Sunday, October 7, 2012

Where oh where have you been?

Another two months have passed and I have not posted to this blog.  I have no excuse (unless raising two small great-grandchildren is an excuse) and hope to get back into posting articles on a regular basis.

I've found another interesting book (while waiting for my great-granddaughter participating in a dance clinic) in the library in Meridian.  We did not have it in our Nampa library so I did an inter-library loan.  The book is a very pleasant 'Tales of the Trail" written by Arabella Fulton  'after she had passed her eightieth milestone -- an account, from a woman's viewpoint, of the crossing of the plains in ox caravan in 1864, and settlement of the Boise Valley of Idaho; a wagon trip to Texas, and settlement and life there; a wagon trip to Washington Territory from Texas, and settlement in the Kittitas Valley.'  This book is an easy read and gives a woman's account of the hardships of travels over the many miles from Missouri to the frontier settlements. 





The following data is extracted from Kittitas County, Washington Obituaries.
Fulton, Arabella Clemens

Arabella Fulton, Valley Pioneer, Succumbs Today. Mrs. Arabella Clemens Fulton passed away July 30 1934 at 3:45 a.m. at the home of her daughter and son-in-law, Mr. and Mrs. Will German.

She was born in Boone County, Missouri, on January 23, 1844. She crossed the plains in the spring of 1864 by wagon trains to Boise, Idaho. On November 24, 1864, she married Francis M. Fulton. Four children were born in Idaho; J. L., John Hugh, Della, and Isabelle. In 1872 Mr. and Mrs. Fulton moved by wagon train to Decatur, Wise County, Texas.

In Texas the following four children were born: Frank, Mrs. Nellie Wilmarth, Nettie, and William R. In 1883 they moved to Washington Territory by wagons. They spent the winter in the Wenas, moving later to Ellensburg in the spring of 1884. Two daughters, Mrs. Estella Cooper and Mrs. Jacquelyn Nickell were born here. Mr. Fulton died here in 1896. After that, Grandma Fulton resided in Okanogan County and California. She moved back here five years ago and has since made her home with her daughter and son-in-law, Mr. and Mrs. William German. The seven living children are J. L. Fulton of Willows, Calif.; Mrs. Della German, Ellensburg; Francis M. Fulton, Wenatchee; Mrs. Nellie Wilmarth, Nampa, Idaho; William F. Fulton, Mazama, Wash.; Mrs. Estella Cooper, Glenn, Calif.; and Mrs. Jacqueline Nickell of Pateros, Wash. There are 28 grandchildren and 23 great grandchildren.

Grandma Fulton was a faithful member of the Christian Church for many years and until her death. She leaves a host of friends who will mourn her passing. Funeral services will be held at Honeycutt's Chapel on Wednesday afternoon at 2 o'clock. Burial in the IOOF Cemetery.

Source: Kittitas County, Washington Obituaries

*************************
I have no relationship to Arabella Fulton that I can determine, but as my grandmother Mary Winnie Dexter, came from Illinois to Idaho territory with her parents and two siblings in the 1880s, I imagine they had some of the same struggles in settling in Long Valley.  Even though this was twenty years after the Fultons settled in Boise Valley, it was still difficult to get goods into the high mountain valleys and household goods were scarce and expensive.  Raising crops and animals was difficult with the unpredictable weather, medical help was almost non-existent, and life was hard for all.

 Mary W Dexter with her parents, on their homestead in Long Valley in the 1890s.

By the time my grandfather (her future husband Thomas Logue) had arrived in Long Valley, Mary Dexter and her father, Walter M Dexter had filed on homesteads of 160 acres each. 

Saturday, August 4, 2012

Checking in and Checking Up

I heard about another book on Valley County, Idaho history and thought I would check it out.  The book is "Free Land! Hopes and Hardships of Pioneers of Valley County, Idaho."   It is a Valley County History Project published by them in 2009.  The Valley County History Project is composed of writers and researchers who donate their work to this non-profit organization.  I could have bought the book directly from this group, but chose to order it online from Amazon.com. 

The book is full of nice pictures, maps, and lots of information, but it is lacking information on my Dexter forefathers who were early pioneers of Valley County and the information they have on the Logue's (also early settlers) is grossly wrong.  I'm not sure who supplied them with the information but they sure got it wrong. 

First, see my posting of March 21, 2012, for information on the Dexters and their journey to Idaho's Long Valley.  I used this information to file for a pioneer certificate from the Idaho Genealogical Society. 

Pioneer Certificates

Pioneer certificates are issued to direct descendants of persons who lived in Idaho before Statehood, 3 July 1890.  Applicants must prove direct descent from a person who was in Idaho Territory prior to statehood.  The ancestor need not have been born here; they need not have stayed here but applicants must prove they were once here.
As for the Logues (also early settlers), in the tables starting on page 240 (Valley County Genealogy, compiled and edited by Eileen Duarte), they list George A. Logue as follows:
GEORGE A. LOGUE came to Long Valley in 1901 and met his wife SARA who came here with her family in 1889.  (WRONG - George A Logue (born 25 Dec 1840) married Sarah A Sweet, in Pennsylvania before 1869 and was father to Thomas E Logue, Johns S Logue, and Fred S Logue, all of whom moved to Idaho in 1901 - see Our Logue Family History by Wesley Craig on the Valley County Genweb page.  He lost his first wife, Sarah, in 1882 and remarried Aurilla Ervay, having a daughter Bessie with her, still in Pennsylvania.)  They homesteaded in Crawford. George's brother THOMAS ELBRIDGE LOGUE born 1870 married MARY WINNIE DEXTER of Crawford and ran the FS Logue & Bros Store in Thunder and died 1954.   (WRONG: Thomas E Logue was George's oldest son.  He did marry Mary Dexter - of the above mentioned Dexter family - but did not run the store in Thunder.  His two younger brothers, Fred and John were owners and operators of the store.  In checking out land records, a brother of George, Washington S Logue, also filed for a homestead in Valley County and is listed on the 1920 census living next to George's daugher Bessie and her husband, John P. Lampie.  Other Logues listed in the land records are Ezra Logue, a cousin, Thomas, John and Fred.)  George's son Merton was born in 1910 (George would have been 70 years old then) became a logger and later was Sheriff and died 1987.  Another son Cecil was born 1907 married Rachel Crawford 1933. George's son Walter was born 1909, married Vava Marguerite Jones 1902 and their daughter Leona born 1918.  (WRONG:  Cecil, Walter, Merton, and Leona were children of Thomas E and Mary Winne Logue.)  












Why these errors surprise me is that the authors use a lot of information from Wes Craig (my cousin and grandson of George's daughter Bessie Logue) as sources for their Logue information and he is the author of the Logue Family History which proves that their data is incorrect.


