Discover millions of ebooks, audiobooks, and so much more with a free trial

Only $11.99/month after trial. Cancel anytime.

The Prize Winner of Defiance, Ohio: How My Mother Raised 10 Kids on 25 Words or Less
The Prize Winner of Defiance, Ohio: How My Mother Raised 10 Kids on 25 Words or Less
The Prize Winner of Defiance, Ohio: How My Mother Raised 10 Kids on 25 Words or Less
Ebook353 pages4 hours

The Prize Winner of Defiance, Ohio: How My Mother Raised 10 Kids on 25 Words or Less

Rating: 4.5 out of 5 stars

4.5/5

()

Read preview

About this ebook

The Prize Winner of Defiance, Ohio introduces Evelyn Ryan, an enterprising woman who kept poverty at bay with wit, poetry, and perfect prose during the “contest era” of the 1950s and 1960s.

Stepping back into a time when fledgling advertising agencies were active partners with consumers, and everyday people saw possibility in every coupon, Terry Ryan tells how her mother kept the family afloat by writing jingles and contest entries. Mom’s winning ways defied the Church, her alcoholic husband, and antiquated views of housewives. To her, flouting convention was a small price to pay when it came to securing a happy home for her six sons and four daughters. Evelyn, who would surely be a Madison Avenue executive if she were working today, composed her jingles not in the boardroom, but at the ironing board.

By entering contests wherever she found them—TV, radio, newspapers, direct-mail ads—Evelyn Ryan was able to win every appliance her family ever owned, not to mention cars, television sets, bicycles, watches, a jukebox, and even trips to New York, Dallas, and Switzerland. But it wasn’t just the winning that was miraculous; it was the timing. If a toaster died, one was sure to arrive in the mail from a forgotten contest. Days after the bank called in the second mortgage on the house, a call came from the Dr Pepper company: Evelyn was the grand-prize winner in its national contest—and had won enough to pay the bank.

Graced with a rare appreciation for life's inherent hilarity, Evelyn turned every financial challenge into an opportunity for fun and profit. From her frenetic supermarket shopping spree—worth $3,000 today—to her clever entries worthy of Erma Bombeck, Dorothy Parker, and Ogden Nash, the story of this irrepressible woman whose talents reached far beyond her formidable verbal skills is told in The Prize Winner of Defiance, Ohio with an infectious joy that shows how a winning spirit will triumph over the poverty of circumstance.
LanguageEnglish
Release dateSep 2, 2005
ISBN9780743217279
Author

Terry Ryan

Terry Ryan, the sixth of Evelyn Ryan's ten children, was a consultant on the film adaptation of The Prize Winner of Defiance, Ohio. She lives in San Francisco, California.

Read more from Terry Ryan

Related to The Prize Winner of Defiance, Ohio

Related ebooks

Biography & Memoir For You

View More

Related articles

Reviews for The Prize Winner of Defiance, Ohio

Rating: 4.2926829268292686 out of 5 stars
4.5/5

41 ratings31 reviews

What did you think?

