

2021, Thousand Oaks California. Born into VERY humble means, St. Louis MO 1932,
she was 88yrs. She was the 9th of 11 children, born to Franklin Joseph
Fitzenrieder, and Esther Ann True. She was proceeded in death by all but one of
her siblings, Berkley being the remaining family survivor. Mom told us many
stories of her humble roots in St Louis. Grampa Fitzenrieder hunting deer to put
food on the table, worked as a bus driver near the original Budweiser Brewery in
St Louis. The Fitzenrieders lived on Montana Street, St Louis (Uncle Berk still
does!), and worked hard to survive and provide for a large family. My favorite
stories are of Budweiser opening their spigots, and beer flowing freely in the
streets when WW2 came to an end. Of how she only went as far as 8th grade in
school, before she quit to help the family scrape a living out of a hard
scrabble life on Montana Street. Her first 'job' was hauling and storing heating
coal to neighbors, with her little red wagon, for a few nickles each. She may
have only finished 8th grade, but she was truly one of the SMARTEST, strongest,
and WISEST Souls I've ever met, far ahead of her time and peers. My favorite
story was when she was sent as a child to fetch her Dad a pail of beer from the
neighboring brewery, and would suck the foam off the top on her way home! Until
one day her Dad complained that there was no foam head on his beer... which put
a stop to that! She also became an excellent 'butcher' of meat, because her Mom
would send her to the Butcher Shop for cuts of meat, again pulling her little
red wagon down the street. She would bring them home in her fully laden little
red wagon. If the cuts were not 'up to snuff' with her Mom, she was sent back
pulling that heavy wagon again, to get better cuts of meat! She learned very
quickly to pick out the best cuts of meat, so she only had to make one trip back
and forth! Lots of stories regaled of her brothers rough and tumble coming of
age in old, poor, St Louis. She met her future husband Jerry LeGrand (also of St
Louis) thru a 'double date' with her childhood best friend Delores. Delores was
an only child and considered rich and privileged, not having to share anything
(food, clothing, or even a bed!), or wear hand-me-downs. Delores' date was Dad,
but quickly became Mom's love interest. They were married right after Mom's 18th
birthday in 1950. Dad had an electronics shop for a few years, but the young
family, with now baby daughter Debbie in tow, moved to California, where the
lived in Venice and Santa Monica, where their son Michael was born. Eventually,
GOOD jobs in the Aerospace Industry became available during the Moonshot years,
and NASA's golden era. Mom worked first for Teledyne, then Northrop-Grumman. The
young LeGrand family purchased their forever home in Thousand Oaks near Los
Robles, and layed down permanent roots on Dunn Ct. Mom and Dad used to like
weekend jaunts to Las Vegas, where Mom could indulge in her passion for watching
Horse Racing (I don't know how I'll ever watch horse racing or the Derby again,
without you, Mom! After retiring from Northrop, she was not content to stay
home, and had a 2nd career working for City of Thousand Oaks in Micrographics,
for many years, where she met her beloved Debbie Hodge, who became her best
friend and our family. Always restless, Mom also worked for a few of the new
Broadway department store in the newly built Oaks Mall. Perhaps her most
beloved job was 'crossing the kids' at Meadows Elementary School Crossing Guard,
raising a few generations of kids she stayed in touch with, and impacted, for
several years (as we never gave her grandchildren). We heard from a few, upon
posting her obituary on Facebook!
I will miss you Mom, on the first Sat in May, MOST of all! I hope you'll still
watch with me, and show me around the stables, when I get there! Have a safe
ride, and a safe trip across the finish line, Mom. You will ride with me, with
us, forever!).
Mom will have a private funeral and interment with Dad, in Thousand Oaks, on April 6th, at Pierce Bros off of Lindero Canyon Rd. We ask you toast Mom with a frothy head of beer, a glass of champagne, or an apple martini in her memory. Until we meet again, Mom and Dad, God speed!
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