The Joe Lagow Family ~ Joe, Janet, Donna, Ralph Joe, Jean, Elizabeth
Virginia “Pat” Lewis was born on the 4thof July, 1927 to Clarence “Sam” Carrington and Sadie “Sate” Lewis.
“Virginia “Pat” Lewis took care of Jean and I for 30-plus years,” said Janet Lagow. “She started taking care of us when I was about 3 years old. She was our surrogate mom. Her name was Virginia, but she went by Pat. She was the best,” Janet softly said, “She took really good care of us.
"Pat was such a prankster, we both would pull pranks. We use to hide those little squishy toys to scare her and she'd be working under the desk cleaning and touch it and we'd hear bumpety bump bump, "Oh, my gosh, girls, stop, get that thing off of me!" Dr. Andres gave daddy a rubber alligator whose mouth would open by remote control. I'd wait until Pat crawled under the desk and let it chomp on her leg, she'd just squeal. About a week would go by and she'd say, "Girls, I've got your little beds all made, I've washed your sheets and put new little covers on." So we'd hop in bed not knowing she had hidden a pine cone in the bottom. Somewhere in the middle of the night we'd hit it and wooooo, it'd wake you up," laughed Janet. “I had a little dachshund I called Snooky Bear. We took him to the vet and he had something similar to an endoscopy so every now and then he would squeak when he breathed. I rolled over one night and heard the squeak and said, "Oh, Snooky Bear, are you okay?" Snooky Bear just looked at me like, "What are you waking me up for." It wasn't until morning that I found Pat had put a little squeak toy under my pillow and every time I would roll over it would squeak. She pulled stuff like that on us all the time. We used to hide some squishy toys in the washing machine with our laundry. She'd find them and come chasing us through the house swatting us with a broom just a laughing,” Janet laughed.
"She was the best cook; she'd cook ducks with dirty rice and cornbread and all the fixin's. The doctors who came out to the Ranch to hunt would say, "We don't care if we hit a duck as long as we can get some of Pat's delicious duck dinner." There was Dr. DeBakey, doctors from Waco, and all over. They all wanted to come have some of her fantastic cooking.
"One time, when I was in the seventh grade, I think, I was supposed to do a science project and daddy helped me get a gopher and a mole. I was supposed to show the skeletal difference between the two. One day Pat thawed out that gopher and mole thinking they were ducks. I heard her holler, "Sista, come here, get his out of my sink!" I went running in there and said, Oh, I was looking for my gopher and mole," chuckled Janet. "It's hilarious the things we used to do."
"She was the sweetest, she would make us all kinds of special treats. I wish I'd paid better attention when she cooked because she cooked better than anybody. I've never tasted any other cooking that measured up to hers. I tell you; we would have been lost without her. She took some time off to have back surgery and after she recovered, she asked if she could come work for us again. She said I know your parents are gone now. We told her, "Absolutely, you will always be welcome here,” and she worked for us until the day she died in a tragic car accident. Jean and I stayed by her side in the hospital until she passed in the night. She was like our mom. Pat showed me how a real Christian and Spiritual person should live. She was the most giving person. She was truly family. . . she wasn't hired help. . . she was family. She was greatly admired by us, just a very special lady,” Janet said tenderly.