Tap to rate

Review must be at least 10 words

  • Rating: 2 out of 5 stars
    2/5
    parts of the book were a bit tedious, but it was interesting that the author's mother chose to stay with the alcoholic father, that didn't support the family. The excuse was that in the '50's and '60's women did NOT leave/divorce their husbands. I think this mother would have done better without the husband. The ending is good though.
  • Rating: 5 out of 5 stars
    5/5
    loved this true story - what a wonderful mother! Thoroughly enjoyed reading about the life she created for her 10 children. What a powerful example of what a mother can be! Beautiful
  • Rating: 5 out of 5 stars
    5/5
    I love true stories about family life. Terry Ryan made laugh and cry. What a wonderful story of love for her mother, who was a remarkable woman. The Hand of Providence is seen so many times throughout the lives of this family, most especially when contests were won which corresponded to their needs. Absolutely amazing how Evelyn's "wins" happened at just the right moments, too. All of the children did well, going to college and moving away, but staying close to their mother and each other. Even their Dad had his good qualities, and at the end of his life, made atonement to his wife. A truly uplifting book, despite the hard times and sometimes tragic events. I loved it! The movie is terrific, as well.
  • Rating: 4 out of 5 stars
    4/5
    I recently finished this great book. The author is the daughter of Evelyn Ryan, a fiesty, resilient mother of 10, who writes jingles and ads for contests. The story is mainly about her contesting.. but I am getting more 'umph' from the author's story behind the story: how her mother manages with 10 children, a drunken husband and a car that falls apart for years, washing machines and other appliances that die every month, not enough money for food and constant trips to the emergency room.. and yet everyone survives. That alone inspires me. I am looking for more stories like this one.
  • Rating: 2 out of 5 stars
    2/5
    had to give up halfway though....couldnt follow the story with all the verses and entries scattered on each page throughout the story
  • Rating: 5 out of 5 stars
    5/5
    loved it. Felt every word. got to know Evelyn and admire her and her determination
  • Rating: 5 out of 5 stars
    5/5
    I just wanted to give the mom in the book the biggest hug. I can't believe all she managed to do for her family. She led an amazing life and the author, her daughter, perfectly captured her tireless spirit. This was definitely one of my favorite nonfiction reads of the year.
  • Rating: 4 out of 5 stars
    4/5
    A wonderfully upbeat story about a woman who raises her large family by entering contests.
  • Rating: 3 out of 5 stars
    3/5
    Another one I forgot to log.
    Read it in 2009 or 2010.
    Another fascinating true story.
    Lots of kids, little money, and creative optimistic mother.
    Wow - She wrote good copy and won a lot of fantastic prizes.
    Lots of struggle, lots of love, lots of family working together.
  • Rating: 2 out of 5 stars
    2/5
    I found this book about the author's mother to be interesting but flawed. I think she could have used a strict editor. I am just old enough to remember the tail end of the big contests for housewives, and it was fun to find out more about them. I found this book to have too many details about things not germane to the actual story, though.
  • Rating: 3 out of 5 stars
    3/5
    Just love this story of resilience.
  • Rating: 4 out of 5 stars
    4/5
    Excellent story of a family growing up in a generation before my own. Through struggles with finances brought on by an alcoholic father, a family of 9 manages to stay afloat through the mother's ability to write small jingles that win contests. Ultimately, the story provides some hope and a good look at family dynamics in the 1950's.
  • Rating: 4 out of 5 stars
    4/5
    (Transplanted from my old booklog... I didn't give a star rating there, but I'm pretty sure it was in the 4-5 range.)Oh, this was good.The subtitle concisely summarizes the entire book. It's the true story of how the author's mother, during the contest craze of the 1950s and 1960s, entered every contest in sight, winning often enough to keep the family afloat.I liked this for several reasons. For one thing, I confess I give bonus points to any book chronicling a family whose size is in the ballpark of mine. (Ten is close enough to be in the ballpark, I figure.) This is one reason why I've long been a fan of Cheaper by the Dozen and Belles on their Toes. (Of course, small families can be nice, too: that's one reason why I've liked watching The Brady Bunch over the years.)Anyway. Aside from that, the story is engaging, and it's pretty well written. I particularly liked the fact that the author didn't fall into the trap of foreshadowing contest entries that were going to win. As the narrative progresses, some contests disappear into the mists after the entries are sent out, never to be heard of again, while others pay off. You have to read on to discover which is which, though.Finally, the book includes many of the actual contest entries, and while some of them are almost incomprehensible (but right up the alley of the contest judges), others are a delight to read. In one case, I'd actually read it before, in a collection of Burma-Shave signs, just without attribution to the author. (It's a real beaut, having relevance both to the actual product, and to the fact that it's being read from a car speeding along a highway: "Hairpin turn, / Hotrod ditched. / Lost control, / His whiskers / Itched. / Burma-Shave.")
  • Rating: 5 out of 5 stars
    5/5
    This was a delightful and heartbreaking read. Ryan's mother was an inveterate contest enterer, and it was the winnings from these contests than kept the family's head above water, due to dad's inveterate drinking. Ryan's portrait of her mother and her family is touching and hilarious.
  • Rating: 5 out of 5 stars
    5/5
    An entertaining, often humorous look at 1950s America and the life of an intelligent, indomitable women who kept a family of 12 afloat on sheer wit and determination.
  • Rating: 3 out of 5 stars
    3/5
    An interesting memoir, I think primarily because of its originality. I've heard of people who spend a lot of time with sweepstakes & contests, but have never heard of one who makes a living off of it. I found it inspiring to a certain degree, but I also thought the author's mother was weak in certain ways. Why did she put up with that husband of hers? And really....10 kids? Why keep having them if you know you can't afford them? But granted, that's not the author's fault, so I digress. In many ways this was an inspirational mother & she obviously was doing something right to have her kids turn out so well in the end.It was the writing style of this story that bothered me more than anything, or maybe the author's monotone in her reading of the audiobook version. Maybe I'm just too used to memoirs that are funny & quirky, but this one just fell flat for me. Perhaps with a different reader, this would've impressed me more. As for the jingles themselves -- it was great that Ryan's mother kept such good records & Terry was able to use them in her memoir, but honestly, I didn't think the jingles were anything spectactular, or certainly not prizeworthy in some cases. Perhaps that's a sign of the times changing, as jingles aren't utilized near as much nowadays as they used to be & I can't appreciate them the way one would several decades ago. Nevertheless, I'm a sucker for movie adaptations, so I'll probably rent a copy of the movie to see how I like that.
  • Rating: 5 out of 5 stars
    5/5
    This was such a wonderfully, touching, heartfelt story. Mrs. Evelyn Ryan (and all her various contest aliases) is indeed the "hero" her daughter portrays her to be. Any stay at home mom who can raise 10 kids on an alcoholic fathers meager income by contesting is a saint in my book. Her story is an inspiration to all. Most if not all of her children went on to college to boot. Mrs. Ryan could make or repair just about anything (most comically her own girdle) in order to make ends meet. Many of Mrs. Ryan's contest submissions are included as well as photo's of herself and sometimes the family when a big contest prize was won. What I enjoyed most about the book was not Evelyn's writing, but that of her daugher Tuff (Terry Ryan, the books' author). Her first person account made me feel as if I was standing in the kitchen smelling the repairs being made to the girdle with the iron, or sitting in the living room when one of the contest judges moved a magazine to sit in a chair only to have a spring pop out in his face that the magazine was covering up, or last but not least standing on the front porch watching Charlie the chicken attack people from the bushes. It was a great comedy, tragedy and tear jerker all in one...a fantastic book!
