Monday, February 27, 2017

Memory Monday: The Continuing Saga of My Last Doll


My daughter and my last doll

THE CONTINUING SAGA OF MY LAST DOLL

I wrote a while back about the Tradition of the Last Doll in our family. I got her when I was in the 4th grade and was told that she would be the last doll my parents would give me. I treasured her. By the way, I never named her. I just called her “my doll.”
When I had a daughter of my own, she played with the doll. The picture above was taken the weekend of my daughter’s 3rd birthday. My parents had come from New Mexico and my mother had made matching dresses for my daughter and my doll. (Aren’t they so cute together?)
Last month was my granddaughter’s third birthday, so I got MY LAST DOLL from a top shelf in the garage. I even put the dresses (which I had saved) on my granddaughter and the doll. There was only one problem. My granddaughter is somewhat taller at three than my daughter was. The dress is too short for her to wear in public, but it will make a fine play dress—for the next few months—if she doesn’t grow too fast.
The doll’s index finger on her right hand is still in my jewelry box, but I noticed that the area around the next finger has cracked and the middle finger is close to coming off. I’ve already looked up a local doll repair expert so I can get her taken care of because my granddaughter really, really likes that doll. The other day, she pulled the doll over to the table where she was playing, gave the doll a hug, and bent her forward so she could “see” what my granddaughter was doing, talking to her the whole time.

So far the doll has lasted three generation. Let’s see if we can go for four or five. Wouldn’t that be amazing?

Thursday, February 23, 2017

Throwback Thursday: Two Women and a Baby


From my "old and unknown" file



Woman on right—“What is it, and what do I do with it?”
Woman on left—“I don’t know. But it smells, so finders’ keepers.”

There's my caption. What's yours? Leave it in the comments.

Monday, February 20, 2017

Memory Monday: Origin of Words


My Great-Grandfather's School Picture
ORIGIN OF POPULAR WORDS
As some of you may know, I put together and publish a “reprinted” historical magazine each month. I have been doing this for almost two years. The first edition was dated May 1865—just weeks after President Lincoln was assassinated. I “create” a new edition each month 150 years after the date listed on the monthly magazine—in May 2015, I did May 1865, June 2015, I did June 1865, and so forth.
Other than the front page, along with Letters to the Editor and Manners Matter columns, all the tidbits, articles and book chapters come right out of books and magazines published before the date of the magazine. It’s a lot of research, but I love it—and I learn a lot from it. Doing this also helps me connect with family members that lived during that time. These were the books and magazines that were available to my great-great-great grandparents as well as their children and grandchildren. My great-grandfather is in the picture above, although I’m not sure exactly which one he was. I do know that it was taken in Illinois because that where he lived at the time. Maybe, his mother read from some of the magazines I used. Maybe she read some of the children’s stories to my great-grandfather and my great-great uncles and aunts.
Anyway, one of the things I came across this last month in the bound book of The Ladies Repository, from 1865, was an interesting article. I will show part of it below:

BANKRUPT. Few words have so remarkable a history as this. The money-changers of Italy had, it is said, benches or stalls in the boruse or exchange in former times. At these, they conducted their ordinary business. When any of them fell back in the world and became insolvent, his bench was broken, and the name of broken bench, or banko rouo, was given to him. When the word was first adopted into English, it was nearer the Italian than it now is, being bankerout instead of bankrupt.
BIGOT. This word is not, as generally, supposed, of religious but of secular and political origin. Rollo, Duke of Normandy, receiving Gissa, daughter of King Charles, in marriage, and with her the investiture of the Dukedom, refused to perform the usual ceremony of kiss ing the king's foot in token of subjection unless the king would hold it out for that purpose, and when he urged it, answered hastily, "No, by God," whereupon the king gave him the nickname of by God or bigot, and the name has passed to all stubborn and peevish insisters on their own notions.
CANTEEN. This is, perhaps, the only word in our language which, originally English, passed into a foreign tongue and was afterward taken back in a modified form. As originally spoken by the Saxon it was simply a tin can; but the Gaul, as is his wont, placing the noun before the adjective, and pronouncing the letter i as e, brought it out as cantin, pronounced canteen. Adopting a thousand other French terms, the dull Englishman took back his own original word in a new shape without any inquiries on the subject, and hence we now say canteen instead of tin-can.
GROG. Admiral Vernon—the same after whom Mount Vernon was named—was the first to require his men to drink their spirits mixed with water. In bad weather he was in the habit of walking the deck in a rough grogram cloak, and hence had obtained the name of "Old Grog" in the service. Such was the origin of the name applied to rum and water.
HURRAH. Thousands of people have shouted "hurrah!" "many a time and oft," but comparatively few know its derivation and primary meaning. It originated among the Eastern nations, where it, was used as a war cry from the belief that every man who died in battle for his country went to heaven. It is derived from the Sclavonic word Hurraj, which means "to Paradise."
LADY. In an old work of the date of 1762 is the following account of the origin of the term lady: "As I have studied more that appertains to ladies than to gentlemen, I will satisfy you how it came to pass that women of fortune were called ladies even before their husbands had any title to convey the mark of distinction to them. It was generally the fashion for a lady of affluence once a week, or oftener, to distribute a certain quantity of bread to her poor neighbors with her own bands, and she was called by them hlaf-day; that is, loaf-giver, or as it is sometimes explained, the bread-giver. These two words were in time corrupted, and the meaning of the term is now as little known as the practice which gave rise to it."
WINDFALL. Some of the English nobility, by the tenure of their estates, were forbidden felling any of the trees upon them, the timber being reserved for the use of the royal navy. Such trees as fell without cutting were the property of the occupant. A tornado, therefore, was a perfect Godsend in every sense of the term to those who had occupancy of extensive forests, and the windfall was some times of great value.


