With summer comes festivals, fairs and, perhaps my favorite, rummage sales.
Rummage sales are special to me because they remind me of my grandparents’ crowded basement. When, as a youngster, my little brother and I would stay at their house, it would be a real treat to go into the dark, cool rooms (the cans of soda stored there didn’t even need to be refrigerated) and rummage around for new and interesting things.
Some of my favorites included the board games that my dad and aunt played when they were growing up, the yards and yards of racetrack for tiny toy cars, which my grandparents would let us set up all around the living room, jigsaw puzzles, 45s of children’s songs that we played on a record player in a heavy blue case, and the earliest version of the video game Pong (my grandfather used to own a TV and radio repair shop).
And that was in only one room of the basement.
There was also my grandmother’s laundry room, which had even less light and was quite terrifying, and my grandfather’s workshop.
The variety of things to uncover seemed endless.
And now, in adulthood, the treasures keep coming: a somewhat-hideous green velvet chair (origin unknown and mine now because my mother refused to let it into her house), a set of silver iced tea spoons that I now use for ice cream, and, most recently, a quartet of wine glasses that belonged to one set of great-grandparents.
Over the last decade, as my grandparents have slowly begun to downsize their belongings, items like these have made their way to me.
Children of the Great Depression, they rarely parted with anything that could be deemed useful at any time. And after decades of sitting in boxes, these objects are entering my living space and helping the tiny apartment I rent become home.
At rummage sales, objects are given a new purpose. They become part of a new story. And, best of all, things are sold at a reasonable price.
Here are some sales coming up this weekend:
Five Church Rummage Sale in Norwich:
Community Yard Sale in Tunbridge:
Summer Fair and Yard Sale in New London:
Yard Sale in Hartford:
Liz Sauchelli can be reached at esauchelli@vnews.com or 603-727-3221.
