Tuesday, December 3, 2013

Mom's estate

I've been working toward clearing the contents of mom's home for a couple of weeks.  Some of the items I've sold are family pieces.  Before you gasp in shock, you need to know that I have saved for myself several family pieces, my brother has several family pieces, and my children and Raymond's children have had an opportunity to choose family pieces for themselves.  I encourage you to read blog posts by Julie Hall, The Estate Lady, as her advice has been invaluable to me.

Family members included in this post:
  • Ruth Elma Harder Cole
  • Cyrus Walter "Walt" Ferguson
  • Della Cole Owens Young
  • Irene Orvetta Cole Schnack Speer 
  • Arthur "Art" Fred Owens
  • Henry "Hank" D. Young
  • Hazel M. McNeilly Ferguson
  • Howard Cole
  • Olive Letha Rose Schnack
  • Raymond Cole Schnack
  • Stephanie Marie Arsenault Hann


Mom told me that her mother bought the machine from Uncle Walt.  She told me that Uncle Walt used to repair sewing machines.  Uncle Walt was married to Grammy's aunt Hazel.  This Singer sewing machine model #66 is the machine my mother learned to sew on.  On this machine, she crafted her own wedding dress.  I still have the wedding dress...not sure what to do with it!  I used mom's veil to drape in and around old family wedding pictures framed especially to display at my daughter Stephanie's wedding recently.  Drat, I wish I had taken a picture of the display!  



Mom told me that this bed belonged to Aunt Della.  Della was my mom's paternal grand aunt.  When Della and her second husband were no longer able to tend their farm in Milford, New York, she sold it to my grandfather.  Della inherited the farm when her first husband died in 1938.  As a matter of fact, my grandfather lived briefly with his aunt Della and uncle Art and is listed on the 1925 New York State Census as a 12-year old student in that household.  The farmhouse was large as were many houses of that time.  Della and her second husband Hank lived on one side of the house and grandpa's family lived on the other.  Although related, the two families had little interaction.  When Della died in 1970, her side of the house remained vacant. 



This is the sewing machine that my mom taught me to sew on when I was about 12-years old.  It's a Singer Slant-O-Matic.  I believe my mom bought the machine not long after 1957 (when the owner's manual was published).  My mom sewed many of our clothes and was fond of matching mother-daughter outfits.  She would also sew patches on my dad's uniforms and at times 'took in sewing' to earn a little extra money.  She also took in washing and ironing.  My dad would help with the laundry.  I only know this because its written in one of the letters from previous posts. My first sewing project was a brown, wide-wale corduroy jumper.  I remember every step of the process...mom wouldn't let me miss a beat!  I still have the jumper and the plastic 'chain' belt that rode the hip line.


I bought the recumbent bike for mom so she could keep up her exercise.  She and Raymond had been walking to the Stop sign and back every day.  When I say walk, I mean a very slow snail pace.  Mom wasn't walking so well and used an ambulator.  She could sit on the seat of the ambulator when she tired.  The Stop sign was one house down the street.  She would sometimes have the energy to walk back taking the long way which was one house up the street from her house.  On cold and rainy days she wasn't able to walk but still felt the need to move about.  Unfortunately, she never had a chance to use the recumbent bike.


Mom had trouble getting up so I bought her a lift chair.  It was wonderful for her.  And, as she wasn't sleeping in her bed anymore, this served as her bed in the fully reclined position.  Before she became totally bedridden, she had to be supervised anytime she was up and about.  To limit her activity, we would sometimes put her shoes on the other side of the room because she wouldn't get up without having her shoes on.  She never experienced a fall while trying to rise but we eventually had to use an alarm on the chair so we'd know when she attempted to get up.


Mom had this parlor table in the living room for many years.  It was placed in front of the window near the front door.  She kept framed photos on it and an old wash basin on the bottom shelf.  She said that Grammy kept it in her living room with flowers on it.



