Judith Carole
Kelley Orlando
Memories of growing up,
family, music and the phonograph
Mack
and Mary Belle Kelley, April 17, 1938
My parents' Family Register
for Marriage, July 19, 1937
Judith
Carole Kelley - August 28, 1942 (almost 3 years old)
Jack age 6, Judy age
5 and Mickey Kelley age 3
I
lived in Tulsa until I was seven when we moved to San Jose, California.
I had some cousins in California and enjoyed spending time with them
and liked where we lived.
Judy age 7
When I was
about 14 my Dad told me that we were moving back to Tulsa and I
wasn't very happy about this news. To emphasize my dislike for this
move I sat on the floorboard of our car all the way back to Tulsa.
The funny thing was that after moving back to Tulsa I enrolled in
a school that I really liked and became kind of popular because
I was the new girl from California.
I also enjoyed
this return to Tulsa because my mom had two aunts that lived in
Tulsa, Ada and Effie, and they owned a restaurant and hired me to
do some work for them in the summer (e.g., setting tables, etc.).
But it was only about a year and half later that we moved back to
San Jose where I started at Santa Clara High School. I did some
synchronized swimming in high school and was a pretty good swimmer.
I graduated from San Jose High School in 1957.
Music was an
important part of the Kelley family as both of my dad's parents
were musicians. My grandfather, Mack Kelley, lived in San Jose and
was a drummer and percussionist in the "Mack Kelley Orchestra" that
played primarily in San Jose at places like the Majestic
Ballroom (2). My grandmother, Minnie Maude Kelley, who we called
Aunt Maude, could really play the piano. She was also quite funny
and had a truly memorable laugh. Her piano specialty was sort of
a rag-time style but as a member of the Mack Kelley Orchestra she
could perform whatever style the orchestra was playing.
Aunt Maude, Mother,
Dad and Aunt Oneida, January 1, 1960
My dad was
an engineer and tool designer by
profession (3). but he loved to play his trumpet and could really
blow that horn. My mother would sing a capella and had a lovely
singing voice and she would often harmonize with my Dad who sang
pretty well but who sometimes seemed to be off-key (though I never
told him that).
My grandpa
Mack thought it would be nice if I played an instrument and asked
me, "Honey, what instrument would you like to play?" I
thought about it an decided I liked the sound of the clarinet. So
he gave me one from his music shop (he
also did instrument repairs as a part-time job) but I didn't
practice much and soon gave it up as the clarinet wasn't for me.
Next in my
music career was dance lessons. My mom asked me if I wanted to take
tap dance lessons and I was very excited to do that. She made me
some cute outfits and I really enjoyed going to the California Theatre
in downtown San Jose where I had lessons on the second floor where
my dance instructor had a studio. I still remember my dance instructor's
name, Gordon Keith, because I thought it was odd to have two first
names as your full name. I did tap dancing for awhile but I didn't
practice enough and eventually stopped taking lessons. But I never
stopped loving to dance.
The
California Theatre, San Jose
Although
I do not remember us having a record player when I was very young
my parents listened to the radio and a lot of music. As a teenager
I had a portable record player and some records. I loved to listen
to bebop, Fats Domino, Little Richard and many others and especially
loved to dance to the music.
Music was also
involved in some 'hanky-panky' I remember doing as a teenager. One
night after it was dark I snuck out of the house and met my girl
friends. We went to one of the corners in the neighborhood and starting
singing "Jingle Bells" as loud as we could. We laughed
and had a great time. I don't know why I thought that was so daring
but I guess it was because I was out with the girls at night and
my parents didn't know about it.
In San Jose
I had summer jobs in junior high school called "cutting cots". We
had a neighbor who arranged for this job and I would drive with
them each day to go to that job since his kids also worked there.
This was not an easy job and involved picking up apricots from trays,
cutting them in half, pitting them and finally putting them back
into the tray. It paid 50 cents per hour and gave me spending money
so that I could go to the Kress "five and dime" store where I loved
to look.
Downtown
San Jose ca. 1962, Kress down street on left - photo courtesy of History
San Jose/Del Carlo Studio
In
high school I worked at the Richmond-Chase Cannery in San Jose (canning
peaches) and used this money to buy clothes for school and also
some extra things that included buying a few records. Every year
mom would buy me seven dresses but I wanted more in high school
and the summer cannery jobs made that possible.
I graduated from
high school in June 1957 and married Andy Orlando on November 10,
1957 and the adventure of my life began that was to last over 60 years.
November 10, 1957 Wedding
December
1957
Top
row L-R: Andy, Judy, Mary Belle (my mom), Barbara, Dorothy, Daddy Mack
(my granddad)
Middle
Row: Carolyn, my dad, Lillie
Bottom
row: Oneita, Grandmother
May 1958 Judy pregnant
with Kathy
May 1958 Judy with parents
March 5, 1962 (the
twins Bruce and Brian)
March 6, 1962
Sharon,
Kathy, Brian, Bruce (6 months), 1962
July 1963,
Kathy and Sharon
Santa Cruz Beach,
1964 Bruce, Kathy, Sharon, Brian and Judy
Throughout the
years while we were raising our two daughters, Kathy and Sharon and
our twin boys, Brian and Bruce, I have memories of listening to our
stereo console playing Frank Sinatra and Elvis and the kids playing
their 45 rpms and a lot of dancing in the house.
