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AUTHOR SUNDAY – But wait – it’s not just any old doorknob! – This is a heartwarming story you’ll want to share

(Remembering Joyce Ray Wheeler who was a frequent contributor of wonderful stories to AP. I especially liked this heartwarming one. Joyce Ray Wheeler passed away November 2. 2012.)

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At the time of this writing, I am sitting on my sofa looking at a low table in front of me.  I call it a “coffee table”, but at our house, this is definitely a misnomer.  I have never served coffee from this table.  At this moment I see on the table a bowl of red apples, three albums of family pictures, a remote control, and a doorknob.

It’s not just a doorknob

But wait – it’s not just any old doorknob!  It is the inside and outside knobs joined together with a couple of old screws;  all that’s missing is the door—the door to the house where I was born in one of the big bedrooms on a cold January morning in 1926.  The only heat in the room was a coal burning fireplace.doorknob

My family lived here 18 years

I’m now enclosing this doorknob in my hand, and it is completely concealed in my fist.  It is a delicate oval shape of metal coated in brass which has dulled through the years.  About one-fourth inch from the edge is an oval of raised beading.

I’m not sure how our house happened to have such a special knob.  The house had been built by a carpenter for his own family.  All other knobs in the house were the customary big round knobs.

My family lived here about 18 years before selling it.  Many years later I drove by to look at my old home.  I saw the current owner sweeping the porch and stopped and spoke with her about my memories of the doorknob.

Memories flood my mind

She excused herself and disappeared into the house.  She returned with her husband who handily removed the knob and placed it into my hands, saying he’d like a round one better.

Even now as I clasp this oval shape in my hand, memories of “coming home” flood my mind— coming home from school and smelling my mother’s good cooking, coming home from  Saturday night dates, coming home the first time after living in a college dorm – just coming home, grasping the old doorknob and feeling safe and warm!

Perhaps I’m the only person who displays an old doorknob on the coffee table and considers it a treasure.  As I hold that knob at my present age, I’m thinking more of the tried and true words of the old hymn:

“It is sweet to know

As I onward go – —

The way of the cross leads home!”

(I wonder if there will be an oval doorknob in Heaven.)

Joyce Ray Wheeler

Written: December 2008

Vinegar of the Four Thieves was a recipe that was known for its antibacterial, antiviral, antiseptic and antifungal properties for years. It was even used to cure the Bubonic Plague. Discover Thomas Jefferson’s recipe in VINEGAR OF THE FOUR THIEVES: Recipes & curious tips from the past

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7 comments

  1. I love your story!

    A common story in my family is that my sister Mary will inherit the doorknobs of my Mother’s house. My mother and father built their home, using doors from an old hotel in town (that once had been a house of ill repute). The doorknobs are ornate metal. Most of the brass coating has worn away. My sister once said she wanted them to make a coat rack.

    Recently my mother, who is 89, remarked, “Maybe, when I die, instead of selling this house, you could rent it out as a vacation house. My son quickly pointed out, “It won’t have any doorknobs.”

    1. Is your house still standing?

  2. What a lovely story! How sweet of the new owners to see how much a simple door nob was connected to the door of your heart and to give it to you.

  3. Thanks for sharing. It is wonderful to hear that strangers can be so caring.

  4. Oh, I LOVE stories like this! Thank you for sharing! I’m looking at a ornate glass door knob from my parent’s home that is sitting on a side table right now. The old, short closet door it went to is hanging on the wall up in my loft, with old B/W family photos hanging on it! The skeleton keys to the front and back doors are hanging on it, also. Some think I’m crazy, I call it keeping memories alive!

  5. I have a door knob that must look just like Joy Wheeler’s. It was from my mother’s home in SW Oklahoma. The knob opened the door to the room where she was born in 1916. What a treasure….that old house fell several years ago, glad I kept this memory to pass on to my grandchildren.

  6. Oh what a sweet memory Joyce had! Mine only live in my memory banks, as the house my Dad and his brothers built (before I was born) has long since been hauled away. If only I had been able to retrieve such a special remembrance!

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