Our hearts are broken following the tragic events in Newtown, Connecticut. We share the pain of our friends and colleagues there. May they somehow, sometime, find peace.
Genealogies of the Agard, Nunn, Hardenbrook, Wortman, Doyle, and Tucker family lines.
Saturday, December 15, 2012
Thursday, November 29, 2012
Thoughts of Thanksgivings Past
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My family's Thanksgiving table, 1953 |
The house is quiet now. Our children have returned to their respective homes after
a busy and enjoyable Thanksgiving week in Fredericksburg.
I now sit back with a cup of tea and think about
Thanksgivings past. I think about why this holiday is so important that family
travel so far in order to be with their loved ones.
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Thanksgiving 1953 Taughannock Boulevard Home of Ed and Carol Nunn From lf: Maude & Merritt Agard, Dick & Beverly Agard, Laura Hardenbrook, Carol & Ed Nunn, Mr. Wheeler Seated: Mary Nunn, Nancy Agard |
My family always gathered the Sunday after. We operated a restaurant so
Thanksgiving and Easter were our busiest days. Since Thanksgiving was the last
day of the serving season, that Friday and Saturday were dedicated to closing
up the large building for the winter.
Consequently it was on Sunday that we finally had time to gather for the
traditional Thanksgiving meal in our Taughannock Boulevard home near Ithaca, New York.
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Thanksgiving at the Maki's 1993 |
Raising my own family, we opened our home on Thanksgiving to
as many relatives and others who could make it. Cousins, aunts, and uncles came
to Newfield, NY from New Mexico, Ohio, and Buffalo. Our winding driveway brought them over the river and through the woods to our sprawling ranch house
that could easily accommodate 30-35 people for Thanksgiving dinner; a new
tradition was born. For many years
the Maki clan gathered around our many tables to enjoy delicious food, card
games, football, and conversing with each other.
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The Thanksgiving buffet line 1993 |
Each family brought a dish to share and our long kitchen
counter groaned under the number of delicious dishes it held. When the youngsters in the family turned into teenagers, they stayed until all hours playing Axis
and Allies, and then returned the next day to continue the game.
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Cousins catching up, 1993 |
It goes without saying that food is a main ingredient to a
successful Thanksgiving. This year we had way too much food, and I realized the
reason was that everyone had to prepare the dish that meant the most to them at
Thanksgiving. Since this is important,
next year I will suggest we make half the recipe.
The common thread through these thoughts of Thanksgivings
past is sense of community, whether that is immediate family, friends, or
gathering at a communal dinner somewhere.
As humans we need a safe haven; we need human interaction. We need
“family,” however it is described.
Thanksgiving provides that opportunity.
I pray our growing family will gather here every year and
that we can continue to provide them with a safe haven, a Thanksgiving retreat.
Sunday, November 18, 2012
Black Sheep Sunday – Charles Woodson
Charles Woodson (b: 27
May 1895) left his family in Virginia, and traveled to New York where he
started another family. That
was the story handed down in the Woodson family through the years.
We heard this tale at the local Fredericksburg PostNet store
where we went to have our genealogy monographs printed and bound. The young black man who waited on us
was so intrigued with our research he just had to share his own family story.
My hubby ended up grabbing a piece of paper so he could
write down some of the information.
A couple of days later, after several hours of diligent research, he
went back to the PostNet with a very different story about Charles Woodson.
Charles Woodson married Ruby
Carey (b: abt 1896) on 14 May 1923 in Buckingham County, Virginia. Charles and Ruby had four children:
Virginia Elizabeth b: abt 1924, Charles b: abt 1925, James Henry b: abt 1926,
and Robert b: abt 1929.
At some point later in the 1920s Charles, Ruby, James,
Robert and Ruby’s sister, Georgia Cary left Buckingham County, Virginia and
moved to New York. Virginia and Charles E. stayed in Virginia with their
grandparents. The family lived on
Lefferts Avenue, Brooklyn, New York and paid $16/month rent. Charles found work helping in a garage.
Apparently Ruby and her sister could not adjust to city
living and returned to Virginia with the children. Charles stayed on, living by
himself at 430 Vanderbilt Avenue in Brooklyn. He moved up to the position of
chauffer with a commercial truck company.
Charles served his country in World War I as a Private in
the U.S. Army. His draft card states he was a farmer and employed by his mother
and grandmother. He registered
again in 1942 for the WWII Draft. On that form he stated he had no telephone.
Charles died 10 December 1968 in Brooklyn and is buried in
Long Island National Cemetery, Section 2W, Site 3604.
There could be any number of reasons why this family lived
apart, and we may never know the answer.
But we do hope my husband’s research and subsequent report sheds a much
kinder light on Charles Woodson of Buckingham County, Virginia.
Saturday, November 17, 2012
My Irish Roots – Patrick and Maggie Conlon Doyle
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I believe this photo to be of: Maggie and Patrick Doyle Winnie and Mary Doyle |
Although from my paternal grandfather I have strong German
roots, and distinctly English roots through my mother’s side, I most closely
identify with my paternal grandmother’s Irish roots. I wonder why that is?
It may be because I grew up listening to my grandmother sing
her heart out with Too Ra Loo Ra Loo Ral (Tura Lura Lural) an Irish lullaby as
she ironed away in our farmhouse kitchen.
