asked a man at the back of the crowd what was happening.

“The President is coming,” he said. “There’s a big Kennedy party upstairs.”

The dinner turned out to be the first Kennedy Foundation Dinner.

Dad looked at me and smiled. Two years earlier the two of us, Dad’s cousin Chan and Mom gathered around a television in Sausalito, California watching the Democratic Convention. Dad was for Lyndon Johnson but happily backed John Kennedy when he got the nomination.

Being over six feet tall, my father could see clearly over the crowd in the Hilton lobby. At five-five in those days, I stared at a wall of backs. Determined to see the man who had fought the Japanese, funded the space race and stared down the Soviets, I carefully slithered and jostled my way to a tight spot between two men and the velvet rope. I had a clear view of the entrance through the front window and the glass foyer. A man in a black suit stood by the front door. The doorman snugged his gray gloves and stared keenly up the street.

President Kennedy Snowy Limousine
President Kennedy on a snowy night in 1961

A moment later a black Lincoln limousine rolled up to the curb. The doorman leaned forward and opened the rear door. Out stepped Jack Kennedy in a smart black tux. He tugged quickly at his shirt cuffs and gave the doorman a smile. The doorman smiled back and said something. Before the President could answer, Jacqueline Kennedy appeared in the doorway wearing the white dress and matching jacket. The doorman offered the First Lady his hand which she grasped with her fingertips. She rose from the car and walked gracefully between the two men who were by then engaged in friendly conversation.

Jackie waited for a moment, gave a little shiver and walked into the hotel through the front door being held opened by the man in the black suit. She continued through the foyer and into the lobby where she stopped directly in front of me, no more than twenty feet away. She glanced over her shoulder at her husband, lifting the opposite heel as she did. Seeing that he was still talking to the doorman, she turned back and waited.

And there she stayed, poised with her weight on one foot, in what I can only describe as a moment of propriety. Was she annoyed at her husband for ignoring her in the cold to talk to a stranger? Was she upset at having to wait exposed awkwardly to a rope line of onlookers? Or was she perhaps pleased Jack had found a moment of levity between the stresses of the day and the upcoming function? Nothing was revealed in those dark eyes.

A moment later Jack appeared with his charming smile and perhaps an apology. Jackie took her husband’s arm. The couple mounted the stairs and disappeared into the ballroom where a photographer snapped the picture at the top of this post.

We flew home the next day. I never did become a lawyer. I never really chose a career at all. I’ve lived a mostly happy life among my family and friends doing what I enjoyed and what paid the bills. I consider myself very, very fortunate. And no small part of my fortune was being the son of the man who took me to Washington, DC in 1962.

Jackie and Johnson

Above: Video of Jackie Kennedy and Vice President Lyndon Johnson and others watching President Kennedy’s speech at the Kennedy Foundation Dinner the evening of 12/6/1962.

Wikipedia article entitled 1962 in the United States

The Howards and Episcopal churches in Texas

The Howards and St James Episcopal Church in La Grange Texas
The Howards and St James Episcopal Church in La Grange Texas

Uncle Philo Howard sent me this card on 12-28-1989. He and Aunt Mary were living in La Grange then. Jeana lived in her condo overlooking Barton Creek in Austin. Uncle Philo wrote,

Dear Sperry,

The church on this card once had a rector named Horatio Howard and he was your great-great grandfather. We went to the 100th anniversary Celebration of the episcopal church in Eagle Lake and found out that he started the church and was the first rector.

Thanks for the Christmas card, give Spring our love.

You mother has had a lot of visitors since Thanksgiving and she seem to be doing better.

Love,
Philo and Mary

Here is Horatio’s house in Palestine, by the way. The map on the right is wrong. Palestine is in East Texas.

https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Howard_House_%28Palestine,_Texas%29

You can read about Horatio and the Columbus church here:

http://library.columbustexas.net/church%20records/colepis1.htm

Descendants of Sarah Catherine Sperry

 

Sarah Catherine Sperry at 18 in Winchester, VA 1861
Sarah Catherine Sperry at 18 in Winchester, VA 1861

Clicking the link just above the photograph below accesses a PDF document that traces the descendants of Sarah Catherine Sperry Hunt. Many thanks to her great-great grandson Malcolm McCorquodale of Houston for preparing the document, and for maintaining the digital family archive from which it derived.

