Thank you all for your advice and kind wishes after reading my last post. Obviously the family finance issue is on my mind a lot, and one of the aspects I was mulling over last night was how these things slide from one generation to the next: my mother’s finances will affect mine, and mine could affect my niece and nephew. But what about the earlier generations? How did my grandparents’ finances affect my mom and dad?
I’ve mentioned before that my mother grew up quite poor, with parents who divorced when she was a teenager. Her father was a barber– he died a while back, and I never knew him well enough to know anything about how he spent what little money he made. Her mother is still alive, and seems to live very simply on a small income, I guess from Social Security, plus occasional checks sent by my mother and her 3 siblings. She is remarried, and lives in a small house that her husband bought. The mortgage is paid off. My step-grandfather supposedly has a few thousand dollars saved, but he won’t tell anyone where it is– as in, it’s not in a bank, it’s just in a coffee can buried in a closet or something. I don’t think my mother’s parents ever had much spare cash– but nor did they have debts, as far as I know.
As for my father’s parents, I don’t think I’ve ever gotten around to writing much about them, and they are quite a different story.
My father’s father was a lawyer. His parents were poor immigrants so he put himself through college and law school. He may have been the only one of their 9 children who got an advanced degree, though one of his older brothers was also successful and was actually in the House of Representatives for a term or two back in the 1930s. Probably because of this government connection, my grandfather ended up working for the Veteran’s Administration. I don’t know how much money he made– a decent amount, I’m sure, but nothing like what we hear about corporate lawyers making today. My father has expressed some resentment about the fact that my grandfather volunteered for the Navy during World War II despite being well over the age where he’d have been drafted– if he’d stayed home, his political connections might have led to an appointment as a judge, but by the time the war was over, his brother was out of office and had no strings to pull.
My father’s mother also came from immigrant parents of what I guess you’d call a white-collar working class background (her father was a machinist but became some sort of supervisor). My grandmother graduated from high school but never attended college. She never worked until after my grandfather retired, when she did some part-time clerical work for her sister (who has an interesting story herself, which I’ll have to tell later.)
But here’s the kicker: my grandparents had 6 children, my dad and 5 sisters. They put them all through college and may have made some contribution to graduate school/law school costs for at least one or two of them. (3 of my father’s sisters have advanced degrees.) Can you imagine paying for all that in today’s world, on a middle-class government lawyer’s salary? Education just cost less back then, and though all the kids went to Ivy League/Seven Sisters colleges, most of them were able to live at home while going to school, which must have been a big savings. And I suppose my grandfather would have paid for some weddings too, though I imagine they’d have been small.
How else did they make ends meet? My grandparents definitely had a depression mentality, and never threw out a scrap of food. But they weren’t crazily frugal– my grandfather gave my grandmother plenty of jewelry, and he played golf (though at a public course, not as a member of a private country club), and they had a comfortable house in an expensive area. They didn’t really travel much, but I remember them taking a couple of winter vacations. I’m sure there were many years when money was tight, but by the time they were retired, they had a nice life.
My grandfather went into a nursing home and lived there for a few years til he died at the age of 90. My grandmother continued to live at home for about 13 more years, with part-time care from an aide for about 2 or 3 of those years. Then she went into a nursing home for about 9 months before dying at the age of 94. In the later years of her life, she gave each of the 6 children a few thousand dollars a year, and after she died, they each got a share of the proceeds from the house– it sold for about $500,000 at the top of the real estate market, so each of the kids ended up getting over $80,000 in the end. (This inheritance makes up almost 1/3 of my father’s current net worth.)
It just boggles my mind that they managed to raise so many kids and live so long and pay for nursing home care yet still not run out of money. My grandfather may have had a really good government pension. Maybe he invested well. He definitely left everything set up for my grandmother after he died, with some kind of annuity in her name. I would not say my grandparents were wealthy, but they were definitely prosperous.
The “American Dream” is for that kind of prosperity to increase in each succeeding generation, not evaporate. Yet that evaporation is what seems to be happening in my family. My parents have savings now, but they’ll likely be gone well before they’re even in their 80s, and then they’ll have to tap the equity in the house. My sister and her husband are in their mid-30s with credit card debt and have probably barely made a dent in retirement savings or college funds for their kids. Our family’s situation could be far worse– some of stories told by commenters on this site make me feel like I have no right to complain. I guess it’s just sad to look back at those early generations, on both sides of the family: their hard work after starting from nothing, their frugality, their willingness to live with less. They passed on an amazing gift to us, a gift that went well beyond money itself. I think they’d be sad to see that gift wasted.
Read more about Finances and the Family: The Earlier Generations…