I do pick up my camera most every day (can't imagine what retirement would be like without my camera and PC to play with the pictures) and I get a great deal of enjoyment in working with it.
Tuesday, December 30, 2008
Advanced Studies in Bird Feeding
Or at least one step beyond 101. I've been reading a book about bird feeding and it's a lot more involved than I thought. Mike and Missy gave us the bird feeeder we have on the corner of the deck so I just bought a couple types of bird seed and we throw that in there and watch the birds. Fortunately it was the right type for most of the birds we see here. But there are special feeders and special seeds to attract particular birds. The easiest for us was to try a tube feeder with nyjer seed to attract goldfinches. It worked!! We've got four feeders now plus a suet feeder and we've got four kinds of seeds. We put the sunflower seeds in a squirrel proof feeder and use safflower seeds in the platform feeder and that cuts down the expense of feeding bird seed to squirrels. In the cold of winter, the birds appreciate the diet supplement and we've always got a bunch of them.
Monday, December 29, 2008
There is Always Always Always Something to be Thankful For
- Retirement
- The timely selling of the condo
- Our unmortgaged house and it's character
- 401k out of the market
- My camera, PC, & Picasa
- Time
- Birds in our backyard
- The yard & garden to work in
- The tools it takes to do so
- The trails to walk down
- Netflix
- Our big screen TV
- Quitman library
- Ancestory.com
- The internet and the answer to everything I want to know
- The maturing of East Texas (restaurants, coffee shops, etc.)
- Xander & Blake
- Justin's graduation from the fire academy, his election to Captain of the class, and his new job
- Magen's graduation with honors from NTCC and her passing of the state certification exam
- Aaron's graduation from International College of Bible Theology (2 years of study) and his pending homecoming
- Judge Jill
- The Patriot Guard Riders
- The USMC Honor Guard
- In East Texas you have to mention electricity which you learn to appreciate when you don't have it.
- And family!
Saturday, December 27, 2008
A Lunchtme Surprise
Thursday, December 25, 2008
Tuesday, December 23, 2008
The Patriot Guard Riders
The Patriot Guard Riders - "Standing For Those Who Stood For Us" - These are the guys that stood at attention for 45 minutes in the cold of yesterday. They are the ones that rode the bikes, and flew the flags. Right now, there are nine pages of posts on their website honoring Jacob. Here's the link to those posts.
Monday, December 22, 2008
Another Judge Willis!
See the announcement for December 22nd.
Sunday, December 21, 2008
Saturday, December 13, 2008
What Do Antiques & Sunrises Have in Common?
Wednesday, December 10, 2008
Don't Look Julie! It's Another Bird Post!
Another Junco
Mockingbird
Wednesday, December 3, 2008
Who is Jonathan Carter Cudd?
Jonathan Carter Cudd
> Carter C. Cudd
>> Joshua R. Cudd
>>> Robert Goodloe (Goodlow?) Cudd
>>>> John B. Cudd
>>>>> Elsie F. Cudd
>>>>>> Margaret Ann Miller
>>>>>>> James Roy Hayes
Jonathan Carter Cudd is a Revolutionary War ancestor for the Hayes family. His pay records appear in Loyalists in the Southern Campaign of the Revolutionary War by Mutie June Clark published in 1981 by the Genealogical Publishing Co., Inc. of Baltimore. In the earliest record, the six month period ending in December, 1780 he was listed as serving in "Colonel John Cotton's Regiment, Stevenson's Creek Militia, Ninety Six Brigade, Captain John Cotton's Company, those who came to Orangeburgh, SC, with Lieut. Colonel John H. Cruger"
The links to him aren't certain enough to get you a membership in the DAR but I'd say they have a better than 90% chance of being correct. The family is from South Carolina and the earliest primary source record I can find is the listing for Jonathan's grandson Joshua Robert Palmer Goodlow Cudd in the 1840 census of Union, South Carolina.
Tuesday, December 2, 2008
A Tough Leaf!
A couple days ago at breakfast I looked out the window and saw this leaf hanging hanging on to an otherwise bare branch in the sweet gum tree by the deck. For three mornings I told myself I should take a picture - but didn't. Yesterday I saw it flailing in the heavy winds, standing straight out being whipped like a flag, but hanging on. At lunch today I decided to take a picture and interruped the meal to do so. It's not as pretty as in the morning with the sun behind it but it did prove to be the last chance. I just looked out at the kitchen window and saw a bare branch.
