Tuesday, December 29, 2020

Time Capsule Tuesday

 Since it's the end of a year, I thought I'd take a look back on what was going on in America at the end of 1920.  100 years ago.

December 29, 1920 was a Wednesday.

In the United States, the most popular baby name is Mary.  This name was given to 70,980 baby girls.  For the boys, it is John. This name was recorded 56,913 times in the year 1920.

The generation born between 1910-1925 is called the Greatest Generation.  People of this generation grew up in the midst of the Great Depression, then went on to fight in World War II.

The President of the United States was Woodrow Wilson.  The Vice President was Thomas R Marshall.

The decade of the 1920s is known as the Jazz Age and "The Roaring Twenties." It featured economic prosperity and carefree living for many.  The decade began with a roar.

The 1920s was a decade of change, when many Americans owned cars, radios, and telephones for the first time. The cars brought the need for good roads. The radio brought the world closer to home. The telephone connected family and friends. Some rural farmers were leaving their farms in order to receive a regular paycheck in the factories. Unions were on the rise. Women shortened, or "bobbed," their hair, flappers danced and wore short, fancy dresses, and men shaved off their beards.  

In 1920 the average life span in the U.S. was about 54 years, whereas today it's about 77.  In 1920 the average time a student spent in school each year was 75 days; today it's about 180 days.

The Eighteenth Amendment to the U.S. Constitution was passed in 1920, creating the era of Prohibition. The amendment forbade the manufacture, sale, or transportation of alcoholic beverages.  Many people ignored the ban, however.

The 1920s began with the last American troops returning from Europe after World War I. They were coming back to their families, friends, and jobs. Most of the soldiers had never been far from home before the war, and their experiences had changed their perspective of life around them.  After seeing Europe, they wanted some of the finer things in life for themselves and their families. World War I had left Europe on the decline and America on the rise.

Two events in 1920 kicked off an era of change in America.  The Nineteenth Amendment was passed, giving women the right to vote. And the first commercially licensed radio broadcast was heard from KDKA in Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania.  

1920 Prices

Bread:  $0.11/loaf

Milk: $0.58/gal

Eggs:  $0.39/dozen

Car: $345

Gas: $0.30/gal

House: $6,296

Stamp: $0.02/each

Average Income: $1,130/year


Top Songs for 1920:

The Love Boat by Gene Buck

Margie by Benny Davis

Whose Baby Are You? by Anne Caldwell

La Veeda by Nat Vincent

Avalon by Al Jolson       

 


Japanese Sandman by Raymond Egan

Mah Lindy Lou by Lily Strickland

Whispering by Malvin Schoenberger


Top Books in 1920:

The Age of Innocence by Edith Wharton

The Frontier in American History by Frederick Jackson Turner

Main Street by Sinclair Lewis


Top Movies of 1920:

Outside the Law directed by Tod Browning

The Mark of Zorro directed by Fred Niblo and starring Douglas Fairbanks

The Last of the Mohicans directed by Clarence Brown and Maurice Tourneur and starring Barbara Bedford.


People Born on December 29:

1800 - Charles Goodyear, Inventor

1808 - Andrew Johnson, Raleigh, North Carolina, 17th President (1865-69) (Unionist)

1936 or 1937 - Mary Tyler Moore, Brooklyn, New York, Actress (Mary Tyler Moore, Ordinary People)


Source:  Ncpedia.org, 1920: a Decade of Change, by Barrett A. Silverstein, ncpedia.org/history/20th-Century/1920s# 

Saturday, December 26, 2020

Saturday Night Genealogy Fun - What did (Genea-) Santa Bring You?

 From Randy (my newest cousin discovery!!) over at Genea-Musings:

it's Saturday Night 
time for more Genealogy Fun!!!



Your mission, should you decide to accept it, is to:

(1)  What gift(s) did (Genea-) Santa bring you this Christmas season?

(2)  Tell us all about it in your own blog post, in a comment to this post, or in a post on Facebook.  

Here's mine:

Genea-Santa didn't make an appearance at my house this year... but good old St. Nick (Santa Claus) dropped off some goodies for me:

- A rainbow umbrella (which I have been wishing for forever!)