One other small error noted: In the same table as above the authors list my uncle Joe Crawford (wife Mable) as brother to Otto W Crawford.  They are not brothers (his brothers were Will, Walt, Ernest and Cash) and I have not found any connection between these two Crawford families.


I apologize for neglecting my blog.  I invested in the 2012 Family Tree Maker because I thought it would be great to have software that would sync with my family tree on Ancestry.com - maybe save some time rather that have to enter the same data twice.  WRONG.  I've totally messed up my Family Tree Maker database and I've spend hundreds of hours trying to get it back to where I had it.  Doesn't leave much time to post to my blog.  I hope to be at a comfortable place with the database where I can take time to post regularly.

Thursday, June 28, 2012

Back Again

I can't believe it has been over two months since I posted anything on my blog - in my defense, it was the end of the term at work and as soon as I'd put in all my required hours and the kids' schools were out we loaded up some grandkids and took off to Disneyland.  Then I got back and started getting ready for another Crawford Family Reunion.


My granddaughter and I started scrapbooks on our Disney trip right away, so I haven't spent a lot of time on my genealogy research.  When I did, I made a mess of it.  I have Family Tree Maker 2012, which syncs with your Ancestry.com tree (that is if you set it up right).  Somehow, I got my trees (I have several) confused and now I am going to be months straightening it out.  My subscription to Ancestry expires in July, so I am trying to decide if it is worth keeping it up.

So I would really be interested in hearing from anyone who has experience with the FTM 2012 and how I can clear up this mess (one tree has doubled every member, so instead of 5000+ members, there are 10000+).

Well I think I'll work for a while on my Ancestry family tree and resume this tomorrow.

Monday, April 23, 2012

1940 is here but not an index in sight - YET

So the 1940 US Census has been released and I've scoured all the places I thought my parents might be.  Haven't found them yet.  I've found both sets of grandparents (in Valley County, Idaho), lots of aunts and uncles in both Valley and Gem County, cousins in Valley County and many familiar names in Boise County (Garden Valley and Crouch).

I read over Christina's timeline of where they were in the late 1930s and early 1940s and have followed up in each of those places:

9) Dad worked that summer in south Donnelly and lived in a collapsible house (I think this is those tent homes - wood sides up about three feet then sides and top of canvas).
10) Back to Cascade for the winter in a house on a hill by a shop.  They bought the house and moved it to under the water tower.  Christina Winnie was born there March 18, 1937.
11) Moved to an abandoned house in Werley (unsure where this was).
12) Went to Tonasket, Washington to visit Aunt Alice (Belle Crawford Marshall).
13) Back to Cascade (NOT THERE) in a collapsible house; it burned down, so the family moved to MacGregor (I actually found MacGregor, a community north of the Cascade Reservoir, south of Donnelly NOT THERE), living in a tent and piling brush for Boise Cascade.
14) They then moved to Emmett (NOT THERE) and bought a trailer house.  Cyril Ellis was born in May of 1941.  (Cyril’s doctor  was CE Carver and when mother named him the nurse who was the doctor’s wife came in and asked if she wanted to give him the rest of the doctor’s name C.E. – Cyril Ellis.  Mother had found the name Cyril in a book and liked it and Ellis is the only name she could find to go with it, so he wasn’t really named after his doctor even if it might have looked that way.)
15) They lived on Trail Creek in the trailer house (on the Salmon River) for three years, wintering in Cascade.  (There are pictures of the trailer with Cyril, Dixie, Tommy, and Christina – some with a tricycle, some with a trailer.  Uncle Cash must have worked there one year as Dixie is his daughter and she was in a lot of them.

I guess you can see why my folks are hard to find.  My father was doing a lot of work in the woods during the summers and wintered in Cascade or Emmett with family.  They did not really settle down to one place until they moved to Garden Valley in 1950.

Here the family is in the summer of 1937, just the four of them until Cyril was born in 1941 (Mom had lost her first child, a daughter, in June 1934).

With my father's parents in the Cascade census (Thomas and Winnie Logue) was their youngest son, Fred.  Below is a picture of him in his uniform as he visited home sometime between 1943-46.  His service during the war was at a radar station in Kodiak, Alaska. With him is my father at the left and their father, my grandpa, in the middle.  Grandpa passed away in 1954 (as I was beginning my first grade of school).


So, if you are anxious to find your family in the 1940 census, you may have to wait a while longer until the entire thing is indexed, or you can do like I do and spend a few hours a week just pouring over sets of records in areas where you think they may have been in 1940.  Whichever, it is fun to look through records that are closer to our day, possibly seeing a celebrity or someone that may still be living.

So have fun looking through 1940. And I will spend every spare minute I have indexing batches of records (right now I am working on Washington state records). 

Tuesday, March 27, 2012

Don't You Wish....

I'm sure everyone who does research on their ancestry has at one point said, 'I wish I had asked [name of relative] more about themselves and their remembrances while they were still alive.'  I find myself putting any number of my relatives into the brackets almost daily - when I'm trying to determine who my Aunt Kate was married to before she married Allen Moore and what were her kids' names again; when I try to find my mother in the 1930 census, cause she just isn't listed with her parents; when I try to find why my grandpa and his brothers weren't living with their parents in the 1880 Potter Co, PA census and just where were they. 

Now that I have started transcribing records for FamilySearch.org and plan to help index the 1940 census, I realize what a difficult task it is to do some of this work.  Handwritten records are not exactly easy to read, not only because not everyone has excellent, blockstyle penmanship, but many people supplied nicknames instead of given names and didn't spell out the surname for the census takers, and some of the scanned copies are not the clearest to read.


This is a 1880 census for Garden Valley, Idaho.  See how clearly it was scanned and how neat the penmanship is.  Unfortunately, that is not always the case.  But I guess that is what attracts some people - the challenge to interpret just what is intended.

My advice is, while you have relatives that were around during the 1940 census still alive, you ask them the questions you might have about where were you living, where was Uncle [  ] living, what was their occupation, what did you do to make it through the depression years.  All the questions that might come up as you search through those pages before the census is indexed.  And if you really love a challenge and want to speed up the process of getting all those records indexed, find a place to volunteer. Here is the Family Roots and Branches blog that gives hints for volunteering:  http://family-genealogy.blogspot.com/2011/11/familysearch-volunteers-to-index-1940.html.

Here is a blank 1940 census form to get an idea of the information you will be able to glean once this is available.  http://c.mfcreative.com/email/1940/1940_US_Census_FINAL.pdf

Here's another site with info about volunteering:  https://the1940census.com/getting-started/

So, you have not excuse now.  Get ready for 1940 in 6 days.