And although my grandmother, for whom I am named, lived six
months of each year with us until her death in October 1971, I knew little
about her growing up years and her family.
Since then I have learned her parents were Patrick and
Margaret (Maggie) Conlon Doyle. Patrick was born in April 1857 in Ireland; Maggie abt
1867 in Ireland. Patrick was
naturalized in 1887. Maggie
arrived in New York in 1890, and they were married in 1892. Patrick found work as a laborer, and
then joined the City of New York’s Sanitation Department as a street cleaner.
The 1910 Federal Census shows two daughters: Mamie (Mary)(b:
1899), my grandmother, and Winnie, born abt 1903. It is sad to see that Maggie reported she had had six children
with only two living. Their
Manhattan apartment seems to be a refuge for Irish “cousins.” In 1910 they have Thomas Conlon
(probably a relative of Maggie’s), and three Gormley brothers, who I cannot
connect to this family at this time.
By 1920 my grandmother is married to Harry Nunn, and they
are living with her parents with their son, Harold. Also in the apartment are
four Conlon cousins and niece Catherine Murphy.
I lose them now.
I cannot find Winnie again after 1910; I cannot find Patrick and Maggie
after 1920. My mother thought Maggie died sometime in the 1920s of diabetes. I have run through my Genealogy
Toolbox again to see if additional information has surfaced on this family. I haven’t covered all the bases, but
for some reason I now feel strongly that the photo above is of Patrick and
Maggie Doyle. The young woman on the right is my grandmother; the woman next to
her might be her sister, Winnie.
Friday, November 16, 2012
Follow Friday - Preserving History
Peter Feinman’s November 12 article on the New York History blog poses an interesting question. In the aftermath of Hurricane Sandy,
where survival was of the upmost importance for people as well as historical
archives, Mr. Feinman asks what responsibility do each of us shoulder for the
recording and preserving of history, then and now? How are we documenting history in the making?
Several years ago, after watching a DVD of historian David
McCullough’s presentation in Salt Lake City, my husband and I started keeping
our personal journals. We document
not only what is going on in our personal lives, but also document how we feel
about the events in the local community, the nation, and the world. We now need to plan ahead to assure that our
journals, as well as those of our ancestors that we have in our possession, are
preserved.
But is that enough? Mr. Feinman poses a number of
though-provoking questions, and I urge you to read through his essay and give
some thought to, “what it means to be an historian in our local
globalized-communities where history never stops.
Sunday, November 11, 2012
Sunday's Obituary - Willis C. Smith
Willis C. Smith Dies at home in Mecklenburg
Willis C. Smith died suddenly at his home in Mecklenburg,
Saturday morning, Jan. 10 [1925] aged 71 years. He is survived by his widow,
one son, Dr. Charles Smith of Detroit, Michigan, and one grandson, a son of Dr.
LeVerne Smith, who died a few years ago. He was a justice of the peace of the
Town of Hector, and had held other public offices during recent years. Funeral services were held from the
home at 2 p.m. Tuesday, Rev. E. M. Scholtz officiating. Interment in Laurel Hill Cemetery.
[Mr. Smith is buried alongside his parents, Alexander Smith
1812-1888 and Sarah M. Smith 1815-1893.]
Monday, November 5, 2012
Mystery Monday - Hattie Phoenix Gardner
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Hattie Phoenix Gardner - Age 88 May 20, 1962 |
I found this photo yesterday tucked into a pocket of a
3-ring binder, a binder I had not opened in several years. On the back of the photo is written,
“Hattie Gardner,” “May 20, 1962” and along the side, “Born May 24, 1874.”
In Jessie Tucker’s diaries I came across many references to
Aunt Hattie and George and Hattie.
I knew she was related, but how?
I then remembered Jessie’s diary entry about her wedding
day. It is interesting she writes in third person:
“Arthur Agard and
Jessie Tucker were married June 26, 1901 at the Tucker home in Enfield called
the “Tichenor Place.” … They were
married by the pastor of the Methodist Church, Enfield Center, the Rev. Wilcox
at 4 p.m. They went immediately to
Newfield to the Jay Phoenix home. Hattie Phoenix and George Gardner were to be
married at 7 p.m.”
Although I knew Hattie was Arthur's cousin, I needed to know exactly how. First I found George A. Gardner
(1875-1947) and Harriett M. Gardner (1874-1964) buried in Woodlawn Cemetery,
Newfield, New York. I then did a
Command F on Jessie’s diary transcription, and found that George and Hattie met
up with Jessie and Arthur each year at the Secord Family Reunion. That
was the link. Hattie’s mother
must have been a Secord; Arthur Agard’s mother was Sarah Secord.
In the 1860 Federal Census I found Arthur Agard’s mother,
Sarah Secord (b: 1854); she is the daughter of Charles and Eliza Secord. Sarah’s older sister was Susan
(b:1844). The Secords lived in Hector, Schuyler County, NY, not far from Enfield.
The 1900 Federal Census shows twenty-five year old Hattie
Phoenix living with her parents, J.B. and Susan Phoenix. They were living in
Starkey, Yates County, NY.
The Montour Falls Free
Press dated 20 June 1901 states:
“Cards are out announcing the marriage of Miss Hattie Phoenix which
occurs on the 26th of this month.”
I look forward to learning more about George and Hattie
Gardner.
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