  • Rating: 5 out of 5 stars
    5/5
    Couldn't put the book down. A story of 10 children raised in poverty by an alcoholic father and one of the most engaging mothers put in print. It's hard to believe she was that saintly; I'm sure there are stories missing, but enough comes through to make this a genuine feel-good tale of a woman who kept her children housed and clothed (barely) through her skill in winning jingle contests. The book also transplants you to the 1950s and, as someone then alive, I remember enough to feel that the author truly caught that era. Unique story, interesting and vivid characters, a book well worth your time.
  • Rating: 4 out of 5 stars
    4/5
    I enjoyed reading this so much. What stood out for me was the grit and determination of the mom. Raising 10 kids seems herculean by itself, but then you throw in an alcoholic father in a time and age when you just didn't get divorced, and the task becomes all the more daunting. How she went about it was by entering contests; the ones where you came up with catchy slogans; another relic of times gone by, I'm afraid. I truly enjoyed the samples of her writing shared throughout the book. I also really enjoyed the story of Charlie the chicken, who was raised by their door-opening cat.
  • Rating: 5 out of 5 stars
    5/5
    One of those books you can't lay down. Have read it more than once, and watched the movie. A story that reminds people to be thankful for what they have. Shows what a mother will do to keep a roof over her childrens heads and food in their tummies.
  • Rating: 5 out of 5 stars
    5/5
    I tore through this book until the last page - the star of this inspirational tale, Evelyn Ryan, is one of the most amazing characters I've ever seen on page. Amazing still, that she was a real person, a 50's housewife raising ten children with little to no help from her alcoholic husband. This would be a tale of woe if it weren't for Evelyn's ingenuity, skill, and luck at entering contests. Her cute and clever rhyming jingles, included appropriately throughout the book along with the kitschy ads and contest forms that inspired them, were all a part of this overwhelmed mom's can-do attitude. The family certainly wouldn't have survived without her. Not only the glue that kept the family together, her prizes here and there replaced broken appliances, helped pay the bills, and even bought the Ryans a house! For every major adversity, Evelyn's prizes saved the day.It's amazing how much this woman accomplished with so much stacked against her, and here I complain I don't have time to do the dishes.
  • Rating: 5 out of 5 stars
    5/5
    As memoirs go, this will always be one of my favorites. The take-away message in this book is that a positive outlook will take you every where you want to go. In my life, I would leave the negative, drunk husband and would also have encouraged Evelyn Ryan to do the same. However, She had the grace to accept him for who he was, ask him to improve and when he could not to get out of the way of her happiness. Despite the hardships, she raised her 10 children to expect more from life and to stay positive. Her lessons were ahead of their time, despite her traditional outlook, for instance when she allows her children to voice their hatred of their dad, or the catholic nuns who look down on them, but shows them where to put that anger where so that it does not consume them in addictions and unhappiness. The 2005 movie, which condenses but follows the book perfectly, is also worth watching.
  • Rating: 3 out of 5 stars
    3/5
    Interesting biography written by the child of 10 children. They grew up in the 1950's. The father was an alcoholic. The mother sent in jingles to companies to win money. She won a couple cars, a trip to New York and many appliances. The mom had a way of being positive even when the chips were down. Interesting read about a time when jingle contests were prevalent.
  • Rating: 5 out of 5 stars
    5/5
    I watched the movie and it was such an amazing story I read the book. I love stories about real people. Plus the movie had great costumes and aprons!
  • Rating: 4 out of 5 stars
    4/5
    The Prize Winner of Defiance, Ohio is a warm and lovingly written memoir that chronicles the life of Evelyn Ryan, who, as her daughter and the author of the book Terry Ryan puts it, raised 10 kids on 25 words or less.I love biographies. I especially love to learn from others’ mistakes and triumphs and to be inspired to be better than I am. I am partial to stories about ordinary people, that is, people like me. While Catherine the Great, Hatshepsut, and Amelia Earhart were all immensely interesting and inspiring, their lives were nothing like mine. I know that while what they did was all well and good for them, there is not the remotest chance that I am going to rule Russia, have myself declared King and a god, or fly myself from here to Bakersfield, let alone around the world. And so I enjoy reading about people who have done things there is a remote chance I might also do.This book is about a woman who leads an ordinary life in an extraordinary way. Evelyn Ryan is a woman of talent, wisdom, humor and an amazing ability to keep her eyes on the prize, both literally and figuratively, no matter what is happening around her. That she lived in a town called Defiance is only fitting, for this is a woman who defied many things, including the odds.Evelyn was born in 1913 and her mother died shortly after. Her father remarried when she was 3 years old. In the early 20’s her stepmother published, and wrote most of, a local newspaper. Evelyn was taught to set type and by the time she was 17 she had earned a reputation for both speed and accuracy as a typesetter. By the time she was 20 she was also writing a twenty-inch column for the newspaper. She wrote everything from social gossip to satire about the government. Her column was popular, but she didn’t feel that she was really any good at writing, and because of a lack of confidence she gave up the column after a year. (She would, however, continue throughout her life to make some money from stories she submitted to various newspapers.) She wanted to be a nurse and started school, but she had a horrible case of eczema which left her hands blistered and swollen and she had to quit school and return home. Shortly after that she met and married Kelly Ryan. Of this decision she tells one of her children, “I want you to know that I don’t regret any part of my life, including marrying Dad.” She and Kelly had 10 children in quick succession.Think back to the role of women in the 40’s and 50’s and Evelyn Ryan would fit that bill. She was Catholic, which heavily influenced her decisions, including having 10 children, staying home to raise them, and deciding to stay married for life, even though her husband was an abusive alcoholic who drank up most of his paycheck. The financial strain that this caused was immense and this is what led Mrs. Ryan to turn her writing skills towards entering contests. The primary theme of this book, however, is how she manages to keep her family together and give her children a happy childhood in spite of the adversity that they faced. It might sound depressing, just one more book about the ravages of growing up with an alcoholic parent. But this book, written with humor, intelligence and compassion by Mrs. Ryan’s daughter Terry is infused with joy, laughter and is a tremendous tribute to the power of resilience and the unwavering love of a mother for her children.Mrs. Ryan was a prize winner and that’s how she supported her family for over 20 years. From the late thirties into the sixties many manufacturers and stores held contests. But these were not like the contests of today, where you fill out an entry blank, have a 1 in 10 trillion chance of winning, and you start getting junk mail from the 2,463 