The Lake House: a blessing
to four generations
Four
generations of this family owe a great debt to M.P. “Pat” Witherington, a World
War II Navy officer and then a CPA in Statesville, who selected a waterfront
lot off Morrison Farm Road in 1964 before Lake Norman was filled. He stood at
the edge of the unpaved and unnamed road and knew it was the perfect spot with
one of the finest views of any place on the north end of the new lake. Pat, who
grew up near waterways in eastern North Carolina, chose a lot at the end of a
protected cove with a miles-long view of the lake. At first, his family of his
wife, Harriett, and four children enjoyed the water and the view on weekend
adventures involving tents, a picnic table and lots of relatives and friends.
Pat and Harriett loved it so much, they decided to sell their home in
Statesville and build a new home at the lake.
The
house was completed in 1967, and the family moved to the lake permanently. Each
teenager had her own bedroom, and all the children grew up on the water,
boating, swimming, water skiing and watching new homes appear as lake living
grew more popular. Sometimes, Pat would get home from a long day at the office
and immediately take a quick swim off the dock.
In
1972, by-then-widowed Pat remarried, and he moved to his new bride’s home in
Statesville. For the now mostly grown children, The Lake House, as it had come
to be known, would always be home. Pat kept the Lake House as a gathering spot
for his children, their spouses and their children and grandchildren. Second
generation families spent their vacations and special weekends at The Lake
House. Each new generation fell in love with the house and the water and the
heritage and history the house represented.
The
extended family continued to gather at The Lake House over the decades for
Thanksgiving, Christmas, graduation celebrations, weddings, childbirths and
other special occasions. The original siblings, scattered by careers, would all
gather at the lake with their children, which forced some crowded sleeping
arrangements but resulted in immutable memories. The third-generation cousins
would form a Cousins Club and conspire to play tricks on their parents or
produce talent shows for them, and those precious moments would return two
decades later, when the fourth-generation children formed the same group
dynamics during vacations at The Lake House.
Each
generation has found solace at The Lake House. During times of discord or
crisis, they could escape to the lake to sit on the porch and look out across
the water. Whether the lake sparkled with sunlight or roiled with an
approaching rainstorm inching its way toward the cove, the second-floor porch
was the spot to see nature’s beauty and to feel all tensions and worries drain
away. If the weather was too cold for porch sitting, the living room fireplace
could provide nearly as effective emotional healing.
When
Pat died in 2010, he left The Lake House to his children, who cherished it as
the greatest bequest they could ever receive, and they and their children and
grandchildren continued to enjoy the lake. Sadly, the expense of maintaining
the house and the distance from their primary homes made keeping the house
indefinitely an impossible dream. The calming, relaxing, ideal spot will have
to bless another family.
1 comment:
Thanks for sharing the history of your family's lake house. A wonderful heirloom for making and sharing memories. Whit & Sherry Strunk
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