Besides 45's
we also went through the recorded music era of listening to music
on 8-track tapes, cassette tapes, LPs, and CDs. I transferred most
of my CDs to iTunes, put all of the CDs in a suitcase and donated
the suitcase to the Salvation Army.
Brian,
Kathy, Sharon, Bruce, Bruce
School portraits: Kathy,
Sharon, Brian, Bruce
1968 - Sharon
remembers her mom making this hat and dress as one of the many
sewing projects she did for herself and her kids. (4)
Andy
and Judy, 1977
1979
Hawaii
Judy,
Marian, Barbara, Joanne - October 1982
1983
Puerto Vallarta
On the Paquet Cruise ship
for Judy's 47th Birthday, October 1985
Brian,
Kathy, Bruce and Sharon, 1991
As a hobby my
dad opened up a record store in downtown San Jose around 1974 which
he named Nostalgic Records. At one time he had over 10,000
records. Our kids thought the store was pretty neat, not because of
the old 78 rpm records and nostalgia that he sold, but because he
had many records that they appreciated such as Led Zeppelin, Boz Skaggs,
Pink Floyd and other pop LPs.
Mack
Kelley 1962
Mack
and Mary August 1991
I have many memories
associated with music, live and recorded. But in growing up knowing
that my grandparents were musicians and hearing so much music in our
own home I think it made music seem more special to me. To this day
I'm still proud that the Mack Kelley Orchestra was pretty well known
in the San Jose area in its time.
(5)
Mack circa 1990's
September 1994
Honolulu,
November 1998
North
Carolina, 2002
Lincoln,
CA, 2003
Jen &
Eamon's Wedding
2009
Puerto Vallarta
The
2007 Honorees of the Night - 50 Year Wedding Anniversary Celebration
Andy's
80th Birthday, 2012
Andy's
80th Birthday, 2012
Although my iPad
is now the source for most of my music I think the memory of my Aunt
Maude playing away on her piano, and my dad blowing his trumpet and
my mom singing her songs with her sweet voice all remind me of the
variety of ways I have been exposed to music. And how important it
was to each of them and myself.
Music was a part
of my growing up years and it continues to be something that I enjoy.
In
Memory of Judy Orlando - October 10, 1939 - September 6, 2021
Other
Judy Orlando Stories
The
La Selva Beach Incident
Andy
and Judy's 50th Anniversary Photo Album
Andy
and Judy's Wedding, November 7, 1957
Andy
and Judy - Sixty Years Together - Often with Dance
Additional
family information and photos
(1) My dad Mack
Wellington Kelley was born in Tulsa, Oklahoma, March 29, 1917.
See The
James M. Kelley Family of Garland County, Arkansas for details
about Mack Wellington Kelley's grandparents, parents, and family.
My mom Mary Belle
Hamer Kelley was born in Cherryvale, Kansas, April 16, 1918. She died
on August 9, 1999 (age 81).
Mary Belle Hamer
Kelley's mother's maiden name was Mary Puterbaugh (German descent).
See the Jacob Puterbaugh Family
for more information.
Mom and Dad met
in Tulsa in a soda shop where Dad was a "soda jerk". The
story goes that my mom, Mary Belle, came in as a customer and as Dad
served up her order he made some kind of wisecrack to which Mom responded
by throwing a spoon into the milk shake and making a clever response.
Dad would later like to say that when that happened he thought "Oh
boy, that's the girl for me!"
Note: Historic
accounts about soda jerks report that it was a fairly respectable
position in its day and popular with the ladies. Some whimsically
called themselves "fizzicians". It has been said that
any fool can scoop ice cream but being a jerk takes practice - the
term jerk referring to the technique of pulling the handle controlling
the carbonated-water flow.
My parents were
married on July 19, 1936
Mack Wellington
Kelley was the son of Minnie Maude Kelley and Mack Kelley (Scottish
descent).
Mary Belle was
the daughter of Joseph and Mary Hamer. Mary's mother's maiden name
Mary Puterbaugh (German descent).
Mary Belle had
one brother, Harry, and one sister, Hilma.
I have two brothers,
Jack and Mickey.
Jack age 6, Judy age 5
and Mickey Kelley age 3
Mary Belle, my mother circa
1937
Mary
Belle Hamer Kelley, 1938 (20 years old)
Mary
Belle Hamer Kelley, 1944 (26 years old)
Here's a brick
from my mom's Cherryvale street: 402 East First Street, Cherryvale,
KS.
Cherryvale,
KS Vitrified Brick Co.
Mary
Belle Kelly, September 1922 (age 4), Cherryvale, Kansas
James Kelley, Mary Jane
Kelly, Jack and Oneita
Mary Belle Kelley, August
9, 1999
Mary
Belle was the daughter of Joseph and Mary Hamer. Mary's mother's maiden
name Mary Puterbaugh (German descent).
See
the Jacob Puterbaugh Family
for more information.
Mack Kelley, 1994
Mack
Wellington Kelley died on November 26, 2004
See
James M. Kelley Family (Grandfather of Mack Wellington Kelley) for
more Kelley family geneology.
In Loving Memory of my dear Aunt Oneita
Friends
of the Phonograph
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