Ah, the Matterhorn.  This painting has hung on our walls for as long as I can remember.  Mom said she bought it from a door-to-door salesman when we lived in Germany.  It was his second time coming to her door that she purchased it.  When Raymond and I were very young, we took our tin horns to some of the oil paint and damaged the texture.  They had it repaired or repaired it themselves.  I don't remember the incident and I can't find any evidence of damage or repair.



I don't remember this rocker at all.  I think Mom brought it to Texas from Grammy's house in New York sometime in the 1990s.  She told me she had the seat re-caned but the whole piece looks refinished to me.  It's made of Birdseye Maple which I'm told is fairly rare these days.


This framed piece hung in mom's living room over the china cabinet.  She told me that it had been a wedding gift to Grammy.  Grammy and Grandpa were married in 1934.


Scrabble!  I don't know where this particular set came from but I remember many visits to Grandma Schnack's and playing Scrabble.  My cousins tell me that Grandma was especially fond of her games and nearly always won.  She didn't let sentimentality or grandchildren throw a game for her!

Thursday, November 21, 2013

Recipes

 
It's been a year and a half since mom died.  It's time to clear her house of the contents. I won't say its been an easy task.  At times I am overwhelmed by the task as she saved everything and other times I am overwhelmed with feelings of loss.  Sometimes, I'm just overwhelmed with the thought that I don't know what I'm doing.  Julie Hall, The Estate Lady, has helped tremendously with her posts that I read.  See the link to her blog under the tab for Blogs I Follow.  She is simply amazing!

Some of the origins of the recipes are and their relationship to my mother:
  • Aunt Lena was Lena Mae Carrington Rose, her husband's cousin's wife
  • Aunt Roxey was Mildred Roxey McNeilly Perry, her maternal grand aunt
  • Grandma Harder was Mary Jane McNeilly Harder, her maternal grandmother 






The next few recipes I include because they just seem so like my mom.






 My dad, Walter J. Schnack, had a favorite food.  It was peanut butter.  Yes, you'll remember that he wrote about peanut butter in one of the Vietnam era letters!  My mom used salted Spanish peanuts in the cookie recipe and the contrast of the salt and sugar was mouth-watering delicious!



A multi-generational family favorite is Unbaked Cookies.  I can remember making them so often that I didn't need to look at the recipe when preparing them!


And last of all, folded and tucked between dividers in mom's recipe box was this page torn from a magazine or pamphlet.  I don't know if its something she saved or someone else ahead of her but reading it made an impact on me.


A perfect prayer for an empty-nest mom and an aging mom.   I know my mom missed having me around once I was grown and had a family of my own.  I often miss my own daughters.  But, I am so very proud of what my girls have accomplished in their lives.  They are resourceful, intelligent, funny, beautiful, caring, and so much more.

Tuesday, November 12, 2013

Are these the same families?

While researching a 3x great grandfather, I found two 1880 census reports that I believe enumerate the same family.  The focus of my research here is John Henry Clayton.  John Henry's first wife was my 3x great grandmother, Sarah L. Baxter.  Sarah died in New York between 1855 and 1859.  At the time of the census reports in question, he had been married to his second wife, Elizabeth, about 21 years and they had lived in Iowa for about 11 years. 




The census above is dated 1 June 1880 and records the residents of Sugar Creek Township in Poweshiek County, Iowa.  The John H. Clayton household is boxed in red and included John H., Elisabeth, Adel, and Floid F.  John Henry's occupation is recorded as hotel keeper.  Of particular interest to me are the birthplaces.  The family members were born in New York, as were their fathers and mothers with the exception of John Henry's mother; she was recorded as born in New Jersey.


The census above is dated 23 June 1880 and records the residents of 6th Ward, East Des Moines, Polk County, Iowa.  The John H. Clayton household is boxed in red and included John H., Elizabeth, Adel, and Floyd.  John Henry's occupation is recorded as hotel keeper.  Of particular interest to me are the birthplaces.  The family members were born in New York, as were their fathers and mothers with the exception of John Henry's father and mother.  His father is recorded born in New Jersey and his mother in Pennsylvania. 