Monday, December 1, 2008
Black & White Photographs
Friday, November 28, 2008
OK! This was a Really Good Thanksgiving!
Wednesday, November 26, 2008
I Know It's Just a Buzzard . . .
Monday, November 24, 2008
Mom Would Be Very Pleased!
The lady in the picture is Pearl (Cleveland) Wilson. She was a "pen-pal" of mom's. I believe that the arrangement started before mom married and I believe that it happened through Christian Science - but am not sure. Later, I also exchanged letters with her. Mom, of course, saved them and they're readily recognizable in stacks because of the blue stationary that she used. A few days ago I was going through some of mom's things again and came across one of these letters written on Jan. 1, 1970. In it, she updated mom on a book she she was finishing about Socrates. I decided to look up the book on the internet, found it, and bought it! The title is "The Living Socrates, The Man Who Dared to Question, as Plate Knew Him". I knew a bit about her but not much so looked her up. She never married. She taught "the language and works of Homer, Plato, and the Greek tragedies" at Hunter College in New York City. She wrote several books including "Wagner's Dramas and Greek Tragedy", demonstrating a serious interest in opera as well. There is an article from the November 11, 1912 New York Times (Julie-please note) announcing a series of lectures on the opera in conjunction with the opening of the opera season including four lectures on the works in Wagner's Ring Cycle. Pearl was giving two of these. Another in the four pages of hits on Google list her as being treasurer of the American Philological Association. She's listed as Dr. Pearl Cleveland Wilson in this one. On another she is writing about Greek gods in Eastern Star (don't know if she was a member). She's listed in the Who's Who of American Women in the first, second,and tenth editions.
Pearl's book on Socrates was published five years after the letter in 1975. She died the following year. In the jacket notes it says that her former colleagues and students "admire her almost classical serenity, glowing warmth, and unflagging concern with humanity". Mom - I think I'll even read the book!
Saturday, November 22, 2008
A Spring Planting Plan
Friday, November 21, 2008
Captain Justin Reyes!
Thursday, November 20, 2008
Monday, November 17, 2008
Another Bit of Family Nostalgia
This is about Aunt Maude's house. (Aunt Maude was my mother's father's half-sister. They had the same mother - Ida Deidamia Havens Littleford Kimberlin.) Aunt Maude lived in Dallas at 3221 Wendelkin Street. She taught music at the school right across the street from her home. Two of the fun things about visiting Aunt Maude were the presence of the big playground right across the street and the interesting house that she lived in. It was a big old house with lots of interesting features and rooms. This morning Glynda and I ate breakfast in our little nook and we observed that the nook would be just the right size to hold a twin bed and that reminded me of the room in Aunt Maude's house in the picture above. This room was on the second floor and was attached to the main bedroom. This was a sleeping room and it was filled up by the bed that was in it. This was before air conditioning and the only relief from summer heat was electric fans. This room is where she slept on those hot summer nights, open to the outside air on three sides.
You can see the location of the room in this picture of the whole house. (There are four people on the porch in this picture, one standing and three in a porch swing but the picture's not good enough for me to identify all of them but the one in the middle on the swing is Aunt Maude.) BTW - this picture and the one below are on post cards - something you could have done at the time - maybe an early version of Snap Fish.
Sunday, November 16, 2008
Julie Collage
I've been working on another litle project that involved a collage and in going through our pictures on Picassa I felt like I had to put together a collage of the Julie pictures I've taken over the last five years or so. My rule to myself while doing this was to include only close-up pictures of Julie by herself. I did have to let Kevin's back in for one of the shots. I had to let Jill in on one of them because I like this picture of Julie. And, of course, part of Hayden got in on the last one. (Don't forget the double-click to fill up your screen with this.)
Thursday, November 13, 2008
Moonset!