Our cousin John Barada will visit Winchester soon.

Sperry Hunt 5/11/2016

 

List of Kate Sperry’s Descendants

 

Marianna and Kate Sperry
The Sperry Sisters in 1853. Young Marianna and Kate (right), who was 10.

 

Photo references:

http://handley.pastperfectonline.com/photo/C0941DE6-FC25-43D5-AE0F-800130094341

http://handley.pastperfectonline.com/photo/CC287E39-F9D2-4B79-A164-437572338725

Biographical information on the Hunts, the Garrows and the Bradys

John and Marie Etta Garrow House

 

Clicking on the link below will download a Landmark Designation Report from the City of Houston onto your computer. The report is about the John and Marie Etta Garrow House. It contains some very good biographical information about the Hunt/Garrow/Brady side of our family. It also mentions Pierre Schlumberger as well.

The John and Marie Etta Garrow House

Sperry Hunt 5/7/2016

The Howard House at 3608 Audubon in Houston

Ryland Howard at 3608 Audubon 2016

This is a picture of cousin Ryland Howard in front of our grandparents’ house in 2016. It was taken by his lovely daughter Isabel who graciously sent it to me. This is my reply to her.

Isabel,
I’ve been past it myself. It’s a law firm now. There was an air conditioned porch on the south side (to the left). Dr. Howard, Dal or Daddy Philo as people called him, sat there every day as an old man. He listened to the [baseball] game and played pitch with me using enormous cards. Diabetes hurt his vision. He ate figs and spoke very little. The house was originally a block to the south on West Alabama. My dad and I weathered out Hurricane Carla at his house with Nannie Mine and him. I was about 13. Chunks of the palm trees from the median blew down the street. My mom said many of her older relatives passed away in the house. As a girl she and her friends pulled old clothes out of trunks in the attic and put on plays with them. Our grandmother was very wise and good with money.   Her mother died when she was little. She live with her mom’s sister who married a man who adopted her and left her and her sister Bessie land. Nannie Mine’s was “the farm” in Chambers County.

Much love,
Sperry

[See other post about Dr. Howard and baseball. Also, the name Hunt on the awning is strictly divine comedy.]

Judge Hunt was a serious poker player

JudgeSperryPlayCardsLivingRoomFriarTuck1960ish
Judge Hunt and Sperry playing cards in the living room of the house at 526 W. Friar Tuck, Houston circa 1957

My dad, Judge Wilmer Brady Hunt, was a very serious card player. Notice the expression in this photo. He’s playing a ten-year-old (me) and was as focused as a terrier at a rat hole. Note the hat. He always wore one when he played cards. It was likely to cover his expression as he studied newly drawn cards. (The second hat likely belongs to the photographer – probably Uncle Philo or Uncle Brother. (Yes, Uncle Brother, as Henry Safford was known.  His wife, Aunt Georgia, called him Brother, which must have raised some eyebrows occasionally.)

My father’s favorite people to play cards with were probably his mother (Lucy Brady Hunt) and his sisters (Lucy Hunt Barada and Lennie Estelle Hunt). All three were sharks. His mother, whom we called Nana, was the Miss Marple of cards. She was a master of bridge and hearts. Nana rarely glanced around the table. Instead she would stare at her cards, cluck and shake her head grimly. And she would win – decisively and often. What made her particularly difficult to beat was that she held her hand upside down and completely unorganized – so that if a competitor or kibitzer happened by …

My dad told me some of his best times as a young man were playing cards on ships. He did his undergad at Georgetown University in D.C.  Most people would have taken the train from Houston. It was a two-day trip. Instead Dad took a ship from Galveston, which would take four or five – leaving plenty of time to drink whiskey and play cards. He was also very good at shooting skeet, which he probably did at the fantail in those days.

