We were, once again, on the trail of the family history. We visited Lakeside Cemetery and the East Cleveland cemetery, did a tour and house hunt of all of the Cleveland properties of both families. We stopped for lunch at Night Town, Eleanor’s favorite restaurant. And, we had to stop at the West Side market – for a huge gyro sandwich and some fresh fruit.
The 4th of July found the campground packed with families – fire pits, grilling and screaming children. They all arrived on Friday afternoon/evening – spent most of the evening getting everything set up. On Saturday and Sunday, they all sat around most of the day- cooking, talking, swimming and fishing with the kids. Then, early on Monday morning, they were all packing up and getting ready to leave.

We found John’s grandmother and great-grandmother’s houses (next door to each other) both for sale. We couldn’t resist getting the chance to see the interiors. We set up an appointment for Tuesday morning and arrived to find the alarm on one of the houses blaring while the two “realtors” were scrambling to try to figure out how to get it to turn off. Attempting to divert us from the blaring alarm, one of the realtors offered to take us into the other house. With absolutely no qualification- and not a single question, she let us wander through the house while she sat in the living room talking on her cell phone. The dark tan, cut-off midriff top, the skin tight black Capri pants, the 3” high cork heels and the blonde streaks in her dark hair should have been a tip-off that we were not dealing with the top echelon of realtors. Her partner in crime was a virtual look-alike. We spent an hour wandering through the two houses, taking photos- amazed that neither agent seemed the slightest bit interested in what we were looking for or what we thought of their properties.
The houses were both in excellent condition- solid construction – and coming from our Boston housing perspective, seemed to be great deals ($379K and $399K). John spent time in the basement of his grandmother’s house with fond memories of playing ping pong and hiding from the adults.