Friday, March 23, 2012

Happy Birthday Adrian and Christina

Today (March 23rd) would have been the 66th birthday of my older brother, Adrian Dexter Logue.  And last Sunday (March 18th) would have been the 75th birthday of our sister, Christina Winne Logue Williamson.

Adrian Dexter Logue, born March 23, 1946
Christina Winne Logue (Williamson) born March 18, 1937

I Have A Place in Heaven - Unknown

Please don't sing sad songs for me,
Forget your grief and fears,
For I am in a perfect place
Away from pain and tears
It's far away from hunger
And hurt and want and pride,
I have a place in Heaven
With the Master at my side.
My life on earth was very good,
As earthly life can go,
But Paradise is so much more
Than anyone can know.
My heart is filled with happiness
And sweet rejoicing, too.
To walk with God is perfect peace,
A joy forever new.

It is comforting to know that one day I will be with them in this 'perfect peace.'

Wednesday, March 21, 2012

Early Idaho Pioneer

Someone asked me the other day if I had any stories about my early Idaho pioneer families.  So I've been looking through all my databases to see what I have.  I decided to write a short piece on Walter Marshall Dexter.  Walter was born 19 Dec 1830 in Dover, Maine.  A biography I found for him from Stark County, Illinois stated: "Walter M Dexter - Farmer Sec. 32; P.O. Ulah; born in Piscataquis Co. Maine, Dec 19, 1831; Rep; Bapt; owns 160 acres land, value $9,600; lived in Maine about twenty- three years, then went to California and was there six years; came to Stark Co. this State and lived there twelve years; came to this county in 1874; has held office of School Director in Stark Co; holds same office here: married Miss Alida Jane Bennett, Nov 24 1862; she was born Pennsylvania and brought up in Stark Co. Ill; they have four children, one boy and three girls."

 Walter and Alida's Marriage License

Walter's older sister, Bethana (born in 1825), married William Perley Wing (son of Ezekial and Lydia Brann Wing).  In the 1850 Federal Census, Bethana is with William in Lewiston, Lincoln, ME and the rest of the family is in Dover, Piscataquis, ME.  In the 1860 census, however, the Lotan/Ruby Dexter family has moved to Toulon, Stark, IL with Bethana Wing and Walter Marshall living at home, while Bethana's husband is possibly still in California (in the gold fields of Placer County - near Tahoe) where he was recorded on the 1852 California census.  So if the above story of Walter is correct, my conclusion is that he went to California to be with his brother-in-law between 1852 and 1860 as the family was moving out west to Illinois.  He then returned from California and settled with them in Stark County, Illinois before the 1860 census.

In the 1870 census, the Walter Dexter family lived in Wetherfield, Henry Co, Illinois (the above biography stated they moved to Henry County in 1874) and  in 1880 they were in Cambridge, Henry Co, Illinois.  According to the biography and the census records he worked for the school district.

By this time the family were all born and growing.  The photo below was taken in the 1880s.  The oldest daughter, Marcia Estelle, married in 1887 to James Wright so when the family decided to make the move to Idaho (for whatever reason) she remained in Illinois.

Phalla, Kezzia, Marcia in the back; Alida, Lotan, Mary Winne (my grandmother) and Walter. 

I told the story earlier of a tragic family outing shortly after the family settled in Long Valley, Idaho.  On 27 July 1890 (possibly the family was celebrating the statehood of Idaho, which occurred on 3 July 1890), the family was on an outing when the middle daughter, Kezzia, went down to the river to fetch water, or catch minnows in a bucket.  The current caught the bucket and pulled her into the water and she was swept away.  Her brother, Lotan, jumped in to save her but tragically both drowned.  They are buried in Crown Point Cemetery, overlook the reservoir that was later created when the river was dammed. 


Walter Dexter and his daughter, Mary Winnie, filed homestead claims on land in Long Valley and Walter farmed there until 18 Jun 1913.  His wife, Alida Jane Bennett Dexter, survived him and passed away 4 March 1924. 

Here is a picture of her celebrating her 86th birthday in 1922 in Cascade, Idaho.


Alida Jane Bennett Dexter's Death Certificate


Their daughters, Mary Winnie and Phalla Edith, married local men and lived long, raised families and died in Long Valley.  Phalla married William D Patterson in 1893 and 'Winnie' married my grandfather, Thomas Elbridge Logue, in 1904.


Thomas had snowshoed  from Long Valley through Garden Valley to Idaho City to obtain the marriage license to marry Winnie.  He also homesteaded 120 acres in Long Valley, so together they had 240 acres.  They farmed and raised my father and his three brothers (Walter, Merton and Fred) and three sisters (Audrey, Geneva and Leona).

So that is yet another Idaho Pioneer story.  Walter Dexter came from the Atlantic coast in Maine to Illinois (after a short sojourn in the mine fields of California).  Then moved out to the high valley country of Idaho Territory in the 1880s where he homesteaded, farmed, raised his family and died.

Saturday, February 18, 2012

The McMillans

My husband's family is from Arkansas - more specifically, from the area where Sam Walton is from - Benton County, the northwest corner of the state.  His father, Joseph Howard McMillan, was born in Hiwasse, AR on 15 April 1919.  His family moved to Idaho after 1930 and he enlisted in the Army Air Corp on 16 Dec 1941 (enlisting in Portland OR for 'the duration of the War or other emergency, plus six months, subject to the discretion of the President or otherwise according to law' with 4 years of high school and having worked as a farm hand and being single without dependents, 5'8", 151 lbs).


Joseph Howard was born to Phillip Louis and Cora M Fletcher McMillan.  His siblings were a sister (still living in Arkansas) and a brother, Reece A McMillan, born 9 Mar 1933 in Hiwasse and died 20 May 2003 in Meridian ID.  He married Hazel Olive Wingate (01 Nov 1917 - 24 May 2010) around 1947.  See earlier posting for information on the Wingates.  They had two boys and a girl.

Mac and Hazel McMillan

Philip Louis McMillan was born 18 Nov 1885 in Seba, Benton, AR and married Cora M Fletcher (born 13 Dec 1901 in either Iowa or Illinois), daughter of Lemuel Fletcher and Cynthia Caroline Spurlin, in Centerton AR on 3 Jun 1918. Their three children (two boys and a girl) were born in Hiwasee AR and they moved to Idaho before 1942 because Philip filed a WWII registration card in Ada County Idaho in 1942.

Although they lived in Idaho until their deaths, they are both buried in the family plot in Benton County AK.


McMillan (Hiwasse) Cemetery, Benton County, Arkansas
Established 1893 __ Rededicated 1989 - On this site George A. and Nancy McMillan journeyed from Tennessee to homestead and raise their family.
Located on Hwy. 279, .5 miles north of the junction with Hwy. 72. It is on the east side of the road.