companies who bought your name and address from the company holding the contest. The contests that Mrs. Ryan entered required good writing skills, cleverness and a good sense of humor, all of which she possessed in great quantity. She started out entering these contests in the late 1940’s by writing Burma-Shave signs. One of her entries which was selected reads, “Passed on a hill, Lived through Korea, Met a guy, With the same idea. Burma-Shave.”Soon she had made a business out of entering various contests which required her to write various pieces such as limericks, poems, pithy sayings and product descriptions, usually 25 words or less. Mrs. Ryan had a notebook which sat at the end of her ironing board and she would write her entries as she worked. Many of these entries are in the book and are quite clever and amusing.It was practically a full-time job keeping up with all of the contest entries, the rules for each, etc. The rules were very rigidly applied and the stakes were high because winning might mean the difference between having food on the table or not. The contests were decided by panels of judges, so Mrs. Ryan also took the time to find out whom the judges were and learn what each of them preferred. The companies even sent out private detectives to see if the submissions were really written by the person who sent them. Since she sometimes made submissions in the names of her children, this caused some fairly comical scenes, which are detailed with good humor in the book. Mrs. Ryan was not above telling a few “white lies” if it meant money for her children. All of this took time, energy and attention to detail, all of which Mrs. Ryan was quite good at. And let us not forget that she was also responsible for raising her 10 children. She is the definition of Supermom.Mrs. Ryan won contest after contest, with prizes ranging from a few dollars to trips, cars and even a guest appearance on the Merv Griffen show. Some of the prizes were kept and used by the family, such as washing machines and televisions, but most were sold and the money used to buy the essentials of what the family needed. One car that she won was sold to get the money for a down payment on a house. At a later time, after Mr. Ryan had a breakdown and was out of work so money was especially tight, the bank had threatened foreclose on the mortgage because it hadn’t been paid in several months. Mrs. Ryan had one week to get the money or lose the house. She had entered a major contest and if she won and if the money arrived on time she could save the house. I’ll let you read the book to find out what happened.Partly what I find remarkable about this family is how the focus of the household was not on the father, who could be a mean drunk, but rather on the love and joy that Mrs. Ryan brought, and won, for her children. Terry Ryan certainly talks about how her father affected her family, but there is no bitterness there and there is a good deal of compassion for his failings. The sense she gives of her childhood is that while there was stress, financial difficulties, etc., the children felt loved and happy and they had a lot of fun together. This was the ultimate prize for Mrs. Ryan, the thing she worked her whole life to achieve: the success and happiness of her children. And by all accounts she was a winner there too. Her children went on to be educated, have successful careers and families of their own, and remain close to each other and their mother. Terry Ryan does not tell a story of the tragedy of having a dysfunctional parent, she tells the story of a remarkable woman and a childhood filled with love, if not with possessions.I love this book and I highly recommend it. This is a book that will make you laugh, and perhaps cry, and it will leave you with a sense of hope about how powerful each of us ordinary people is to leave the world a better place.
  • Rating: 5 out of 5 stars
    5/5
    Inspiring and a great read!
  • Rating: 2 out of 5 stars
    2/5
    Anytime Food Network, HGTV, or DIY has a sweepstakes, I'm all over it. $25,000 for new a garage? $50,000 for a dream kitchen? $100,000 towards landscaping? I'm there, there, and there. And the king of all of these sweepstakes has got to be the HGTV Million-Dollar Dream Home Giveaway. When that thing's going on I have a hard time thinking about anything else.The great thing about these sweepstakes is that you don't have to do anything but give your name and address, and you can enter every day. You don't even need stamps anymore. The only sweepstakes that I don't enter are the ones that make you write something. You know, when they want you to tell them why you should win, or say why your wife deserves a new kitchen, or come up with a catchy new slogan for their glass cleaner, all in 25 words or less. These contests stop me dead in my tracks.Evelyn Ryan, now she knew how to do those things. She's the subject of The Prize Winner of Defiance, Ohio, written by her daughter, Terry Ryan. Since her alcoholic husband drank most of his paycheck, Evelyn entered as many contests as she could as a way to keep her ten kids fed and clothed. Lucky for them, this was during the golden age of sweepstakes - the forties and fifties - and she was very good at them.By far, the most interesting parts of this book are the numerous entries that are reprinted from the notebooks that Terry Ryan's mother kept to keep track of all her submissions. A wide range of contests are represented, everything from losing entries that didn't even merit a $10 prize to this one, from a "name this sandwich" contest which won her a car and a trip to NYC: My Frisk-the-Fridgidaire Clean-the-Cupboards-Bare Sandwich.Evelyn supplemented her winnings by selling poetry to magazines and local newspapers. Her poetic style, which often showed up in her sweepstakes entries, was very Ogden Nash-like (this one got her $25 from the Toledo Blade): Birds of a Feather To public buildings, Types indigenous Are litter-ally Always pigeonous.She quickly learned that the best entries didn't always win, sometimes you had to know what the judges wanted to hear: [Contest-judging company] Donnelley had offices in all the major U.S. cities, but the Chicago office was known to prefer honest-sounding, straightforward entries, leaning to trite.As much as I enjoyed reading these clever entries, I'm sorry to say that the rest of the book seems to have been written to please those Chicago judges: it's a little too honest-sounding, too straightforward, and too trite. Even when dealing with her father's drinking problem, Terry Ryan's writing is more than a little too gee-wiz corny for me to enjoy. Several times the same scene is described: the kids playing outside waiting for the mailman (loving nicknamed Pokey for his leisurely pace) to bring the latest prize announcement, just as the bank's threatening to foreclose (or just as the car breaks down, or just as one of the kids need new glasses, etc.). Wholesome is good, but after a while it gets kind of old. The book also seems to have been written at about an sixth-grade reading level, which certainly didn't add to my enjoyment.I had heard about this book from a segment on NPR's All Things Considered. I don't want to slam this book too much, since it was obviously written as a daughter's loving memoir of her mother, but I now realize that something that sounds interesting for a five-minute segment doesn't always stay interesting for three hundred-pages.In contest lingo, I'd say this book merits an honorable mention, at best.
  • Rating: 4 out of 5 stars
    4/5
    Terry Ryan is not from your average family. She lives with her 9, yes 9 brothers and sisters along with her mother and father with very little money. But her mother has a passion: entering contests. Terry and her siblings barely survive as they deal with an alcoholic father and little to no food at times, yet their spirits are never low as their mother gives them hope. This book was a pleasant and quick read.
  • Rating: 5 out of 5 stars
    5/5
    This is an excellent book. It is moving and inspiring. It also helps one to better understand the times (mid 60's). I highly recommend it AND highly recommend the movie of the same title, starring Julianne Moore and Woody Harrelson!
  • Rating: 3 out of 5 stars
    3/5
    Short, but entertaining. Tells of contesting before it was just chance, but it was mostly a story of a strong loving matriarch with an optimistic outlook.