As a lawyer and a judge, he played cards with and his friends every Monday night, barring holidays and assassinations. When he hosted the party (in the room in the photo), I made a habit of drifting by for the cold-cuts and the wonderful chatter. One of the men he played with was Judge Pete Salito, who brought wonderful Italian food of his own making, which he warm-up in our kitchen before the game.  Another, and I don’t remember his name, drove up in a beautiful Jaguar XKE, he could barely get into. The men always enjoyed themselves.

Among my dad’s favorite sayings at the table were:

  • I’d rather owe it to you than beat you out of it.
  • Boys are no damn good (which he told me sisters often)
  • A woman’s just a woman, but a good cigar is a smoke

I’m looking to my family to assist me with more.

 

 

Letter from Jeana to Lalu March 11, 1965

Click below to open up a scanned letter from Jeana to Lalu.

Jeana Letter to Lalu March 11 1965

In the letter she talks about meeting Prince Charles, Sperry coming home from Fountain Valley with his friend from Bogota, Brady’s christening, Roy’s birthday and Daddy’s blues. We lived in this house between the one at 526 W. Friar Tuck (1951-1964) and The River Oaks High Rise on Westheimer just south of Buffalo Speedway (1966-1968). From the apartment she and Dad moved to 900 W. Red Bud Trail in Austin (1968-1983?).

Hunt Home 1964-5. (After Friar Tuck) 1163 (?) Bissonnet St. Houston. 2 blocks from the Houston Museum of Art
Hunt Home 1964-5. (After Friar Tuck) 1163 (?) Bissonnet St. Houston. 2 blocks from the Houston Museum of Art

Below is the apartment. This is the north side. We were on the west near the top. A decade letter Robin and Malcolm moved into a house on Locke Lane, a block behind the Google camera tacking this photograph.

Hunt Apt River Oaks  High Rise Westheimer and Buffalo SpeedwayHouston
Hunt Apt River Oaks High Rise Westheimer and Buffalo Speedway, Houston

Jeana – Letter to Father Aspiazu

Jeana created may religious works. The following is a draft of a 1954 letter Jeana wrote to Father Jose Maria Azpiazu, pastor of the parish of St. John the Baptist in San Juan, Texas. I’ve paced a link at the bottom of the letter. Click on it to learn the history of the church.

Note that this is a draft letter only. I haven’t found a copy of the actual letter as yet. The letter is a small window into who Jeana was as an artist.

Sperry

———————————–

Dear Father Aspiazu,

Yesterday, Mr. Hamilton Brown, Houston architect called me, that he had heard that you were building a church in San Juan, and would be needing some murals.

I would like very much to apply for the job, as I have begun doing sketches for just such a thing for the past two years. Many of which I can send you in photographs. Or I can come down and talk to you and bring the sketches with me.

I have painted for twenty years and have had experience as a teacher in several art colonies.

I can do casein, oil, or paint directly on plaster – or work in plastic which is fairly new and very beautiful. I would like so much to do thes and would charge you minimum because it’s for the church.

My references are Mr. Hamilton Brown 2017 W. Gray(acting Pres. of Allied Arts in Houston), Mr. Paul Elliott – architect and designer in the Contemporary Art Museum of Houston.

[Eugenia Hunt]
Click her to read about the church at San Juan

1954 – Jeana composes a letter to Grainger

Alpine, TX; Early circa 1954

The following is a draft of a letter to Grainger, who is fourteen and at Moye Miltary Academy which he recently said was, “run by nuns.” I doubted that, but turns out to be true!!!  ( http://www.moyecenter.org/about-moye-retreat-center ). Actually Jeana and Judge were taking their girls to California and leaving their boys behind. I was left (happily) with the Lockharts in Alpine. Mrs. Gard ran a wonderful day care that had a rusty old jalopy to play in as I recall.)