- A candle screen with a lighthouse scene.  The screen is clear other than the scene painted on it, so the light from the candle shines through.  I love lighthouses.

- A jump starter for my car.  So if I am somewhere and my battery goes dead, I can jump it off myself without having to ask a stranger for assistance.  It holds a charge for up to 6 months, and you can also charge your cell phone or tablet with it.

- A Blink Indoor Camera to add my my security "system."  I have 3 cameras on my system now.  Outside, the living room, and my bedroom.  Now I can add one to the dining room that will cover the front door.  

- An Echo Dot.  I already had 2 Google Assistants - one upstairs and downstairs.  However, Alexa can control my smart TV.  It will pull up Netflix and the series I want to watch for me.  Hands free!  

So as you can see, my Santa Mom was very good to me this year.  

I did make her a genea-gift.  I had taken all the family photos here to my house, so I made her a book with memories from her life.  She had forgotten some of the pictures even existed.  I think she liked it.  

Saturday, December 19, 2020

Saturday Night Genealogy Fun - Blog Caroling

  From Randy (my newest cousin discovery!!) over at Genea-Musings:

it's Saturday Night 
time for more Genealogy Fun!!!


Your mission, should you decide to accept it, is to:

(1)  Identify your absolute favorite Christmas or Holiday Song.

(2)  Share your favorite Christmas carol or Holiday song in your own blog post, in a comment to this post, or in a post on Facebook.  

(3)  For extra credit, post an audio or video of the carol or song (almost all are on YouTube) and the words to the song.  Add the background of the song and the artist(s) if you can find that information.

(4) Enjoy the memories and feelings that the carol or song brings to your heart and mind, and share them too!

Here's mine:

This is actually a hard topic for me.  I'm not a Christmas person.  I do not enjoy the rushing, the shopping, the agonizing over what to give someone, the cold weather, the decorating, none of it.  Seriously.   Now I do get in the spirt sometimes, and I have more this year than most.  But I still wasn't sure about picking a favorite Christmas song.  I tend to change the radio station every time a Christmas song comes on!  

However, I did go to YouTube and found some old favorites to share.  

I think I like songs that poke fun at ourselves or just plain fun songs.  So my favorite is Ray Stevens' "Santa Claus is Watching You."  It makes me smile and sing along.  And the "He's everywhere! He's everywhere!" cracks me up every time.



"Santa Claus is Watching You"
Written by Ray Stevens

Now baby doll, sweetie-pie, sugarplum
Honey-bunch, angel face
You know you better be good
And act like two fine lovers should
Be careful what you say and do
'Cause Santa Claus is watchin' you
He's everywhere, he's everywhere!

You'd better kiss and hold me tight
And give me good lovin' every night
'Cause you'll be sorry if ya make me blue
'Cause Santa Claus is watchin' you
He's everywhere, he's everywhere!

Well you may think you can sneak around
And get away with something but there ain't no way
'Cause Santa's no fool, he's really super cool
He's the secret head of the CIA
Eesh, Iish, crime don't pay
You can't do nothin' 'cause  you're never alone
He's even got a wire tap on your phone!

So baby if you ever do me wrong
Break my heart and leave me alone
When Christmas comes, you'll be crying too
'Cause Santa Claus is watch you
He's everywhere, he's everywhere!

Every Christmas Eve, he climbs on his sled full of toys
With fuel exhaust and side mirrors
The foxtails, the mud flaps, the leopard-skin seat covers
And spreads Christmas cheer to all good little girls and boys

Then he says "On Dsher, Dancer, Prancer, Vixen, Comet, Cupid,
Donner and Blitzen, and Bruce and Marvin, Leon,
Cletus and George, and Bill and Slick, and Do-right,
Clyde and Ace, and Blackie and Queenie, 
And Prince and Spot and Rover

So where's Rudolph
He's on a stakeout at your house!
You can run, you can hide, but you can't get away
Got binoculars focused on you everyday

So baby if you ever do me wrong
Break my heart and leave me alone
When Christmas comes, you'll be crying too
'Cause Santa Claus is watching you
He's everywhere, he's everywhere!