Book preview

The Prize Winner of Defiance, Ohio - Terry Ryan

PART ONE

CHAPTER ONE

The Contester

The ordinarily sleepy town of Defiance, Ohio, emitted an industrious hum on hot days, a subtle pulse of activity—like the buzzing of distant bees. It was late Indian summer, a little too warm for an October day, in 1953. Most of the rust-red and golden leaves still held fast in the towering maple trees that lined our block on Latty Street. You could feel the moisture in the air seeping up from the muddy, slow-moving Auglaize River a few blocks away.

My mother, Evelyn Ryan, had sent six of her nine children outside to play while she and my sixteen-year-old sister, Lea Anne, made lunch. As usual, all the school-age kids in the family came home at noontime, and we crammed as much recreation into the hour as we could.

As a seven-year-old, I sat on the porch steps reading comic books with my brothers Mike, five, and Bruce, who had just turned nine. My oldest brother Dick, fourteen, his arm still in a cast from a bicycle accident, played one-armed catch with my thirteen-year-old brother, Bub, on the sidewalk in the sun. Rog, two years younger than Bub, roller-skated in the street, hoping to get a free ride by grabbing on to the bumper of a passing car. My baby sisters, three-year-old Barb and one-year-old Betsy, were somewhere inside the house with Lea Anne and Mom, who was pregnant with my brother Dave at the time.

Just as Rog decided that little or no traffic would pass the house on the quiet little street and clumped up the steps to remove his skates, a sleek jet-black Pontiac Chieftain pulled up to the curb in front. It was so new we could see ourselves reflected in the side panels. The chrome grille glistened expensively in the sun. Even the aerodynamic hood ornament—a small amber-colored bust of Chief Pontiac—looked valuable, more like a misplaced jewel than an auto accessory.

So few visitors ever stopped at our house that we all turned to stare. When three men wearing dark pinstripe suits got out of the car and started up the walk, Bruce and I raced into the house to tell Mom that some very well-dressed strangers were about to knock on the door. Because of the suits, we thought that someone must have died.

Our middle-America town of Defiance was big enough to be the county seat and small enough to need only three traffic lights on Clinton, the main street. Visitors arriving in a quasi limousine were unheard of. Not that we weren’t getting used to surprises. In the late 1940s my mother had begun to enter the many contests of skill that had sprung to life in the post–World War II economic boom. Poems, limericks, and statements of the 25 words or less variety had been pouring out of her for the past five years. She was now winning small prizes with some frequency—the Benrus ladies’ watch she wore everywhere, even to bed; the Bulova watch she saved for special occasions, like Sunday Mass; $95 in cash (from multiple contests); an automatic coffeemaker; frying pans, a Westinghouse blender, basketballs, footballs, Rog’s roller skates, and—by my reckoning, the best prize of all—an entire case of Almond Joy candy bars.

Contesting was a relatively new outlet for Mom, though she had been writing her whole life. The poems she submitted to magazines or poetry contests tended to be short, pithy, and unexpectedly humorous. The dollar she received for But Excuse Us went a long way in 1953:

Folks endowed with

Luck, or virtue,

Get the tissue

To the kerchoo.

She began her contesting career simply enough, with Burma-Shave roadside rhymes. In the 1950s you couldn’t drive down a highway without passing a Burma-Shave roadside billboard campaign, six signs spaced at hundred-yard intervals down the road, one line to a sign, the last always Burma-Shave. The verses were clever and meant to amuse, their content ranging from shaving to safe driving and current culture. My mother’s submissions added to those topics an occasional touch of irony:

Race little roadster,

Fairly fly.

You’ll be

Used parts

By and by.

Burma-Shave.

Successful Burma-Shave jingles inserted a not-so-hidden advertisement into the mix, and in one entry Mom went for broke—if you don’t shave close enough, you could kill yourself:

Hairpin turn,

Hotrod ditched.

Lost control,

His whiskers

Itched.

Burma-Shave.

Our family was often surprised at Mom’s uncanny knack for working complex political issues into something as simple as a Burma-Shave jingle. I doubt anyone would have accepted the premise of a Korean War veteran who survived combat only to be killed because he foolishly passed another car on a hill. But the poem she sent in was quick-witted and timely enough to hit just the right note:

Passed on a hill,

Lived through

Korea.

Met a guy

With the same idea.