I believe these two families are one and the same.  What do you think?



 


Tuesday, November 5, 2013

Grandpa's Pearl Harbor Pictures 1924-1927 part two

As you learned in my last post, my paternal grandmother's nickname was Dot.  Where exactly the nickname came from, I don't know.  I assume it was given her by my grandfather.  Grandma wasn't much bigger than a dot, that's for sure!

This is a smaller collection of photographs but these pictures were specifically addressed to Dot. 

Place names in this collection include:

Dot: This is the Statue of King Kamehameha I, the first king to have full possession of all these Islands.  All this happened about the time Captain Cook discovered the Islands.  The Marine in the picture is Mace, a friend of mine.  Wallie


Dot: This is a picture of a golf course near Moanalua Park.  I developed it and overexposed it.  I hate why its so dark.  The white spot is a finger print.  Wallie


Dot: The Marine Barracks, Pearl Harbor, Territory Hawai'i, rear view looking north.  The wooden affair is a handball court.  Wallie


Dot: Here's one I'm ashamed to send.  But, it's all I have at present.  I overexposed this when I printed it.  The houses are some plantation homes and are just off Schofield Road.  You can see a truck just past the houses and Diamond Head and the Punch Bowl in the distance, both extinct craters 1/2 mile from Moanalua.


Dot:  The famous landmark of "Oahu." Iit is Diamond Head, an extinct crater taken from Waikiki Beach looking East.  Wallie

Wednesday, October 30, 2013

Grandpa's Pearl Harbor Pictures 1924-1927

I refer to these photographs as Grandpa's Pearl Harbor pictures even though some were of other locations as well.  Grandpa was a U.S. Marine from 1923-1927.  This group of photographs document subjects of interest to my paternal grandfather, Jochim Walter Schnack.  Wallie, or Wally, or Walt, is how he signed the backs of the pictures when he was stationed at Pearl Harbor, Territory Hawai'i.  The chain of islands we know as Hawai'i was a U.S. Territory from 1898-1959.

Because of how and what was written on the reverse sides of these photographs, and the fact that grandma saved them, I believe that my grandfather mailed these to my grandmother, Olive Letha Rose Schnack, as correspondence.  They married 12 October 1926.

Some of the pictures are dated and others I included because of the similar subject matter.  All the photographs were found loose in a box of miscellaneous memorabilia.  I know my grandfather was interested in photography but what I don't know is if he was the photographer of all of these photos.  Some, I believe, he developed himself and others have a photography shop stamp on the reverse side.
Click on any of the place names to learn more about them. Place names in this collection are:


Dot: Taken 1924.  Marine Barracks, Mare Island, California.  The canteen is on the left, or rather part of it.  This is the duty company barracks.  The Naval Prison detachment has a separate barracks.  The hospital is behind the trees on the right.
Wallie


Friend Barker at Cardiff, California 1924



Taken February 1924.  The Boulevard at Balboa Park over the bridge.  This bridge is over 600 feet high.  The tower is the distance is that of the California Building.  I can't swear how high it is but it has 225 steps to the top and I estimate it at over 175 feet high.  You can see a long, long ways in all directions from the top of it.  Wally


Balboa Park, San Diego, California



Taken February 1924.  Scene shows La Jolla in the distance.  At the bottom of the hill is the U.S. Biological Research building and pier.  The beach is military beach.  Can you see the f__ver coming up the hill?  La Jolla is 3 1/2 miles from where this picture was taken.  Wallie


This is a combination cave and ocean scene.  I snapped it at the sea shore at La Jolla, California, four miles from the Range.  You will find it 15 miles north of San Diego.  Notice how I caught the spray as it broke on the rocks.  I get all my pictures as clear as this one.  There are quite a few seals, sharks, and whales in the waters here.



Taken March 1924.  Torrey Pines Lodge, California.  If you look real close you can read the name.  I hope I haven't sent you this one before.  Did I ever send you the one showing the winding road through Balboa Park?  If not, let me know in your next letter.  It was taken from the top of the bridge crossing the valley, which the road runs through.  Torrey Pines Lodge is 25 miles north of San Diego.  Wallie


Torrey Pines Lodge, California. Walt.