Yeah, Santa Claus is watchin' you
He's everywhere Lord have mercy!
Santa Claus has got his eyes all over you baby
It's over for you.  You better watch out woo!
Look out there Santa Claus is peepin' around the corner at you

You're in deep trouble, you know that?
It's over for your kind
You go sneakin' around here, you ain't gonna get away with it  
You understand? 
I mean you got to be true blue - through and through
Or Santa's gonna get you!

"Ray Stevens originally released "Santa Claus is Watching You" about 1962.  His very first music video was for this song, and it was shot in 1985.  

Other favorite Christmas songs (all link to a YouTube video):

* "You're a Mean One, Mr. Grinch" (original version)
* "Leroy the Redneck Reindeer" by Joe Diffie
* "Hard Candy Christmas" by Dolly Parton

This was actually fun, listening to and watching videos for all the Christmas songs.

Tuesday, December 15, 2020

Time Capsule Tuesday

 


My father passed away 12 years ago today.  Let's see what was going on in the U.S. in 2008 and on December 15.

It was a Monday.  2008 was a leap year.  2008 was designated as: International Year of Languages; International Year of Planet Earth; International Year of Sanitation; and International Year of the Potato.  

The U.S. economy faced the worst financial crisis since the Great Depression. The mortgage market collapsed, and the Dow Jones Industrial Average lost 33.8% of its value.

The President of the United States was George W. Bush.  The Vice President was Dick Cheney.  By December 15, the United States Presidential Election has taken place with Barack Obama defeating John McCain.


2008 Prices

Milk: $3.99/gal

Eggs:  $2.29/dozen

Car: $27,958

Gas: $3.39/gal

House: $238,880

Stamp: $.42/each

Average Income: $40,523/year

Minimum Wage:  $6.55/hour


The Top Hit Songs on December 15, 2008:

Live Your Life by T.I. featuring Rihanna

Roll With Me by Montgomery Gentry

Sex on Fire by Kings of Leon

Sandcastle Disco by Solange


Top Books in 2008:

The Appeal by John Grisham

Audacity of Hope by Barack Obama

Eat, Pray, Love by Elizabeth Gilbert

The Story of Edgar Sawtelle:  A Novel by David Wroblewski

Twilight series:  New Moon by Stephanie Meyer


Most Popular Feature Films of 2008:

The Dark Knight

Mamma Mia!

Twilight

Iron Man

Forgetting Sarah Marshall


Most Popular TV Shows in 2008:

American Idol

Dancing with the Stars

CSI: Crime Scene Investigation

NCIS


Happenings on December 15, 2008:

It was a slow news day.  

* The winner of the 74th Heisman Trophy Award was Sam Bradford, Oklahoma, Quarterback.

* Hundred of thousands of houses in Maine, Massachusetts, New York, and New Hampshire are left without electricity after an ice storm.


Sunday, December 13, 2020

Saturday Night Genealogy Fun - Your Santa Claus Memories

 From Randy (my newest cousin discovery!!) over at Genea-Musings:

it's Saturday Night (on a Sunday afternoon!) 
time for more Genealogy Fun!!!

Come on, everybody!   Join in and accept the mission and execute it with precision.

(1)  Answer these questions:

- Did you ever send a letter to Santa Claus?
- Did you ever visit Santa and "make a list?"
- Do you still believe in Santa Claus?
- When did you find out "the truth" about Santa Claus?

(2)  Tell us all about it in your own blog post, in a comment to this post, or in a post on Facebook.  

Here's mine:

- Did you ever send a letter to Santa Claus?

I don't remember ever sending a letter to Santa Claus.  I checked with my mom, and she doesn't remember me sending one either.

- Did you ever visit Santa and "make a list?"

I have visited Santa exactly three times in my life that I know about or can remember.

The first one was taken at a department store in downtown Jacksonville, Florida when I was about 6 years old, so circa 1973:


Mom said I was very scared, but it seems I hid it fairly well for the picture.

The second time was after we moved to Swainsboro, Georgia.  I think I must have been about 8, so circa 1975.  I remember it was taken at the Western Auto.