Burma-Shave.

By the age of five, I had grown used to seeing Mom, pencil behind her right ear, spend hours each day at the ironing board. She often said that she did her best work while ironing, her hands working on one chore, her head on another. On the squared end of the board, where the iron stood upright, Mom kept an open notebook of current contest jingles and entries in various stages of completion. A basket of pre-sprinkled clothes rested at her feet. The iron hissed on the board as she scribbled. Even Steven won a poetry contest in the Toledo Blade, earning her at least $25, a veritable windfall in our family.

Who’d trade

Peace of mind

(To most rich men

Denied)

For all of their

Worrisome money?

I’d.

Each evening after the last supper dish had been washed and put away—never an easy task since we used every plate in the house—Mom would grab her notebook and sit down at the end of the couch to produce more entries. Inevitably she fell asleep after a few minutes, notebook on her lap, postage stamps and other effluvia of contesting slipping out of the pages and onto the floor. Each new year, Mom started a new notebook to fill with entries that might go nowhere or all the way to the top.

She used her writing skills to win some of the necessities our large family couldn’t afford to buy. Ours was one of the poorest families in Defiance. Mom was far too busy with the family and housework to take on an outside job, and Dad’s take-home pay from Serrick’s Screw Machine Shop—where he made nuts, bolts, screws, screwdrivers, pliers, hammers, and an occasional pair of tweezers for home use—was about $90 a week, barely enough to pay for food and rent. His nightly liquor consumption—a fifth of Kessler’s whiskey and a six-pack of Pabst Blue Ribbon beer—came to $30 a week, sapping his paycheck of any real buying power.

In the days before credit cards, few people in Defiance had a checking account. Bills were paid in cash and in person. Our family finances worked like this: Dad cashed his weekly paychecks at the bank, and at the end of the month, he drove all over town to pay the mortgage and bills at the gas and electric, telephone, and doctor’s offices. Whatever was left by the time he got home usually remained in his wallet, getting distributed bit by bit for groceries, clothes, and incidentals (newspapers, the milkman).

Medical bills were paid in erratic installments, if ever. We relied on the Lions Club to pay for eyeglasses for Lea Anne, Rog, Bruce, me, Mike, Barb, and Betsy. We got much of our clothing from more well-to-do relatives as they outgrew them. Most of the food we ate was bought by our generous aunt Lucy.

So Mom, like a surprisingly large number of housewives in the 1950s and 1960s, turned to contesting for a living. Of course, thousands of contestants competing for a small pool of prizes made for long odds. But Mom won a great deal of the time, and any prize she received (with the possible exception of the free accordion lessons she won for Mike in 1958, Barb in 1961, and Betsy in 1963) usually filled a pressing household need.

The contests Mom entered required word skills, wit, and originality. Luck, she always said, has nothing to do with it. An average contest might ask for a rhymed jingle, the last line of a five-line limerick, or 25 words or less on a specific product. In 1955, for example, she won $10 for this submission to Dial soap:

I’m glad I use Dial

Though my reign’s in the kitchen

I needn’t pour perfume

To keep quite bewitchin’.

The same year, she won an RCA Victor AM/shortwave radio with this jingle:

Kraft’s Parkay won’t tear fresh bread.

Even ice-cold, it will smoothly spread.

It tastes as delicious as can be—

No seasonable facsimile.

Mom worked on her entries day and night, honing them until the rhyme or the sentiment, in her mind, perfectly fit the sponsor’s expectations. She never submitted just one entry when she had enough ideas for ten or eleven. She learned to use every variation on her own name (Mrs. Evelyn Ryan, Mrs. Evalyn Ryan, Mrs. Evalynn Ryan, Mrs. Evelyn L. Ryan, Mrs. Evelyn Lenore Ryan, Mrs. E. L. Ryan, Miss Evelyn Ryan, Mrs. Leo J. Ryan, Mrs. L. J. Ryan, Mrs. Kelly Ryan, Mrs. Kelly J. Ryan, Mrs. K. J. Ryan); used fictitious middle initials (Mrs. Evelyn A., B., C., D., E., F., G., H., I., J., K., M., N., O., P., R., S., T., U., V., W., X., Y., and Z. Ryan); made up names (Eva Ryan, Donna Bea Ryan, Bud Ryan); used relatives’ names (Dad’s, Aunt Lucy’s, Aunt Enie’s, Lea Anne’s, Dick’s, Bub’s, Rog’s, Bruce’s, mine, Mike’s, Barb’s, Betsy’s, Dave’s). When she ran out of names, she changed the address (adding a letter to the house number, changing Avenue to Street). All these variations allowed her to submit numerous entries for any contest, and also let her know which entry won when one did win.

Companies sponsored contests for two reasons: to acquire new advertising ideas from the public, and to sell more products. Most contest entry blanks had to be accompanied by a proof of purchase (labels on cans and jars, box tops, freshness seals, bottle caps, candy and cigarette wrappers). Fifty thousand contest entries represented fifty thousand purchases that might not have occurred otherwise. Contesting was big business, for both sponsors and winners. Entrants felt almost patriotic to be a part of it.

Our kitchen cabinets were crammed with shoeboxes full of entry blanks and labels that Mom was saving for future use—one for cereals and other boxed foods (Kellogg’s, Wheaties, Cheerios, Jell-O), one for canned and bottled foods (Spam, Del Monte, Heinz), one for candies (Peter Paul, Tootsie Roll, Pom Poms), one for soaps (Duz, Lux, SweetHeart), one for soft drinks (Dr Pepper, Coca-Cola, Hires), and one for any product not fitting those categories (Alcoa Wrap, Motorola, General Electric). No empty can or jar was tossed in the garbage until the label had been soaked off in the sink, a process that sometimes took days.