Philip was the son of George Alfred McMillan and Nancy Ellen Harris.  George, son of Thomas Phillip McMillan and Sarah A Smith was born on 30 Mar 1846 in Breckinridge, KY. He died on 29 Dec 1912 in Hiwasse, Benton, Arkansas,. He married Nancy Ellen Harris on 01 Jan 1867 in Steelville, Randolph, Illinois,.

Nancy Ellen Harris, daughter of Samuel Harris and Mary Ann Jay was born on 21 Sep 1848 in Kentucky. She died on 23 Dec 1910 in Hiwasse, Benton, Arkansas.


Nancy Ellen Harris and George Alfred McMillan had the following children:

i.    Samuel Knox McMillan was born on 06 Oct 1868 in Steelville, Randolph, Illinois. He died on 22 Aug 1936. He married Mary Ellen Walthall on 23 Dec 1893 in Dickson Township, Benton, Arkansas, daughter of Edward S Walthall and Anna Jane Palsgrove. She was born about 1873 in Missouri. She died on 01 Aug 1925 in Benton, Arkansas.
ii.    Thomas Clark McMillan was born on 10 Oct 1870 in Steelville, Randolph, Illinois. He died in 1951.
iii.    Annie Lee McMillan was born on 20 Feb 1873 in Dixon, Benton, Arkansas. She died on 12 Jun 1955 in Hiwassi, Benton, Arkansas,. She married John Franklin Holloway, son of James Augustus Holloway and Sidney Amanda Whiteside. He was born on 16 Mar 1868 in Dixon, Benton, Arkansas,. He died on 26 Aug 1916 in Hiwassi, Benton, Arkansas.
iv.    Della Retta McMillan was born on 05 Sep 1875 in Illinois,. She died in 1936. She married Alva Hall Duncan in 1895 in Bentonville, Benton, Arkansas. He was born in 1873 in Wallace, Benton, Arkansas,. He died in 1957 in Wallace, Benton, Arkansas. Notes for Della Retta McMillan: Burial: Mount Pleasant Cemetery Hiwasse, Benton County, Arkansas
v.    Forrest Courtney McMillan was born on 17 Jan 1878 in Beauport, Washington, Illinois,. He died on 06 Dec 1895 in Hiwasse, Benton, Arkansas.
vi.    John Wilton McMillian was born on 23 Aug 1880 in Beauport, Washington, Illinois,. He died on 12 Jan 1944 in Bentonville, Benton, Arkansas. He married Parlee V McMillan on 07 Mar 1901 in Pineville Missouri. She was born on 03 Jun 1886 in Bentonville, Benton, Arkansas,. She died on 24 Jun 1963 in Bentonville, Benton, Arkansas.
vii.    Bessie McMillan was born on 26 Mar 1883 in Table Rock, Pawnee, Nebraska,. She died in 1883.
viii.    Philip Louis McMillan was born on 18 Nov 1885 in Seba, Benton County, Arkansas. He died on 04 Jan 1959. He married Cora M Fletcher on 03 Jun 1918 in Centerton, Benton, Arkansas,, daughter of Lemuel Fletcher and Cynthia Caroline Spurlin. She was born on 13 Dec 1901 in Iowa. She died on 28 Nov 1977 in Boise, Ada, Idaho.
ix.    Joseph Frank McMillan was born on 11 Jul 1888 in Dickson, Benton, Arkansas,. He died on 18 May 1969 in Springdale, Benton, Arkansas. He married Verna Walker on 30 Dec 1919. She was born in Jun 1900 in Missouri. She died in 1996 in Springdale, Benton, Arkansas.
x.    Mary Verna McMillan was born on 27 Jul 1891 in Dickson, Benton, Arkansas,. She died on 04 Nov 1968. She married Archie Nichols on 15 Feb 1924. He was born on 27 Jan 1891 in Benton, Arkansas. He died on 11 Feb 1967 in Benton, Arkansas. 

 George and Nancy McMillan

Thomas Phillip McMillan, son of James McMillan and Sarah Regan was born in 1818 in Meade, Tennessee. He died before 1860 in Randolph County, Illinois. He married Sarah A Smith on 19 Mar 1840. She was born in 1820 in Virginia.

Sarah A Smith and Thomas Phillip McMillan had the following children:

i.    Martha McMillan was born in 1842 in Meade County, Kentucky.
ii.    John William McMillan was born on 16 Jun 1844 in Meade County, Kentucky. He died on 12 Jan 1912 in Jackson County, Illinois.
iii.    George Alfred McMillan was born on 30 Mar 1846 in Beckinridge, Kentucky,. He died on 29 Dec 1912 in Hiwasse, Benton, Arkansas. He married Nancy Ellen Harris on 01 Jan 1867 in Steelville, Randolph, Illinois, daughter of Samuel Harris and Mary Ann Jay. She was born on 21 Sep 1848 in Kentucky. She died on 23 Dec 1910 in Hiwasse, Benton, Arkansas.
iv.    Sarah McMillan was born in 1847.
v.    Eliza McMillan was born about 1852 in Kentucky.
vi.    Martha McMillan was born in 1842 in Meade County, Kentucky.
vii.    Tommie Elizabeth McMillan was born in 1856 in Meade County, Kentucky. She died in 1896 in Randolph County, Illinois.
viii.    John William McMillan was born on 16 Jun 1844 in Meade County, Kentucky. He died on 12 Jan 1912 in Jackson County, Illinois.
ix.    Eliza McMillan was born about 1852 in Kentucky.

Samuel Harris was born about 1819 in Kentucky. He married Mary Ann Jay on 30 Oct 1847 in Randolph County, Illinois. Mary, daughter of William Jay and Rachel Tindall was born on 05 Jul 1827 in Randolph, Illinois. She died on 25 Jul 1850 in Need Steelville, Illinois.

Mary Ann Jay and Samuel Harris had the following child:

i.      Nancy Ellen Harris was born on 21 Sep 1848 in Kentucky. She died on 23 Dec 1910 in Hiwasse, Benton, Arkansas. She married George Alfred McMillan on 01 Jan 1867 in Steelville, Randolph, Illinois, son of Thomas Phillip McMillan and Sarah A Smith. He was born on 30 Mar 1846 in Beckinridge, Kentucky. He died on 29 Dec 1912 in Hiwasse, Benton, Arkansas. 


** Note from husband's sister - Mom and Dad were married in Winnemucca Nevada February 21st 1947...I have their original marriage certificate..oh and the photo of them..my Dad's nickname was spelled Mac..so was his father's..Witnesses to their marriage was Harley P. and Clara A Elam..Harley was my mother's cousin..just more FYI

Sunday, January 29, 2012

Following Auxiliary Branches - the Earles

My children's father was Robert Frank Earle.  The following is a listing of his ancestors as I've been able to determine from census, family trees on ancestry.com, and other sources.


