Remembering Uncle Carroll
My sister Kathy and I were grateful to be among the many
relatives and friends of the Schield family who traveled to Neillsville, Wisc.,
to attend the memorial service Jan. 24 for Uncle Carroll Schield. While, of
course, it was sad to lose the patriarch of the Schield family -- who died Nov.
22, 2013, the day after his 96th birthday -- the occasion gave all
of us the opportunity to honor him, celebrate his life and enjoy time with each
other.
Click here to access a slide show of photos taken throughout
the day by me and Rebecca Schield, David Schield’s wife. There are also more
photos by Rebecca on her Facebook page, for those of you linked to her.
Like the service for his wife, Aunt Betty Schield, two years
earlier, the service for Dr. Carroll Schield was held at St. Mary’s Catholic
Church in Neillsville. And again, eulogies were delivered by the oldest and the
youngest of the seven Schield children, Dan and David.
Dan, like his three sisters, followed his father’s footsteps
into the field of dentistry and attended the Marquette Dental School in
Milwaukee some three decades after his dad. Dan told the story of when he was
working in the dental school clinic where students like him would treat
patients under the supervision of their instructors. The clinic hadn’t changed
much since Carroll’s days as a student but Dan found himself gravitating to one
particular chair for treating patients each day. Carroll visited his son at the
clinic once and pointed out to Dan where he had carved his initials underneath
the shelf where students placed their instruments. It turned out that Dan was
working at the same station where his father worked as a student.
As many friends and relatives of Schields know, Never
Never Land was a labor of love for Carroll and the scene of a lot of memorable
celebrations over the years. Dan spoke of how his dad loved to “putz” around
the cottage, repainting the deck, cleaning the grill or raking leaves.
“He was always accomplishing something,” Dan said of
Carroll. “I think this resulted in teaching us to take care of our ‘stuff,’ and
to be self-reliant.”
Dan said he thinks his dad became a dentist because he
believed that if you take care of your teeth, they will last you a lifetime. Of
him, people said, “’He didn’t talk much, but he sure was a good dentist,’” Dan
said.
Dan’s big finish, to the delight of the assembled, was to
remove his suit jacket, revealing one of his dad’s argyle sweaters, then he
donned one of the 60’s-style casual fedoras Carroll favored and placed one of
his dad’s pipes between his teeth. I
told Dan afterwards that’s the first eulogy I’d seen featuring props.
David recounted his dad’s meeting his future wife, Betty
McCorry, when she worked as a secretary in the dental school. After graduating,
Carroll served as a US Army Medical Officer during World War II, stationed at
an army base in Louisiana, then in Europe and the Philippines. He and Betty
then settled in his hometown of Neillsville to start his dental practice and
start a family.
“Dad was a hard working man, a true professional, and a
really good dentist. In his mind, his
role was to financially provide for his family,” David said. “By his work ethic
and nature, he [taught] us that we, too, needed to provide for ourselves and
our families.”
There’s much more that Dan and David shared and I will
post their full eulogies separately.
As mourners streamed out of the church, they were greeted
by an honor guard of veterans from the local VFW post who fired a 21-gun salute
and a bugler played “Taps.”
Guests took a short drive from the church to the Neillsville
Country Club for lunch; the menu was inspired by the lunch Carroll usually had
when he visited the club: turkey sandwiches, minestrone, chips, pickles and
brownies for desert.
Besides all the Schield children, spouses and several
grandchildren and great-grandchildren, other guests included Brian and Maureen
(Drabik) McCorry, Aunt Teresa, Tom and Sarah from the Jonases and Kathy
(Gesley) and me representing the Mullinses. The nuns couldn’t make it but Sr.
Acquinice had been up there a week or so before the service.
The evening ended with a tableful of relatives enjoying a
fish fry at Stone’s Throw, the Hatfield restaurant that some of you may
remember as the setting for another fish fry before our reunion at the cottage
in 2012.
We topped off the evening by visiting Dan and Bobbie’s
lovely home in Neillsville, just a block or so down from St. Mary’s. We had a
lovely time reminiscing while going
through boxes and boxes of photos of my Schield cousins when they were growing
up and other Schield relatives going back two or three generations.
It was a wonderful way to reconnect with family and honor
the man whose long and successful life we came to celebrate.
Love to all,
Robert Mullins
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