It didn’t matter if the product manufacturer had never sponsored a contest. Mom saved the proofs of purchase just in case. If Tang doesn’t offer a contest one of these days, she said one morning, I’m going to have to move you kids out of the bedroom to make room for the labels.

My mother had so many box tops, labels, and wrappers put aside that finding the right one could take an entire day. As a last resort, she’d remove a label from an unopened package or can and put the unmarked container back in the cupboard. The process inspired this poem:

Hmn! Wonder What This Is

A Contester’s life is full of woe!

She parts with her box tops, then doesn’t know

If she’s washing with Surf or with Oxydol;

Might be Fab. Might be Duz. It could even be All,

Once her soap’s poured in cans.

(Isn’t yours, Contest fans?)

But the food she prepares is exciting, gay fare!

There’s always an aura of mystery there,

For labels are long gone from fruit, fowl and fish,

So whatever she cooks is a real surprise dish.

Whoever happened to be passing the ironing board at the moment of Mom’s inspiration was pressed into service. We loved to listen and collaborate with her, but sometimes—unless the entry rhymed or was funny in a conventional way—we would just stare at her, slack-jawed. We wondered how in the world she ever won a single contest with entries that sounded so indecipherable. Some of them seemed closer to Greek than English—underlined, italicized, polysyllabic verbal tangles studded with clusters of capital letters. This submission won a brand new Schwinn bicycle from a Champion spark plugs contest:

Champion KNOWHOW puts MOST in SPARK PLUG to get the MOST (power, mileage) out of a CAR—a powerFULL plug for a spark plug!

Mom had a reason for producing such deliberate gobbledygook. Contesting, as she always said, required more than collecting box tops and being clever. There was form to consider (some contests required the use of specific words, or gave points for the use of product-related words in an entry), product focus (was it aimed at families, at young men, at children?), and judges. The advertising agency hired by the sponsoring company to judge the contest was always a more important consideration for entrants than the sponsor or the product. Each agency had its preference for rhyme or prose, for humorous or straight material.

So did the Ryan family. We considered some of Mom’s entries just plain boring, or complete exaggerations. In a contest sponsored by the Plough pharmaceutical company, contestants wrote 25 words or less in praise of the local drugstore, in our case Kuntz’s Drugs in Defiance.

Kuntz’s compounds hand-to-the-‘Plough’ dedication,

what-you-don’t-see,-ask-for informality, what-we-don’t-have,-we’ll-get-you accommodation.

This cheery, welcoming scenario was so unlike the real drugstore, whose owner—some people thought—treated many of his customers like potential shoplifters, that when my sister Barb read the entry, she blurted out, "This glorified place is Kuntz’s?" The toaster Mom won for her entry arrived just two days after the previous toaster expired. Truth was always secondary when a new appliance was needed.

For every entry we couldn’t understand or appreciate, there were far more that we could. A Real-Kill pesticide contest required the entrant to think up a name for the company’s new bug spray and write a rhymed description of it. Mom submitted at least thirteen entries, using her usual aliases and alternate addresses. To those of us passing the ironing board, four of them seemed promising:

One, Two—

Today’s bug’s dead, tomorrow’s too!

Inning—

A game life’s bugs won’t be winning!

Blend—

As bug sprays go, the LIVING end!

Blight ’em—

From bugs you’re free ad finitum!

Even Mom wasn’t sure which entry won, but one of them did. As with the toaster, her timing seemed almost divinely inspired. The prize was a top-of-the-line RCA color television set, which arrived just days after our old TV stopped working for good. Mom had won the old General Electric TV from The Ed Sullivan Show for this jingle on Mercury automobiles:

With power-endowed wizardry,

Nice going M-phatically!

We didn’t understand this entry either, or why it was good enough to win such a big prize. The judges must have liked Mom’s double entendre (nice going) and M-phatically (with the M signifying Mercury).

Whenever she won a major prize (to us, anything worth over $25), Mom wrote a personal thank-you note to the sponsoring company. Her intentions were sincere, but she believed as well that a letter of thanks just might give her an edge the next time around. Evelyn C. Ryan wrote the following letter to Ed Sullivan after receiving the TV:

A thousand pardons. I hope you’ll forgive me for being so tardy to acknowledge receipt of the beautiful G.E. portable TV awarded me in the recent Mercury contest. We are all overjoyed.

I was aiming, I’ll admit, for a brand new Mercury to replace our decrepit ’46 Chevy, which runs nowadays only when it chooses, and seldom does.

You may be interested to know that the new portable entertains a family of twelve—Pop, Mom, twenty-, eighteen-, sixteen-, fourteen-, twelve-, ten-, eight-, six-, four-, and three-year-olds, so the superiority of the G.E. line will doubtless be broadcast far and wide.

We are very grateful, and are biding our time until next year, so please do have another Mercury contest! Huh?

Happily and hopefully yours, (Mrs.) Evelyn C. Ryan

Mom didn’t win a prize in every contest she entered, of course. (And though she tried, she never won a sweepstakes contest, where winners were picked at random.) In the 1950s, Pepsodent, one of the more popular brands of toothpaste, saturated radio and TV airwaves for at least a decade with its familiar singsong jingle, You’ll wonder where the yellow went / When you brush your teeth with Pepsodent. When Pepsodent sponsored a contest asking where the yellow went, Mom’s entries, all four of them, went nowhere, though we thought they showed her typical humor and range:

The yellow escaped

By the skin of its teeth

When Pepsodent unveiled

The white underneath.

The yellow battled

As it went

(But it didn’t make

A PepsoDENT).