Ancestors of Robert Frank Earle

Generation 1
  1.  Robert Frank Earle, son of James Michael Earle and Frances E Nelson was born on 09 Nov 1938 in Brooklyn, Kings, NY. He died on 02 Feb 2007 in Nampa, Canyon, ID. He married me on 29 Apr 1974 in Orange, CA, daughter of Cecil Elbridge Logue and Rachel Helen Crawford. She was born on in Emmett, Gem, ID.




Generation 2
  2.  James Michael Earle, son of William R Earle and Catalina Castillo was born on 21 Aug 1910 in Arivaca, Pima, Arizona Terr. He died on 20 Apr 1994 in Murphysboro, Jackson, IL. He married Frances E Nelson.
  3.  Frances E Nelson, daughter of John Emil Nelson and Gertrude LNU was born on 02 Sep 1919 in New York. She died in Feb 1989 in Brooklyn, Kings, NY.

Frances E Nelson and James Michael Earle had the following children:

1.    i.   Robert Frank Earle was born on 09 Nov 1938 in Brooklyn, Kings, NY. He died on 02 Feb 2007 in Nampa, Canyon, ID.
ii.    Living Earle was born on 04 May 1939 in Brooklyn, Kings, New York.

Generation 3
4.    William R Earle, son of William Francis Earle and Eliza Earle was born on 24 May 1880 in Montana,. He married Catalina Castillo in 1909 (1910 US Federal Census - married less than 1 year).

 
Wm R Earle WWI record

5.    Catalina Castillo, daughter of Francisco Castillo and Ramona Castillo Guerrero was born on 30 Apr 1885 in Saric, Sonora, Mexico. She died on 16 Jul 1968 in Los Angeles, Los Angeles, CA William Earle was her second husband and not the father of Harry, William, and Eva. 

                                                                           Catalina Castillo Spiva Earle Fredericks

Notes from my Family Tree Maker:
    Searching for relatives on Gillermo Spiva of Tucson, AZ. Married Catalina Castillo in late 1800's, killed in hunting accident early 1900's. Any in information would greatly appriciated.  SUSAN KING  Posted: 31 Aug 2000 7:08AM on Ancestry.com
    Talk about lame, I posted this message three years ago and just gave up on it and now I find that someone finally has something in the Spiva side of the family. Gillermo's wife Catalina, was Mexican and they had two sons, Enrique (Harry) and Gillermo (William) Jr. As the story goes, Gillermo was killed in a gun fight. Catalina (Kate) then married William Earle so I can answer YES! I am related to the Red Onion Earles. Bart is my father and Jan and Jeff are my half sister and brother. I hope I didn't take too long to answer your reply and you are still checking the web site. You had that little extra push that has got me looking again.Thank You
Susan King 

Reba McMillan added this on 24 Jan 2009 (from the Red Onion Restaurant web site)
Catalina Castillo, was born in Sonora, Mexico. Her husband, Guillermo Spiva, was born in Tombstone, Arizona. While Guillermo worked as a blacksmith in Las Gijas, a small mining town near Arivaca, Arizona, Catalina operated a small kitchen preparing meals for the miners, perfecting many of the recipes that would be used in my family’s restaurants in later years. It was here that Enrique, later called Harry, was born. Guillermo was killed in a hunting accident, leaving Catalina to raise Harry and his brother on her own. A year or so later, Catalina met and married an Arizona Ranger, William Earle [NOTE: I've checked all the records of Arizona Rangers online and have yet to find Wm Earle listed as one of their members.  Other stories that have been told is that he was featured on 'This is Your Life' as the last surviving Arizona Ranger, but I cannot find record of that either - you know how family lore is, this could just be a tale that has been passed down with no basis], who adopted the two boys and gave us all his surname.
    This is going to sound kind of lame, but I remember seeing in print a reference to a cemetery in Pima, Arizona, that had Spivas buried there. Can't remember the source. I wondered at the time how Spivas got there. No first names were given, only initials like D. It sounds like your Guillermo may have had a Mexican mother. There were Spivas in California in 1860's; they came from Missouri. Don't know if there is any connection. Have you looked for him in the 1880 census under Guillermo and/or William? (Are you connected to the Red Onion Earle family?)
S Davis   Posted: 23 Sep 2000 12:28PM GMT on Ancestry.com
*************************************
The Original Red Onion
Reba McMillan added this on 24 Jan 2009
     THE RED ONION MEXICAN FOOD RESTAURANTS have been operating in Southern California since 1949 yet many people remain curious about the history of these restaurants, how they got their name and why an apparent “gringo” like me is the third-generation operator of a family business begun with my Mexican great-grandmother’s recipes.
     My great-grandmother, Catalina Castillo, was born in Sonora, Mexico. My great-grandfather, Guillermo Spiva, was born in Tombstone, Arizona. While Guillermo worked as a blacksmith in Las Gijas, a small mining town near Arivaca, Arizona, Catalina operated a small kitchen preparing meals for the miners, perfecting many of the recipes that would be used in my family’s restaurants in later years. It was here that my grandfather, Enrique, later called Harry, was born. Guillermo was killed in a hunting accident, leaving Catalina to raise my grandfather and his older brother on her own. A year or so later, Catalina met and married an Arizona Ranger, William Earle, who adopted the two boys and gave us all his surname.

                                                                         Guillermo Spiva

     The Earle family got started in the Mexican food business long before there was a Red Onion. During the Depression, Grandfather Harry worked as a short-order cook and manager in a series of hard-luck businesses, including a Chinese takeout and catering facility in San Diego. Harry’s first business in Los Angeles was operating the grill at the Owl Drug Store in the Downtown District. In 1942 he converted an old Victorian house, located on Western Avenue near the famous El Cholo, into a restaurant and named it the El Rae - that’s Earle spelled backwards. Harry and his mom, Catalina, operated the business using the same recipes for chile rellenos, enchiladas and tacos that she used in Las Gijas fifty years before. The business thrived for a while but eventually fell victim to wartime food rationing.
    In 1949 Harry opened the first Red Onion in Inglewood. It seated only fifteen people but it was where my dad, Bart, and Uncle Don got their start in the business. Both eventually out grew that tiny restaurant to open Red Onion chains of their own, ultimately numbering a total of twenty-six locations. My dad would eventually sell his restaurants in 1973 to Host International Corporation, keeping only his favorite restaurant, the Palos Verdes Red Onion, which opened in 1963. My Uncle Don has since retired and the many Red Onion restaurants in which he had shared interests have now faded away, leaving the Palos Verdes Red Onion as the only restaurant still owned and operated by the original founding family.
(It's really the third Red Onion   Let's be clear. What is billed as "The Original Red Onion" on the sign hanging outside the charm-drenched restaurant that opened in 1963 is really the third Red Onion.
"The first was opened by my grandfather, Harry Earle, in Inglewood in 1949," said Jeff Earle, the gregarious owner/proprietor of the Rolling Hills Estates eatery. 
Preppy in his USC polo shirt, the former Trojan who served as a press advance man on two of President Ronald Reagan's campaigns (1976 and 1980), had been overseeing structural improvements in the kitchen before sitting down for an interview.
"The second restaurant was opened by my father, Bart, in Hawthorne in 1958," he said.
It was at the Hawthorne Red Onion that groups of engineers who lived in Rancho Palos Verdes and worked at Douglas Aircraft came to wolf down cheese enchiladas, tacos and tamales. Lacking a place to go out to dinner on the Peninsula, the engineers pleaded with Bart Earle to build a restaurant somewhere in Palos Verdes.
Thus, the third Red Onion appeared on the sparsely settled site where it now stands surrounded by homes, businesses and a mall across Silver Spur Road.)