If you wish to read all of the article, or if you wish to see the magazine archives for my magazine—Worbly’s Family Monthly Magazine, go to http://worblysmagazine.com/ It is a lot of fun to explore the world of the mid-19th Century.

Thursday, February 16, 2017

Throwback Thursday: Woman on a Rock


From my "old and unknown" file



Woman—Maybe if I stand on my tip-toes, I’ll be able to see where I am.

That's my caption, but what's yours? Leave it in the comments.

Monday, February 13, 2017

Memory Monday: A LOT is Happening in February


My Parents-in-Law

A LOT IS HAPPENING IN FEBRUARY
Valentine’s Day is this week, but my husband and I usually don’t do anything special that day—we save our celebration for our anniversary. But that isn’t to say that there isn’t a lot to celebrate this month. As I have said in another post recently, February 15th is a very special day in our family—today and in the past. My parents-in-law were married on that day 76 years ago. Sadly, they only had 38 years together.
Two nieces also have their birthdays on February 15th, and I want to hope they have wonderful birthdays filled with love and happiness.
For our immediate family, we will celebrate our granddaughter’s 3rd birthday on the 15th. (Sh-h-h, we’re giving her a sandbox at our house and at her parent’s home, plus a few other presents.) As I think of the wonderful parents-in-law that I have been blessed with, I can’t help but think how much they would have loved and treasured their great-granddaughter.

What special memories do you have of Valentine’s Day? Is there anything special in your family that is celebrated in February?

Thursday, February 9, 2017

Throwback Thursday: Woman and Her Baby


From my "Old and Known" File



You decide: Is the house tilting? OR Is the house standing straight and the original picture was tilting?

Monday, February 6, 2017

Memory Monday: Facts in 1884


My Great-Grandfather

FACTS FROM 1884

I love to research. With writing historical romance, putting together my historical magazine, and finding things for my historical website, I need to do a lot of research (what fun!!!). As I was looking through the book, Hand Book of Useful Information, 1884, I came across this list:

Interesting Facts.
There are 2,750 languages.
America was discovered in 1492.
A square mile contains 640 acres.
Envelopes were first used in 1839.
Telescopes were invented in 1590.
A barrel of rice weighs 600 pounds.
A barrel of flour weighs 196 pounds.
A barrel of pork weighs 200 pounds.
A firkin of butter weighs 56 pounds.
Tile first steel pen was made in 1830.
A span is ten and seven-eighth inches.
A hand (horse measure) is four inches.
Watches were first constructed in 1476.
A storm moves thirty-six miles per hour.
A hurricane moves eighty miles per hour.
The first iron steamship was built in 183o.
The first Lucifer match was made in 1899.
Gold was discovered in California in 1848.
The first horse railroad was built in 1826-7.
The average human life is thirty-one years.
Coaches were first used in England in 1569.
Modern needles first came into use in 1545.
Kerosene was first used for lighting purposes in 1826.
The first newspaper was published in England in 1588.
The first newspaper advertisement appeared in 1652.
Until 1776 cotton spinning was performed by the hand-spinalist wheel.
Glass windows were first introduced into England in the eighth century.
Albert Durer gave the world a prophecy of future wood engraving in 1527.
Measure 209 feet on each side and you will have a square acre within an inch.
The first complete sewing machine was patented by Elias Howe, Jr., in 1846.
The first steam engine on this continent was brought from England in 1763.
The first knives were used in England and the first wheeled carriages in France in 1559.
The present national colors of the United States were not adopted by congress until 1777.


Although I haven’t cross-checked the information to see how accurate it is, I thought it was interesting to see what was being told as fact back then—like the speed of a storm or a hurricane—both of which we know by watching the news today isn’t exactly this cut and dry. By the way, this book came out about the time my great-grandparents had been married about nine years.

Thursday, February 2, 2017

Throwback Thursday: Man in a Dapper Suit


From my "old and known" file



“Bowties are cool.” (Doctor Who reference from the 11th Doctor)

That's my daughter's caption. What's yours? Leave it int he comments below.