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Vartabedian: A Lifetime Of Chico Memories

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  • Vartabedian: A Lifetime Of Chico Memories

    VARTABEDIAN: A LIFETIME OF CHICO MEMORIES
    By Mary Nugent - Staff Writer

    Enterprise-Record, CA
    Nov 18 2006

    A resident at a Chico retirement facility, Vart Vartabedian took
    little time Nov. 14 to talk..."1"

    Vartkes "Vart" Vartabedian clearly remembers something that happened
    when he was 9 years old and selling newspapers on Third Street,
    between Main and Broadway in Chico.

    "This guy bought a paper and he gave me a $5 gold piece. I didn't
    have change, so I ran around the corner to my father's business for
    change. And that was that.

    "Then years later when my father passed away, we found that $5 gold
    piece in a safe deposit box. I had forgotten all about it. He saved
    it for me; I had it made into a pendant for my wife."

    At 96, Vart Vartabedian has a lot of memories. Sometimes they're
    poignant, or funny -- but his memories are lucid and detailed.

    Vartabedian was born in 1910 in Chicago, Ill., to Armenian parents
    who arrived in the U.S. through Ellis Island. Big city Chicago was
    a rough transition after the small villages in Armenia.

    "Lock, stock and barrel, with two kids and everything they owned,
    they took a train west," Vartabedian recalled. They had seen Butte
    County on a map, and settled in Chico.

    "My father had a little shop in Chicago -- he was a hatter,"
    Vartabedian said, describing the profession of cleaning and remodeling
    men's hats in a big city where hats got grimy.

    Hats didn't get so dirty in rural Chico,and over time, his father
    revamped his business to include cleaning gloves and umbrellas.

    "People walked everywhere, and you had to have an umbrella,"
    Vartabedian said.

    "My parents raised four children on 2.5 acres on East Eighth Street.

    We had a nice garden, cows and chickens."

    He remembers his mother and Annie Bidwell had the same doctor. "The
    doctor knew my mother made yogurt and he told Mrs. Bidwell about it.

    She came in a horse and buggy with her Indian driver. I saw her get
    out of the rig, and my mother gave her a container of yogurt."

    He also recalls when Annie Bidwell died in 1918. "My school
    participated in the funeral. I remember walking with a bunch of
    flowers. I was pretty young."

    And there was yet another incident he remembers. "I was 6 or 7 and on
    my way home. I'd go through the (Bidwell) park, at the Fourth Street
    entrance. The park was very overgrown then, very wild. I broke off
    a piece of a grape vine, struck a match and was going to smoke it
    -- and I felt a hand on my shoulder -- it was the hand of a big,
    heavy-set woman who lived on the corner. She asked me if I wanted
    her to tell my mother ... I put that grape vine out quickly."

    He graduated from Chico High School in 1928 and after working for a
    time with his father, Vartabedian went into the wholesale cleaning
    business with the late Henry Usherwood. They worked together in
    partnership for 25 years, then Vartabedian bought him out.

    "The cleaners was at 231 Main Street, what is now the Garden Walk. I
    ran it for 50 years and retired in 1980."

    Vartabedian and his wife, Jean, have been married for 62 years. They
    met during a dance at the hotel at Richardson Springs. He was in the
    Air Force and she married another man, also in the Air Force.

    "He was a flyer and he was killed during World War II," he recalled,
    and said Jean had a little girl. Vartabedian married her, raised her
    daughter, and together they had three more children.

    "There are so many good memories," he said. "I remember something
    humorous, one Thanksgiving. We had a big table with a lot of family
    sitting around it. I was at the end of the table and my wife set the
    turkey on it. The table tipped, and the turkey landed on my lap. The
    whole thing. It was pretty funny."

    He remembers the streetcar than ran through downtown Chico, and the
    dances at Portuguese Hall, Memorial Hall, and down by the Sacramento
    River.

    Vartabedian lives at a retirement community, and his wife has gone
    to a nursing home. "We used to like to travel in our RV. We really
    enjoyed ourselves," he said.

    They have eight grandchildren and three great-grandchildren, and a
    few associated as step-grandchildren, he said.

    Vartabedian says there is nothing complicated about why he is living
    such a long, healthy life. "Good genes. That's it."

    http://www.chicoer.com/features/ci_4683 722
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