Although the Red Onions were quite popular, they were not the only Earle family restaurants in the Los Angeles area.  My children's grandfather, James Earle, also owned and operated his own chain of restaurants - the Chili Peppers - in Orange County.  The one pictured was managed by him and others were managed by Bob and his brother.



Catalina Castillo and William R Earle had the following children:

i.    Harry Earle was born on 18 Mar 1903 in AZ. He died on 16 Feb 1988 in Redondo Beach, Los Angeles, CA,. He married Lucile Gladys Gortat, daughter of Carl Gortat and Wilhimina Krakofski. She was born on 13 Aug 1902 in Manti, Sanpete, UT. She died on 16 Feb 1949 in Los Angeles, Los Angeles, CA. He married Elizabeth Jenkins on 18 Mar 1950 in Las Vegas, Clark, NV, daughter of William Jenkins and Helen Gaines. She was born on 26 Jul 1914 in Greenwood, Sebastian, AR,. She died on 10 Mar 1991 in , Los Angeles, CA.
ii.    William P Earle was born in 1905 in AZ. He died in 1953 in Josephine Co OR. He married Minnie May Carpena Brady in 1923, daughter of Henry Whittier Mendibles Brady and Emma D Brady. She was born in 1908 in Winkelman, Gila, Arizona Terr.
iii.    Eva Earle was born on 18 Jan 1906 in Tucson, Pima, Arizona Terr.
3.    iv.     James Michael Earle was born on 21 Aug 1910 in Arivaca, Pima, Arizona Terr.  He died on 20 Apr 1994 in Murphysboro, Jackson, IL. He married Frances E Nelson, daughter of John Emil Nelson and Gertrude LNU. She was born on 02 Sep 1919 in NY. She died in Feb 1989 in Brooklyn, Kings, NY.
v.    Charles Earle was born on 11 Jan 1912 in Arizona Terr. He died on 15 May 1989 in Brooklyn, Kings, NY. He married Bertha Nelsen (Frances' sister). She was born about 1915 in NY.
vi.    Frank Earle was born in 1913 in Arizona.

6.    John Emil Nelson was born about 1886 in Finland. He married Gertrude LNU.
7.    Gertrude LNU was born about 1887 in Sweden.

Gertrude LNU and John Emil Nelson had the following children:
i.    Gertrude Nelson was born about 1910 in New York.
ii.    John Nelson was born about 1912 in New York.
iii.    Edward Nelson was born about 1914 in New York.
iv.    Bertha Nelson was born about 1917 in New York.
3.    v.     Frances E Nelson was born on 02 Sep 1919 in New York. She died in Feb 1989 in Brooklyn, Kings, New York. She married James Michael Earle, son of William R Earle and Catalina Castillo. He was born on 21 Aug 1910 in Arivaca, Pima, Arizona Territory,. He died on 20 Apr 1994 in Murphysboro, Jackson, IL. She married Arthur Hodne, son of Ole Hodne and Karen LNU. He was born about 1915 in New York. He died about 1970 in New York.
vi.    John Nelson was born about 1912 in New York.

Generation 4 [Here is where I am stretching - I've searched census records and there are a lot of Earles in the New York area in the 1870-1900 time period]
8.    William Francis Earle, son of Charles Earle and Ann Jeanette Shumway was born on 28 Apr 1854 in New York,. He married Eliza Earle in 1880.
9.    Eliza Earle was born about 1852 in New York.

Eliza Earle and William Francis Earle had the following child:

4.    i. William R Earle was born on 24 May 1880 in Montana (?). He married Catalina Castillo in 1909 (1910 US Federal Census - married less than 1 year), daughter of Francisco Castillo and Ramona Castillo Guerrero. She was born on 30 Apr 1885 in Saric, Sonora, Mexico. She died on 16 Jul 1968 in Los Angeles, Los Angeles Co., CA.

10.    Francisco Castillo was born on 01 Jan 1857 in Mexico. He died on 04 Nov 1946 in Los Angeles, CA. He married Ramona Castillo Guerrero.
11.    Ramona Castillo Guerrero was born in Sonora, Mexico.

Ramona Castillo Guerrero and Francisco Castillo had the following children:
5.    i.       Catalina Castillo was born on 30 Apr 1885 in Saric, Sonora, Mexico. She died on 16 Jul 1968 in Los Angeles, Los Angeles Co., CA. She married first Guillermo Spiva. He was born in Tombstone, Pima Co.,Arizona Terr. He died about 1907 in Las Gajas, Arizona Terr.  She then married William R Earle in 1909 (1910 US Federal Census - married less than 1 year), son of William Francis Earle and Eliza Earle. He was born on 24 May 1880 in Montana,  She married Fred Fredricks.

ii.    Refugio Castillo was born in Jul 1886 in Mexico.
iii.    Rita Castillo was born in May 1888 in Mexico.

Generation 5
16.    Charles Earle was born on 23 Mar 1829 in New Jersey. He died before 1880 in New York. He married Ann Jeanette Shumway on 20 Jan 1853.
17.    Ann Jeanette Shumway, daughter of Dolerval Shumway and Jane Colyer was born on 15 Jan 1831 in Malta, N.Y.. She died after 1880 in New York.

Ann Jeanette Shumway and Charles Earle had the following children:
8.    i.     William Francis Earle was born on 28 Apr 1854 in New York,. He married Eliza Earle in 1880. She was born about 1852 in New York.
ii.    Jane Louisa Earle was born on 28 Jun 1857.
iii.    Sarah Ann Earle was born on 22 Apr 1860. She died on 20 Mar 1864.
iv.    Charles Murville Earle was born on 20 Dec 1862 in New York.
v.    George Edward Earle was born on 24 Aug 1865 in New York.
vi.    Hester Ann Earle was born on 05 Dec 1867 in New York.
vii.    Lewis Dolerval Earle was born on 04 Apr 1870 in New York.
viii.    Edmund Earle was born on 14 Aug 1873.