A view from Torrey Pines. Walt.


Friend Kaufman on Torrey Pines grade, California.  Walt.



Taken April 1924.  Scene looking north along beach and road from Torrey Pines.  The road is several hundred feet lower than the place from where the picture was snapped.  Del Mar is just over the hill in the picture.  You may be able to find Del Mar on a map.  It's about 30 miles north of San Diego.


Taken May 1924.  Scene in San Diego Bay.  Picture shows destroyers on the right.  A freighter and six submarines on the left, also part of San Diego.  Picture was taken from Coronado Ferry.  Wallie


Dot: This picture was taken from Coronado, San Diego, California in August 1924.  The land in the distance is Point Loma.  The clouds are often much better but I had to take the picture while I was there.  The rocks on the right is the breakwater in front of Coronado Hotel.  Did you ever try taking a picture like this?  If not, try it!  Wallie


Dot:  Taken September 1924.  This is a picture of our barracks here.  This view is looking east.  It was late P.M. and consequently I got plenty of shadows in the picture.  You can see some of the bunks with mosquito netting on the second deck.  It is all screened in.  The iron door on the nearest corner leads to the guard room and brig.  Well Hon, do you like my home??  This was taken with my new camera.  Wallie


Dot:  Taken September 1924.  Showing the street in front of the officer's quarters.  Walnut Avenue.  This street has trees on it from all parts of the world, including the 'Tree of Heaven' from China.  Also, trees from Australia, South America, and other places.  Just to the left of the auto, you will notice a very small shack.  That's where the Admiral's orderly stays while on duty.  Yes, he is a Marine.  Wallie


Dot: Taken at the inter-company swimming meet. October 24, 1924.  Picture shows 'Seitsinger' doing a back dive.  Or rather, the finish of the dive.  I have been with Seitsinger ever since we joined.  We were on the rifle team together last year.  Wallie


Dot:  Here's another picture of our Thanksgiving day field meet.  This shows one of the teams in a centipede race.  I'm not in the picture.  Wallie


Dot:  Here's the tug-o-war in our recent Thanksgiving day field meet.  The other end didn't come out good on account of the shadow.  Notice the starter with rifle on left.


All ready to pass in review.  Marines at Pearl Harbor, Territory Hawai'i. (Shura Photo, Marine Barracks, Pearl Harbor, Hawaii, 1926)


Passing in review, Pearl Harbor, Territory Hawai'i. (Shura Photo, Marine Barracks, Pearl Harbor, Hawaii, 1926)


The 1000 yard firing line.  The rifle team shooting.  Pearl Harbor, Territory Hawai'i. 1926


Marines arriving at Pearl Harbor.


The dormitory building at Navy Recruit(?) Camp, mess hall, and galley partly showing on left.  Wallie


Just before guard mount, Pearl Harbor, Territory Hawai'i


Just before guard mount, Pearl Harbor, Territory Hawai'i.



S.S.Empress of Scotland off Oahu, Territory Hawai'i. March 1927


This gadget drills 40-foot holes (6 at a time) for blasting.  Pearl Harbor channel, Pu'uloa Point.


The edge of Kilauea Iki, 770-foot deep.  Last active in 1868.  In distance is Kilauea crater proper.  And extreme background is Mount Moana Loa, 14,000-foot elevation.  Wallie


smallest volcano in the world


Hot lava made this hole 1800-foot through solid rock into the heart of the mountain.  The walls and floor are very smooth.


The volcano pit [crater], Halema'uma'u (House of Everlasting Fire) is 1350-feet deep, 3000-feet wide, and 3500-feet long.  At present it just rumbles and steams.  Last eruption was 1923.  I took this picture nearly straight down.  On extreme bottom you can see fresh lava.  Next, on all sides, land slides from the quakes and then the wall starting straight up.  Wallie