Lyn Hardy shows photos from his life. (Photo: Alma Barak)

From his first moments as a bawling baby in 1948 to his days rifling through the news and visiting his grandchildren as a silver-haired man, Lyn Hardy lived what many would consider to be the quintessential American life. He grew up in a part of Fullerton, California, where everyone knew everyone else. A wiry, sandy-haired boy, Hardy would carouse on the streets, racing on roller skates or shrieking as his friends shot him with cap guns. When they got tired, the boys would climb up the orange trees scattered around the neighborhood or clamber into a friendโ€™s treehouse. Their blue jeans would always end up scuffed โ€“ either from dirt or from the green residue that came from the tree bark. โ€œThat was just part of the day,โ€ Hardy said.

Fullerton was split in half by a railroad track, and the lives of the children on the southern side, mostly Mexican and Black, seem to have it different: โ€œThe wrong side of the tracks,โ€ invoked by Hardy, was full of migrants who would come seasonally to work the crops for low wages. Theyโ€™d come in waves in the summer, and live in camps with poor conditions. He knows that at one point a Mexican labor leader tried to organize the workers to strike for higher wages โ€“ but Hardy spent his youth isolated from politics and the wider world. While he heard about the civil rights movement in high school, it didnโ€™t affect him personally, nor the way he viewed others. โ€œThere probably wasโ€ racism at his school, Hardy said. โ€œI didnโ€™t really recognize it at the time.โ€ He had good friends from the north and south side of the town, and race wasnโ€™t a factor.ย 

Still, Hardyโ€™s childhood had its hardships. When Hardy was younger, his father, who had worked for 29 years as a postal worker, was forced to retire by high blood pressure and diabetes. He ended up taking care of the home while Hardyโ€™s mother worked full-time as a secretary. โ€œHe was there for me when I needed him,โ€ Hardy said. โ€œWe spent a lot of time together.โ€ Hardyโ€™s dad would watch his Little League games and teach him how to paint and repair appliances around the house. When he passed away, Hardy was just 14. โ€œIt was hard,โ€ Hardy said.ย 

Some of Hardyโ€™s photos. (Photo: Alma Barak)

From then on, Hardy and his mother would go on shopping trips, out to dinner and on small trips โ€“ little things that added up. Hardy was born more than a decade after his two siblings, which meant he was the only one living at home with his mother when his father died. โ€œShe was glad she had me,โ€ he said. โ€œIt worked out well for her and me.โ€

In high school, Hardy also met his partner in love โ€“ a gorgeous girl named Yvonne Coleman. His school had what was called a girl-date dance, where the girl asked the boy out instead of the other way around. Yvonne asked Hardy to dance, and he said yes, and they hit it off. They ended up being married for 52 years, until Colemanโ€™s death in November 2020.ย 

โ€œWe laughed a lot. We had a lot of fun,โ€ Hardy said. โ€œWe had a lot of fights, but we would always make up and never stayed mad very long.โ€

Hardy lives now in a VNA Senior Living Complex in Somerville. When his wife passed, Hardy realized that he had never lived alone โ€“ he moved straight from his motherโ€™s home to one with his wife โ€“ and the complex provided an affordable community.

โ€œI have a lot of friendly people I enjoy meeting,โ€ Hardy explained. โ€œWe have meals together and we have different activities, different kinds of games and things like that. Itโ€™s fun.โ€

Hardy also has the freedom to drive and spend his days as he wishes โ€“ mostly with his grandchildren. His calendar is full of his medical appointments and their concerts, sports and school events.ย 

โ€œIโ€™m really proud of them,โ€ he said. โ€œThey keep me going.โ€

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