Showing posts with label Richard Mazurowski. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Richard Mazurowski. Show all posts

Friday, March 24, 2017

Richard Mazurowski


Richard Mazurowski (1925-2017) was son of Pearl Haremska Mazurowska, nephew of Clara Haremska Matynka, brother of Genevieve Mazurowska Stroinska, cousin of Clara Matynka Zdrojewska. He was Dad to Debbie, and he was Uncle Dick to Sharon and to Marty and me.

Below, we see him acting as groomsman in a wedding party sometime in the late 1940s or early 1950s. Richard (Ryszard) is third from the right. Sorry, I have no idea who the couple are. But first from the left is Clara Adamina Matynka, aka Mom.  Clara and Richard and Genevieve are first cousins; their mothers were sisters.



We can zoom in a little here, to the curly locks, 3-piece morning dress, and proper cravat.


Below we see another wedding party. The print is on deckle-edge paper. I like the ordinary houses with the Italian Renaissance-style campanile in the background. It houses the belfry of the parish church.



Genevieve and Edward Stroinski are the couple this time. Richard appears as Best Man. Isn't that Florence with him? I think it is. Please correct me if I am wrong.




Cabinetry and the making of fine furniture was Uncle Dick's profession. Below is a bookcase he designed, built, and installed for Gene and Clara. This is in the G&C house in Bowmansville, the year being between 1950 and 1956. Here in the Trove are at least three prints just of this bookcase. They were happy to have it; mayhap it was their Christmas gift to themselves.  See the bits of Christmas tree at the right of the photo?



1957 was the year of G&C moving into the Marilla house. Below is a scene at one of the early parties there. Proper parties always included 40 people or thereabouts, and went on in several rooms, including the finished part of the basement. Below we see, left to right, Casimir Zdrojewski, Adam Matynka, and Richard. The item of furniture in the background is a cobbler's bench done up by him.



The house on Poplar Street was similarly a noted party venue. Below we have New Year celebrations featuring dancing, lots of dancing, here with Florence and Richard.







Fourth of July featured culinary special ops, such as BBQ at the tent site in Marilla. Dick and Gene do not mess around.  I'm guessing 1960s here.







Below we see a very patient, as well as very stylish, Uncle Dick, in the dining room at another Marilla party, c1969.



(No snake is climbing up that wall. That is the stem of a split-leaved Philodendron, the leaves of which had, um, split the scene, for some reason.)



Left to right, below,  we have Clara Matynka, Uncle Dick, some idiot blowing out candles and looking like Oscar Wilde, Aunt Florence aka Auntie 'Lossie, Clara Zdrojewska aka Mom, and Uncle Eddie Stroinski. We also appear to have a fruit-Jello mold. 

But look at the wall behind Mom and Uncle Eddie. See those red-and-black encyclopedias? They are the same Compton's Encyclopedia, shelved on the same Uncle Dick bookcase, as in the Bowmansville photo above. When G&C worked on the design of the Marilla house, they stipulated a recessed niche in that wall, to accomodate that bookcase.




Below are Mom and Uncle Dick at a family event in 1971.




Uncle Dick set up his own furniture refinishing business, using his business name of Richard Mast, and went in with Uncle Eddie Jr. and Uncle Eddie Sr. Below we see him showing the latest progress on the revitalizing of the Zdrojewski grandfather clock, in the 1980s.




Uncle Dick was always at the wheel of  the station wagon when it was loaded up with "The Poplar Street Gang" and driven to Marilla for partying. He also had a motorboat for some time. I remember seeing it in the garage. If you send me any boating photos, or any photos at all of Dick and Florence, I will be delighted to put them up. 


Saturday, May 21, 2016

Uncle Dick Refinishes the Clock


John Zdrojewski, our JPZ, built this grandfather clock in his family home, completing some detail work on the kitchen table on the day his son Eugene was born.  From 1923 to 1982 it looked like this, with the dark stain and shiny varnish:


More photos and details of this clock have been posted as "Grandfather Clock, Then and Now," as well as at "Gene and the Grandfather Clock," "Wartime," and "More on Wartime."  Now some photos have turned up from its time in the professional workshop of Richard Mazurowski.

Uncle Dick took the case apart, sandblasted the wood, and refinished it without dark stain, so that the grain of the wood stands out in all its glory.  He did this work in winter and spring of 1982.



Great work, Uncle Dick.



When the clock came home, Annie Zdrojewski, granddaughter of the maker, kindly posed with the revitalized grandfather clock.


And just as a couple of asides here, note on the right edge of the photo part of the Blue Boy copy, above the piano.  Then way on the left edge, hanging on the divider wall, that Chinese sword.

Chinese sword?














Sunday, February 16, 2014

Bowmansville Dreamin'

The blue cowhide binder
had decorating ideas
as well as ideas for eats
and a partial budget for a baby boy.


Dreams for the future home
were woven in the little brick house
on Genessee Street in Bowmansville.



The built-in bookshelf became a reality in Marilla
when Richard Mazurowski and Edward Stroinski
took Gene and Clara's design ideas
and built a custom shelf into a recess in the
living room wall.



Is that the ugliest wallpaper in world history?

Look at that!  Angled ceilings with beams  exposed;
a room divider thing with a planter base
and see-through top part.
They made those real, also -
only in cedar, and brick and glass.

"Admiral Triple Thrill"
offered a phonograph, television,
and AM-FM radio
all in one unit!


The crossed-off writing is "Buffalo Floral Shop."
Following that is "Ellicot Square Bldg."
There was a display at O'Hare last year of scores
of these first-generation TVs and radios
in cabinetry.  It made me appreciate
the enthusiasm with which they were received.
The Three Weird Sisters remain
a bit startling.


Friday, December 20, 2013

Wedding Party, May 1946, continued

Yesterday's feature was a newspaper item including a photo of an unknown wedding party.  One bridesmaid, and one groomsman, were known, however. This morning a photographic print fluttered up out of the carton and insisted on being scanned:


Bridesmaid Clara Matynka, Jr.,
our CAMZ.

Groomsman Richard Mazurowski;
the two are first cousins.




Wednesday, December 18, 2013

Wedding Party, May 1946


The newspaper is Dziennik dla Wszystkich,
literally "Daily Paper for All,"
hence "Everybody's Daily."



środa, dwudziestego dziewiątego Maja
"Wednesday, May 29th"
Next to the bride: Clara Matynka.
Next to the groom, Richard Mazurowski.

Clara and Richard are first cousins.
Their mothers were the sisters
Pearl and Clara Haremska.