Here is the latest chapter in the story of the courtship and early married life and times of my maternal grandparents, Emily Auble and Lyle Carringer, who married in June 1918. The background information and the list of chapters of their life together are listed at the end of this post. This is historical fiction with real people and real events, and is how it might have been.
And now we are into the late summer and early fall of 1917 as we approach Lyle's 26th birthday
I asked my AI Assistant Anthropic Claude to tell the story of Emily and Lyle in late summer and early autumn 1917 when Emily decides to throw a birthday party for Lyle. Here is Part 1 of this story:
(AI Google NotebookLM Infographic: Lyle's Birthday Party)
Emily and Lyle's Story: Lyle's 26th Birthday Party,
November 2, 1917 (Part 1)
September and October — The Quiet Season
Life in wartime San Diego found its rhythm in the weeks between
August and November. For Lyle, the rhythm was the PX: morning
inventories, afternoon shifts behind the counter, the steady
procession of Marines buying tobacco and writing paper and candy bars
and shaving soap. For Emily, it was Marston's: the gloves and
accessories counter, the familiar downtown streets, the evening
letters written at the kitchen table while Georgia knitted nearby.
Once a week, on rotating Thursdays, Lyle's Liberty Pass brought
them together. They walked the bay, ate at the café on Broadway,
rode the trolley to 30th Street for a family dinner, then back to
Emily’s home for dessert. Slowly, these days accumulated into
something that felt like ordinary life, which was its own small
miracle considering the circumstances.
The renewed friendship with Gladys changed Emily's working days
considerably. Gladys — Emily's former classmate, now working as a
secretary in Marston's administrative offices — had the gift of
making any situation seem both manageable and slightly amusing, which
was exactly what the wartime workplace needed. She knew everyone in
the store, had opinions on everything from merchandise buyers to
managerial decisions, and delivered her commentary in a low, rapid
undertone that made Emily press her hand against her mouth to
suppress laughter at inappropriate moments.
"She sounds like Hennessey," Lyle said, when Emily
described her one Thursday in September.
"She's nothing like Hennessey. She's much better at it.
Hennessey is funny accidentally. Gladys is funny on purpose."
"That is better," Lyle admitted.
Gladys had also, with characteristic efficiency, approved of Lyle
within the first five minutes of meeting him. "He looks at you
like you're the only sensible thing in the room," she told Emily
afterward. "That's worth keeping."
"He is worth keeping," Emily agreed.
On a Thursday in early October, Lyle arrived at Hawthorn Street to
find Emily with a notepad and a thoughtful expression that he had
come to associate with something being planned.
"Your birthday is November second," she said, by way of
greeting.
"It is," Lyle agreed.
"You'll be twenty-six."
"Correct."
"I want to have a party for you. At your parents' house."
She said it with the directness she brought to most important things,
watching his face to see what he made of it.
What he made of it was visible and immediate — the slight
relaxation around his eyes that meant he was genuinely pleased and
not merely being polite. "You don't have to do that."
"I know I don't have to. That's why I'm doing it." She
looked at her notepad. "I'll need a list of friends from school
and Marston's. Anyone you'd want there."
Lyle sat down and looked at the blank list. "Della and Father
will want to host properly. And Georgia—"
"Mother is already making a cake."
He looked up. "You've already spoken to her."
"She suggested the cake herself," Emily said, with the
innocent expression she wore when she had orchestrated something and
was watching it unfold. "I merely agreed."
The List
Over the next two Thursdays, the party assembled itself on Emily's
notepad with satisfying thoroughness. From the Carringer side: Austin
and Della as hosts, Uncle Edgar, Grandmother Abbie Smith. Della's
sister Matie, who lived nearby and could be relied upon for practical
help. Uncle Davey — Della's brother — with his wife Amy and their
daughter Maybelle, fifteen, who would be shy at first and then
insufferable once she found her footing. Abbie's sister Libbie Crouch
and her husband Sam, would be coming down from Long Beach specifically for the
occasion. Several neighbors from the 30th Street area who'd known
Lyle since childhood. Charlie Morrison from Marston's, who needed no
second invitation to any gathering involving food.
From Lyle's high school years, the Class of 1913: Eddie Hartwell,
now working in his father's hardware business; Frank and
Dorothy Yamamoto, married last spring; Ruth Clemens, who was
volunteering at the Red Cross three days a week and working at the
telephone exchange the other two.
"That's twenty-two people," Emily said, counting.
"Is that too many for Mother's house?"
"Your mother's house has a dining room, a parlor, a kitchen,
and a front porch," Emily said. "Twenty-two people is
exactly right." She sent out the invitations.
Friday, November 1 — The Preparation
Emily took Friday afternoon off from Marston's to help Della with
preparations. Georgia arrived via the trolley at two o'clock with the
birthday cake — three layers of white cake with lemon frosting,
transported in a covered tin with the care one gives to something
irreplaceable. She set it on Della's kitchen sideboard and removed
the cover for inspection. Della made an appreciative sound. Georgia
made the modest expression of someone who has done excellent work and
is allowing others to confirm it.
"The lemon," Della said. "How did you know lemon
was his favorite?"
"Emily told me," Georgia said.
"I didn't know lemon was his favorite," Emily said, from
the corner where she was arranging chairs.
"He mentioned it in one of his letters," Georgia said,
replacing the cover. "In August. He said the lemon phosphate at
the PX was the only thing worth having from the soda counter."
She paused. "I read your letters sometimes, when you leave them
on the kitchen table."
"I know you do," Emily said.
Georgia returned to the kitchen to help Della with the
refreshments, and the sound of two women who have decided to like
each other settling into the productive rhythm of shared work filled
the house.
Matie arrived at four with a neighbor, Mrs. Patterson, both
bearing covered dishes and definite ideas about where the furniture
should go. The parlor was rearranged twice before achieving
equilibrium. Abbie, who had been deposited in the best chair upon
arrival and had no intention of leaving it, offered commentary on
both configurations.
"The settee should face the window," she said.
"Then everyone sitting on it will have the light in their
eyes," Matie pointed out.
"People who face the window see what's coming," Abbie
said, which ended the conversation without entirely resolving it. The
settee stayed facing the window.
By seven o'clock the house was ready — refreshments ready to be laid out on
the dining room table, chairs arranged in conversational clusters,
the birthday cake on its covered stand in the kitchen awaiting its
moment. Emily and Georgia went home in the cool November evening,
and they talked about the party over supper in the easy way of two
people who have been preparing something together and are satisfied
with the result.
"He'll be surprised," Georgia said.
"He knows it's coming," Emily said.
"He knows there's a party," Georgia said. "He
doesn't know what it will feel like to walk into a room full of
people who love him. That's different from knowing about it."
Emily considered this. "You're right," she said.
Georgia accepted this without comment and cut them both another
piece of bread.
To be contionued ... next week in Part 2 of this story
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Here is the Video Overview of this story by Google NotebookLM:
This is historical fiction based on the facts that are available for the life and family of my maternal grandparents, Lyle and Emily(Auble) Carringer. It is based on my research, social history and society norms at the time and place, and it is likely realistic. It might have happened this way.
Stay tuned for the next chapters in this family story.
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Copyright (c) 2026, Randall J. Seaver
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