Today, I am so grateful, not only for the bright sunshine, but for the 52 degree temperature!
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So nice out that when I went out to get my mail, I walked on up for a visit with Pearl. No need for a coat. :-)
I just about went nutsy-cuckoo last night with NO Downton Abbey to watch. There was nothing else on TV. Too early to go to bed--even if the clocks said 11:00, my head said it was 10:00 and I was not sleepy. Sleep came this morning when the clock said 8:00, but I felt like 7:00. This too shall pass, not any too soon for me!!
Got granddaughter Elise' slippers done.
She is almost 11 and wears a size 9 shoe--YIKES
Then I realized that I would forget, next Christmas
which pair belongs to who, so........
"Mom, it's time for supper."
I spent quite a bit of time yesterday, working on the family history story I am trying to write. I have the "lists" like this:
William Henry Bush
Born: April 9, 1838
Holly Michigan
Died. November 14, 1908
Holly, Michigan
on and on.....................I have all that nicely printed and set up in my big genealogy books, with their date of marriage, their wife's info, their kids.
What I am trying to get, is that information written in story form. I want the newspaper clippings, obituaries, armed services records--where they served and as much as I can about that person. I have pictures, but I have more text than pictures.
Let me tell you--back in the day, they sure knew how to write an obituary!! Like these a couple of greats back--
"At a full age, like a shock of corn in its season, Peter Walts, another of Shiawassee County's aged pioneers, passed to his reward at his home in Burns Township, on Saturday morning, May 13, after a severe and painful sickness of over nine months, bearing every trial patiently to the end."
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"Mr. Relyea entertained a great antipathy to secret societies. It is related to him that when casting his vote at an election, he would always make it a point to ascertain whom of the candidates belonged to secret organizations. He was a man of great force of character and integrity of manhood."
He's the man who at age 92, laid up with illness, hired a horse drawn wagon to come and get him to go to the polls to vote. They put a straw pallet in the back for him to lay down on, and carried him into the polling place so he could cast his ballot for Republican Benjamin Harrison, who was defeated by Grover Cleveland.
Interesting facts like that, I want in my book, so my kids can read and see if they have the same traits as their ancestors. I can see that my father did. I also found mushy love letters from my father to my mother before they were married. No one that knew my Daddy in his later years would think he ever had or especially ever expressed his feelings like that. WOW!!
I've heard the stories, seen the clippings on each individuals page in my big genealogy books, but to be putting them down in story form, is so much fun.
It's interesting that six generations back on my mother's side, were two brothers from Scotland who ran a slave ship. When Britian confiscated their ship, one went to Virginia and was one of the largest landowners and slave holders and the other brother (thank Heaven my direct ancestor) became a Methodist minister. We have had a Methodist minister on that branch, until my kids level. My cousin was the last minister in our family.
No horse thieves, nor murders in the family--I would think a slaver will shock my kids enough. Only two divorces, until my generation. Not a one of my ancestor's died from cancer--kind of reassuring. Most of them lived long lives and died of heart disease or stroke.
It is an interesting and fascinating "vocation" I am involved in right now. Gathering all the information and photos I have in several different places and putting them all into one story book.
I even have my title--"From There to Here." The legacy of our family.