Down the drain and

Over the dam

Pursued by the paste

with the whammy what-am!

It took to the bottle—

Wasn’t Pepsodent-fond,

And what came out?

Peroxide-blonde!

Occasionally, months would go by without a single prize, and these were dark times indeed. We’d come home from school and spot Mom lingering at the front windows, watching Pokey, as she called our slow-moving mailman, make his lumbering way up one side of Latty Street and back down the other to our house, endlessly chatting with milkmen and garbage collectors on the way. Big events in our house, even the little kids knew, had occurred because of Mom’s contesting before. And most of them had begun with a simple envelope hand-carried by Pokey, like this January 1953 letter from NBC’s Bob Hope Show in Hollywood:

Dear Mrs. Ryan:

Your contribution to the Truth Is Funnier than Fiction portion of the Bob Hope daytime radio show has been accepted for broadcast. It will be heard on the broadcast of Friday, February 6, 1953.

You may expect to receive your Bulova American Girl watch in the near future.

Yours very truly,

Marian H. Kate,

Assistant to the Producer

Enclosed in the envelope was a copy of the winning story Mom sent in:

Four-year-old Mike objected to getting his cowboy hat off the back porch after supper, explaining that he was afraid of the dark. Mike, his father said, God is out there, too. Thus emboldened, Mike opened the back door a crack and called out, God, will you please hand me my hat?

Mom hit a dry spell starting late in the summer of 1953, but that, it turned out, was the least of her worries. The tiny two-bedroom house we had rented for six years, we learned, would soon be the home of someone else. Granted, the house was far too small and cramped for a family of eleven. We had no bathtub and only two bedrooms. Mom and Dad had one; the kids slept in the other—nine of us in two double beds and three single cots.

As children we hardly noticed the crowded conditions. What kid wouldn’t like waking up in a room with eight other boys and girls? It was life as we knew it, and it was grand. What the house lacked in size was more than mitigated by the enormous backyard, a large expanse of lawn we used as a baseball diamond, with built-in snacks as well: a fifty-foot grape arbor, twin peach trees, a cherry tree, and a giant old apple tree.

But now it seemed our life on Latty Street was over. The landlord told Mom that he wanted the house for his daughter, who was getting married in a few months. In short, we were being evicted. Dad didn’t give this news much thought, assuming that a solution would appear in time. Mom had worried ever since about where we would relocate and how we’d get the money to do it.

Then Dick was hit by a car while delivering newspapers on his bicycle. Although he came through the accident with only a broken arm, the bike was destroyed. Just a month before, he had pitched a no-hitter, almost unheard of in Little League. The coach told Mom he had high hopes for Dick’s future as a professional baseball player. When the police called from the hospital about the accident, they put Dick on the phone first, so my mother would know immediately that he wasn’t seriously injured.

Hi, Mom, it’s me. Dick spoke so softly Mom could hardly hear him. I got hit by a car on the northside bridge, but I’m okay.

What? Mom sat down before her knees could buckle. Where are you? Are you hurt?

I’m at the hospital. I bounced off the guy’s hood and broke my arm.

"You what? wailed Mom. Did they take X rays?"

They did, Mom, and I’m okay. The only thing broken is my arm.

As she began to understand that he had indeed survived the accident, Mom paused to smile. "It’s not your pitching arm, is it?"

No. He laughed. It’s my left arm. The bike’s smashed, though. The car drove right over it.

Without a bike, Dick lost his newspaper route to another boy who had a functioning bicycle. A few weeks later on a visit to the hardware store, Mom noticed an ad for a bicycle contest sponsored by Western Auto: Kids! Complete this sentence in 25 words or less (Mom and Dad’s help is encouraged): I like the all-new ‘X-53 Super’ Western Flyer Bicycle because . . .

Mom took home an entry blank, determined for the first time to win a contest for a specific need. Her goal was to win Dick one of the 101 new bikes that would be awarded to the grand prize winner and the hundred runner-ups. The entry she finally submitted seemed, to her kids, another of the slack-jawed variety, but we didn’t say this out loud. There would be other contests, we thought, other bicycles:

I like the all-new X-53 Super Western Flyer Bicycle because brand new ideas about safety, service, sleekness, combined with Western Flyer’s old reliable construction make X-53 Super a stand-out in ANY bike rack!

Nothing had come of the Western Flyer entry Mom had sent in during her dry spell, and we could tell she was becoming increasingly worried about that and our eviction notice by the time the three men in business suits pulled up in their gleaming Pontiac. They must have stifled laughter when they saw the scrappy Ryan kids staring at them open mouthed, until two of us broke ranks and ran in to announce their approach. As the men stepped up to the door and knocked, the remaining kids traipsed through ahead of them, leaving them alone on the porch.

Publicity photo taken after Mom (in Dick’s name) won the Western Auto bicycle contest, including $5,000, in the nick of time. Back row, standing: Dad, Rog, and Bub. Others, from left: Lea Anne, Bruce, Barb (holding her favorite toy, an empty Vaseline jar), Dick, Mom, Betsy (sitting on Mom’s lap), me, Mike (with toy gun). Brother Dave was born eight months later.

Assuming the men were lost, Mom opened the screen door prepared to direct them elsewhere. Her sturdy five-foot six-inch frame came up to the knot in the tallest man’s necktie, but she probably could have beaten him in arm wrestling. Years of hauling kids around had given her a body as solid as stone, her able shoulders visible at the edges of the square-cut top of her yellow sundress. She had high cheekbones and olive skin, remnants of the smattering of Indian blood rumored to have circulated in her mostly German ancestors. Her black eyes stared directly into the blue eyes of the tallest visitor

Enjoying the preview?
Page 1 of 1