Wednesday, November 12, 2008
Another Revolutionary War Ancestor
Conrad Goodner
> David Goodner
>> Superior Goodner
>>> Blooming Cruse (BC) Goodner
>>>> Adeline Goodner
>>>>> James Ray Willis
He was born Nov. 29, 1756 in Hesse, Darmstadt, Germany and died Aug. 27, 1837 in Nashville, Illinois. He enlisted Nov. 1, 1778, at Hillsborough, Orange County,NC and served under Capt. John Griffy and Col. Thackson. (1). Both of these dates are confirmed in the U.S. Veterans Gravesites records and add the facts that he is buried in Liberty Cemetery, Nashville, Washington County, Ill and that he was a Private in the "Continental Line Revolutionary War". (2) He was placed on the pension roll on July 16, 1833 when he was 76 years old. (3) The book "The Goodner Family", an old but thoroughly researched book (I received a copy from dad), also says that he was a "waggoner" at the encampment of General Lincoln when the Battle of Stone Brier was fought on March 3rd, 1779. It also says that he was hospitalized in the Black Swamp due to an illness during the last three months of his service and that he was discharged in August, 1779. Further information from this souce says that Conrad suffered from a severe case of curvature of the spine that left him in severe pain and bedfast for the last seven year of his life and that he was buried in a vertical position.
(1) A Roster of Revolutionary Ancestors of the Indiana Daughters of the American Revolution.
(2) National Cemetery Administration, U.S. Veterans Gravesites, ca. 1775-2006.
(3) The Pension Role of 1835, Vol. IV.
Conrad also appears in the "Index of the Rolls of Honor (Ancestors Index) in the Lineage Books of the National Society of the Daughters of the American Revolution", the database "Revolutionary Soldiers Buried in Illinois", and the "Historical Encyclopedia of Illinois and History of St. Clair County" and a number of other sources.
(I hope the links work for you. I've got a membership to get to them and they may not.)
Friday, November 7, 2008
Another fall morning -
Friday, October 31, 2008
A Short Biography of Montreville Willis - but a really long post!
Montreville Willis was my fathers grandfather. He was the subject of a brief biography that appear in a book entitles Biographical Souvenir of the Sate of Texas, published in 1889. This is a collection of brief biographies of the common man. In 1941, one of his sons Thomas Jefferson Willis took the unusual step of writing an affadivit that was signed by him and notarized. The sole purpose of this document was to state his knowledge of his father's, Montreville's, family. These two documents, along with other genealogical research, enables me to write a brief biography considering Montreville as an ancestor.
Montreville had three brothers; Levaston, Lewis Hamilton, and Caswell. George died when Montreville was only six years old. Thomas Jefferson's affadivit states that Lewis Hamilton was a Captain in the Confederate Army and was killed in battle. He also states that it's believed that Caswell was also killed in that conflict, leaving only the two brothers Montreville and Levaston. We know for certain that both of these also served in the Civil War but more about that later.
Montreville lived in Clay County, Missouri until 1853, when he was twenty years old. He then went west to Sacremento, California. This was four years after the discovery of gold at Sutters Creek, California which is near Sacremento but it's not known if that contributed to his decision to go there. He stayed in California until 1859 when he returned home to Missouri.
Within a couple years, the War Between the States began. Missouri was a border state between the north and the south was one of the two states that had pro-southern and pro-northern govenments. Clay County is very near the southern border of the state and that's probably why both Montreville and Levaston joined the Confederacy. They both enlisted in the Fifth Division of the Missouri State Guard, Company B, Shank's Regiment, Shelby's Brigade. It is said that Montreville took part in numerous battles including Lexington, Oak Hill, andPea Ridge as well as other battles in Texas and Arkansas.
The following is a story from another Montreville descendent, Mary Louise Shultz:
Francis (Fannie) Womble Burkhead Willis
As for riding with Quantrill and the "James boys" (Google "Quantrill's Raiders" if you need to and see the Wikpedia entry.) - both William Quantrill and the James boys as well as the Younger boys, were all from southern Missouri. William Quantrill "developed a style of guerrilla warfare that terrorized civilians and soldiers alike" and some of the tactics used would be considered atrocities. He operated along the Missouri-Kansas border. The James-Younger gang did ride with Quantrill and that's where they learned some of the tactics they later employed as outlaws. In 1861, Quantrill was considered a hero. In 1863, with a raid in Lawrenceville, Kansas, it came to an end and the group was disbanded. We know that Montreville was released from the Confederate army in Little Rock Arkansas in May, 1865. So it's possible that between 1861 and 1865, Montreville joined the Missouri Guard, ended up in Arkansas and married, left the Guard and joined Quantrill riding with him for some unknown period, left Quantrill and rejoined his old unit, and fought to the end of the war when members of the southern army were "paroled".
Fannie died in Quanah in 1910 and Montreville died the following year. Both are buried in the Quanah cemetery.
1900 Census for Montreville Willis