We had a modest summer house on a hill facing the sunset in Alpine. Jeana called it the Gate to Heaven because of the view, and because it was behind the houses of people named the Crosses and the Sohls (lovely people, by the way).

The journal entry ends with a working sketch noting colors she will use to paint the California hills.

———–

Dearest Grainger,

Well – we finally left this morning – as I fell apart and had to stay in bed yesterday.

We left Irene and Mrs. Sanchos1 at the studio cleaning up for our tenant – Mrs. Sanchos is taking Amigo even after knowing what he did last night. He chewed up Lalu’s good black shoes and her brand new blue hat, and the poor thing wept.

Sperry was furious because my being sick delayed his going to Mrs. Gard’s an extra day.

Finally we got off – Mrs. Lockhart lent me her movie camera. We are going to take a film of the trip – and then if they turn out good we’ll show you when we get home.

Down the road and right out of Van Horn with Lalu at the wheel and blow out. The tire was in complete ribbons. Robin and Lalu changed it in about 15 miinutes and on to Van Horn where we had to buy a new tire. Now Robin is at the wheel.

Next day

Well we spent last nite in the La Fonda in El Paso. You remember it used be a motel. Well they added another group of rooms around a patio and a swimming pool and a beautiful dining room. We enjoyed it so much.

Then we left about eight this morning with me driving. About 50 miles from El Paso the car began to giggle and I drove into a station, and lo and behold another puncture. Well we got that fixed and on.

We have been in Texas today, New Mexico and Arizona. We are now nearing Phoenix, Arizona. We stopped at a wonderful place and saw some gorgeous rocks. We could hardly get Lalu out – there were 1000’s of rocks and she wanted to see them all – and found out about them all.

Friday Morn –

Here we are in Phoenix – I think it is the land of motels – hundreds upon hundreds

Another tire down – so we have decided to buy extras, and now they are being put on and Robin and I walk down the streed and find a metal dog – painted about four feet high. So we confer with the furniture store owner and find the enormous fellow was made in France 100 years ago. He’s been in this country 60 years. So we went back and told Daddy we had purchased an antique dog – and we were going to load it on. Poor Daddy’s had so many surprises, I think he believed it.

[New Topic]

Cal. Fall

For gold mountains – under-painting with raw umber and whit. When dry use white brush and brush on Mars yellow for grass. The undulating shapes are almost done across half a side ridge sometimes grew black. Oaks leaning into the wind.

1954 Sketch of California Hill in the fall to be painted by Jeana
1954 Sketch of California Hill in the fall to be painted by Jeana

Marybelle and Robin

This is a precious letter from Marybelle Hunt to Bill Guest et all. It was in response to his recent email about how much he missed Robin.

Sperry

———————-

Hi Bill,
I just read your email. I can’t hardly talk about Robin with out a huge ache. I love hearing about her. I think of her everyday.

A few days ago I reached for my phone to call her and remembered. Then I thought about calling her number anyway just to hear her voice. I didn’t though.

My girls and I talk about her all the time. Especially when we do girl stuff. We have all taken turns using her Prada bag. She was our fashionista and mentor. She listened to me -always interested.

When I was going through the breast cancer I would email her and Heather. She listened to both of us. She was a huge support. The Bandon trip started out as a way to celebrate our lives after cancer. She and dad planned all of it in about a minute. She was awesome like that. She still is awesome. She had a huge impact on my life. Great role model for the girls and me.

She was so much like Jeana. The way she spoke, held herself. Her grace and wit. She was also one tough cookie when she needed to be. She was never afraid to let you know her view and she did it so eloquently. Jeana was the same. I miss their voices and their cheeks. That beautiful skin.

I remember the first time I cussed in front of her. We had a whole conversation about why the word “fuck” just feels good when you say the letters, regardless of the meaning or intent. Who knew that Robin could cuss like that! ? She was so full of surprises.

Dad says that women are the reason that men are able to be great. Robin was a great woman. Robin also thought you were her great love. Lucky you! You must be an awesome guy.

Thanks for listening.

Lots of love,
Marybelle XO