Generation 6
34.    Dolerval Shumway, son of Danforth Shumway and Esther Rockwell was born on 20 Oct 1803 in Malta, Saratoga, NY. He died on 15 Mar 1848 in Malta, Saratoga, NY. He married Jane Colyer on 20 Feb 1830 in Malta, Saratoga, NY.
35.    Jane Colyer was born on 06 Nov 1809 in New York. She died on 30 Jun 1874 in Malta, Saratoga, NY.

Jane Colyer and Dolerval Shumway had the following children:
7.    i. Ann Jeanette Shumway was born on 15 Jan 1831 in Malta, NY. She died after 1880 in New York. She married Charles Earle on 20 Jan 1853. He was born on 23 Mar 1829 in New Jersey. He died before 1880 in New York.
ii.    Charles E Shumway was born on 08 Dec 1833 in Malta, Saratoga, NY. He died on 30 Dec 1872 in Elizabeth, Union, NJ.

Generation 7
68.    Danforth Shumway, son of David Shumway and Alice Ainsworth was born on 18 Jul 1768 in Sturbridge, Worcester, MA. He died on 20 Mar 1828 in Malta, Saratoga, NY. He married Esther Rockwell on 11 Aug 1799 in Worchester, MA.
69.    Esther Rockwell was born on 29 Aug 1780 in Worchester, MA. She died on 04 Jan 1817 in Malta, Saratoga, NY.

Esther Rockwell and Danforth Shumway had the following children:
i.    Jeannette Shumway was born on 24 Feb 1800 in Malta, Saratoga, NY.
ii.    Murville Shumway was born on 09 Mar 1802 in Malta, Saratoga, NY. He died on 24 Jan 1869.
35.    iii. Dolerval Shumway was born on 20 Oct 1803 in Malta, Saratoga, NY. He died on 15 Mar 1848 in Malta, Saratoga, NY. He married Jane Colyer on 20 Feb 1830 in Malta, Saratoga, NY. She was born on 06 Nov 1809 in NY. She died on 30 Jun 1874 in Malta, Saratoga, NY.
iv.    Boville Shumway was born on 19 Mar 1805 in Malta, Saratoga, NY. He died on 03 Nov 1850 in Plattsburg,NY.
v.    Mary Ann Shumway was born on 11 Jun 1807 in Malta, Saratoga, NY. She died on 12 Sep 1807 in Malta, Saratoga, NY.
vi.    Ruth Shumway was born on 10 Mar 1809 in Malta, Saratoga, NY. She died on 12 Jun 1809 in Malta, Saratoga, NY.
vii.    Sarah Ann Shumway was born on 26 Jan 1813 in Malta, Saratoga, NY.

Generation 8
136.    David Shumway, son of Peter Shumway and Mariah Smith was born on 23 Dec 1705 in Boxford, Essex, MA. He died on 10 May 1796 in Sturbridge, Worcester, MA. He married Alice Ainsworth on 20 Sep 1751 in Sturbridge, Worcester, MA.
137.    Alice Ainsworth, daughter of Edward Ainsworth and Joanna Davis was born on 06 May 1727 in Woodstock, Windham, CT. She died on 12 Jan 1810 in Sturbridge, Worcester, MA.

Alice Ainsworth and David Shumway had the following children:
i.    Cyril Shumway was born on 14 May 1752 in Sturbridge, Worcester, MA. He died in Sep 1832 in Exeter, Washington, RI.
iii.    Elijah Shumway was born on 24 Jul 1753 in Sturbridge, Worcester, MA. He died in 1818 in Sturbridge, Worcester, MA
iv.    Alice Shumway was born on 14 Dec 1754 in Sturbridge, Worcester, MA. She died in 1848.
v.    Abigail Shumway was born on 08 Jul 1756 in Sturbridge, Worcester, MA. She died in 1850 in , Jefferson, NY.
vi.    Lavinia Shumway was born on 26 Aug 1759 in Sturbridge, Worcester, MA. She died on 09 Aug 1826 in Martinsburg, Lewis, NY.
vii.    Chloe Shumway was born on 04 Nov 1761 in Sturbridge, Worcester, MA. She died in 1855.
viii.    Jemima Shumway was born on 03 Aug 1763 in Sturbridge, Worcester, MA. She died on 02 Sep 1842 in Sturbridge, Worcester, MA.
68.    viii. Danforth Shumway was born on 18 Jul 1768 in Sturbridge, Worcester, MA. He died on 20 Mar 1828 in Malta, Saratoga, NY. He married Esther Rockwell on 11 Aug 1799 in Worchester, MA. She was born on 29 Aug 1780 in Worchester, MA. She died on 04 Jan 1817 in Malta, Saratoga, NY.




Well, this is as far as I've gone for now, but there is a lot of Shumway information out on the internet and if they really are ancestors of our Earles, I will continue to add to this branch.

I do want to add my children's grandfather's World War II story here:
Sinking of Lehigh
"On 19 October, 1941, the freighter Lehigh, bound from Bilboa, Spain, to African Gold Coast, was sunk without warning some seventy-five miles off Freetown, an area not staked out as a combat zone by any belligerent.  A British destroyer rescued all thirty-nine crew members.  The ship belonged to the United States Lines, flew the American Flag, and was carrying only ballast.  Within three days, Americans knew of the sinking."  pg 266  Storm on the Horizon
By Justus D. Doenecke
 James M Earle took pictures of the sinking of this ship, which were published in the  Dec 8th, 1941 edition of Life Magazine.

  [Photos taken by Sam Hakam. Published in LIFE Magazine Dec. 8, 1941]
[Photo taken by 2nd Engineer James E. Earle. In the area beneath the flag and "Lehigh USA" are two lifeboats which took Sam Hakam, Joseph Manerchia and Richard Rice back aboard to rig an emergency radio aerial. Rice is on top of the rear mast in the photo. Published in LIFE Magazine Dec. 8, 1941]

Sunday, January 8, 2012

Facebook Posts - Remember When


You can criticize Facebook, but you must admit - some of the posts are 'cause to pause' with comparisons of today to the days when we 'boomers' grew up.  Here are a few good examples:

     'Checking out at the grocery store recently, the young cashier suggested I should bring my own grocery bags because plastic bags weren't good for the environment. I apologized and explained, "We didn't have this green thing back in my earlier days." The clerk responded, "That's our problem today. Your generation did not care enough to save our environment for future generations."

     She was right about one thing -- our generation didn't have the green thing in “Our” day. So what did we have back then…? After some reflection and soul-searching on "Our" day here's what I remembered we did have....
   Back then, we returned milk bottles, soda bottles and beer bottles to the store. The store sent them back to the plant to be washed and sterilized and refilled, so it could use the same bottles repeatedly. So they really were recycled. But we didn't have the green thing back in our day.
   We walked up stairs, because we didn't have an escalator in every store and office building. We walked to the grocery store and didn't climb into a 300-horsepower machine every time we had to go two blocks. But she was right. We didn't have the green thing in our day.
   Back then, we washed the baby's diapers because we didn't have the throw-away kind. We dried clothes on a line, not in an energy gobbling machine burning up 220 volts -- wind and solar power really did dry our clothes back in our early days. Kids got hand-me-down clothes from their brothers or sisters, not always brand-new clothing. But that young lady is right. We didn't have the green thing back in our day.
   Back then, we had one TV, or radio, in the house -- not a TV in every room. And the TV had a small screen the size of a handkerchief (remember them?), not a screen the size of the state of Montana. In the kitchen, we blended and stirred by hand because we didn't have electric machines to do everything for us. When we packaged a fragile item to send in the mail, we used wadded up old newspapers to cushion it, not Styrofoam or plastic bubble wrap. Back then, we didn't fire up an engine and burn gasoline just to cut the lawn. We used a push mower that ran on human power. We exercised by working so we didn't need to go to a health club to run on treadmills that operate on electricity. But she's right. We didn't have the green thing back then.
    We drank from a fountain when we were thirsty instead of using a cup or a plastic bottle every time we had a drink of water. We refilled writing pens with ink instead of buying a new pen, and we replaced the razor blades in a razor instead of throwing away the whole razor just because the blade got dull. But we didn't have the green thing back then. Back then, people took the streetcar or a bus, and kids rode their bikes to school or walked instead of turning their moms into a 24-hour taxi service. We had one electrical outlet in a room, not an entire bank of sockets to power a dozen appliances. And we didn't need a computerized gadget to receive a signal beamed from satellites 2,000 miles out in space in order to find the nearest pizza joint. We did as we were asked BECAUSE WE RESPECTED OUR PARENTS
   But isn't it sad the current generation laments how wasteful we old folks were just because we didn't have the green thing back then?'

"If you were raised on bologna, biscuits & gravy, fried potatoes & soup beans, played in the dirt, got your butt busted, school started with "The Pledge," had a bedtime, rode in back of pickup trucks, recorded the top 40 from the radio on cassette tapes, drank from a hose, played in the creek, rode your bike all day without a helmet, your curfew was the sky getting dark, your mom called your name, not your cell.  You played outside with your friends, not online. If you didn't eat what your mom cooked, then you didn't eat. Sanitizer didn't exist, but you COULD get your mouth washed out with soap. You rode your bike without a helmet, getting dirty was OK, and the neighbors looked out for you as your parents did. Re-post if your drank from a garden hose and survived and/or - If you were raised on meat & potatoes, your crib was covered with lead based paint, road a bike with no helmet on gravel roads, your parents had no child proof lids or seat belts in cars, you got a lickin' when you misbehaved, had 3 TV channels you got up to change, school always started w/the Pledge of Allegiance, & stores closed Sunday, if you drank water out of a water hose and still turned out OK"


"I was raised to say please and thank you, to have respect for my elders, lend a helping hand to those who were in need, hold the door for the person behind me, say excuse me when it was needed and to love people for who they are, not for what you can get from them! I was also taught to treat people the way I want to be treated!"


"When I was a kid I didn't have a computer, cell phone, Nintendo DS, XBox, or Wii . I had dirt, roller skates, and a bike. If I didn't eat what my mom made, I didn't eat. And I dealt with it. I didn't think of telling my parents "no" or dare to talk back and or got in BIG TROUBLE if I did. Life wasn't hard, it was life.. And I survived"

And included are some comments on how our life was so much different than today -

"The world did not end. It's just being rebooted. Please be sure your security software is up to date. Run a full scan of your life and remove any malicious files which may be damaging your joy, stealing your hope, or slowing down your essings. If you need more instructions, please refer to the User's Manual, which is readily available, or put your hands together, bow your head and contact Tech Support." ♥"

"LIFE BEFORE THE COMPUTER:
Memory was something you lost with age......An application was for employment....A program was a TV show....A cursor used profanity...A keyboard was a piano...A web was a spider's home...A virus was the flu...A hard drive was a long trip on the road...A mouse pad was where a mouse lived...And if you had a 3 inch floppy...well, you just hoped nobody found out!!


Life lessons that my Mom taught me:
Religion - "You better pray that comes out of the carpet"
Logic - "Because I said so, that's why"
Irony - "Keep crying and I'll give you something to cry about"
Wisdom - "When you get to be my age, you'll understand"
Justice - "When you get old and have kids, I hope they turn out just like you!!"
Five pearls of Scottish wisdom to remember
1. Money cannot buy happiness but, it’s more comfortable to cry in a Mercedes Benz than it is on a bicycle.
2. Forgive your enemy but remember the bastard’s name.
3. Help a man when he is in trouble and he will remember you when he is in trouble again.
4. Many people are alive only because it’s illegal to shoot them.
5. Alcohol does not solve any problem, but then neither does milk.
Other social comments:
In the sixties, 40-50 million boomers were passionate about the music we embraced as ours. The same group of musical artists carried us through the sixties, into the seventies, and right on to the present.
We were passionate about a war we did not understand, that we apparently could not win, and in which we were being ordered to die. We were passionately intolerant of an immoral government that lied to and misled us. Admittedly we have lost much of that zeal. Today, many of us are more passionate about getting the biggest SUV we can get our hands on, and looked the other way when our first boomer president lied to us. That is one of our severe shortcomings.

As I recall, it started in the mid-seventies with rocker Alice Cooper allegedly biting the head of a chicken off during his concerts. Or wait; is he the one who smashes his guitar on stage? No matter. These antics are part of the legacy absorbed by the X'ers. From there, it has "advanced" to what it is today - warning labels on the CDs of music aimed at our youth.

Gen-Xer Marcos writes, "Yes our generation is teen violence, Marilyn Manson, Columbine, but we are the ones left alone at home while our two BabyBoomer parents have forgotten their 60s idealism and only want more wealth, power and prestige." How would you reply to that, friends?

So criticize it if you will, my Facebook friends post a few 'gems' once in a while.  Try 'liking' your 'You know you are from ( your hometown or home state  ), if......" to find some real pertinent posts about what life used to be like.  

Happy New Years all!