The third time I had my picture made with Santa was just last year.  Mom was visiting me here in North Carolina, and we drove to see the lights at Hill Ridge Farms in Youngsville.  It was all my idea to get a picture with Santa.



I don't believe I ever made a list for Santa, but I remember pouring over the Sears & Roebuck catalog and bending down the pages for everything I wanted!

- Do you still believe in Santa Claus?

Why yes I do.  See picture from last year, above.  

- When did you find out "the truth" about Santa Claus?

I don't remember.  I mean, I was a pretty smart kid, and I was raised as an only child, so I am sure I saw and heard more than I should, but I don't remember a distinctive moment.  I think once I figured it out, I didn't change my attitude much, cause as I said, I know Santa is real.

The interesting thing that I did not learn until after my father passed away in 2008, is that my parents had a difference in upbringing and beliefs when it came to Santa Clause.  My mother was raised in a strict church, and her parents did not play Santa.  As a matter of fact, she was told right from the beginning that there is no Santa.  She did not want me told about Santa and keep up that belief for ever how many years of my childhood it would last.  My father, on the other hand, wanted me to have that experience.  So I was raised believing in Santa.  I'm actually glad I was.  

HO, HO, HO!!  Merry Christmas!

Tuesday, December 8, 2020

Time Capsule Tuesday

 


Today is my first cousin's, Cherry, Birthday.  She was born in 1963.  Let's see what was going on in the United States on this date 57 years ago.

It was a Sunday.  1963 was the last year of the Baby Boomers generation.  This day was 20,820 days ago.

In the United States, the most popular baby name is Lisa.  This name was given to 56,037 baby girls. For the boys, it's Michael.  This name was recorded 83,789 times in 1963.  

The President of the United States is Lyndon B Johnson, who had become president only about two weeks earlier when President John F. Kennedy was assassinated in Dallas, Texas.  Because of this, there was no Vice President.  


1963 Prices

Bread:  $.21/loaf

Milk: $1.04/gal

Eggs:  $.96/dozen

Car: $2,300

Gas: $.30/gal

House: $19,300

Stamp: $.05/each

Average Income: $6,998/year

Minimum Wage:  $1.25/hour


The Top Hit Songs on December 8, 1963:

Dominique by The Singing Nun 

I'm Leaving It Up To You by Dale & Grace

Everybody by Tommy Roe


Top Books in 1963:

Six Easy Pieces by Richard P. Feynman

The Making of the English Working Class by E. P. Thompson

A Wrinkle in Time by Madeleine L'Engle


Academy Award Winners of 1963:

Best Picture:  Tom Jones, Directed by Tony Richardson

Best Actor:  Sidney Poitier in Lilies of the Field

Best Actress: Patricia Neal in Hud


On TV in 1963:

Alfred Hitchcock Presents

Perry Mason

Bonanza

The Beverly Hillbillies

The Flintstones

The Dick Van Dyke Show

The Twilight Zone

Gunsmoke

The Ed Sullivan Show

The Fugitive

The Andy Griffith Show


Hot New Toys in 1963:

Mouse Trap

Easy-Bake Oven

Bowl-A-Matic


People born on December 8:

1765 - Eli Whitney, inventor (Cotton Gin)

1925 - Sammy Davis Jr, New York, NY, singer/dancer/actor (Ocean's 11, Candy Man)

1943 - Jim Morrison, Melbourne, FL, singer (Doors)

1953 - Kim Basinger, Athens, GA, actress (9 1/2 Weeks, Batman)


Happenings on December 8, 1963:

* Pan Am Flight 214 was in a holding pattern at an altitude of 5,000 feet, awaiting clearance to land at Philadelphia, when it was struck by lightning at 8:58 p.m.  The bolt, which struck the left wing of the Boeing 707 jet, ignited the mixture of jet fuel and kerosene that was in the reserve fuel tank in the wing, triggering an explosion that ignited the center and right reserve tanks as well.  The left wing broke apart, and Flight 214 crashed near Elkton, Maryland, killing the 73 passengers and 8 crew members. As a result of the disaster, the FAA would require all passenger jets to install "static discharge wicks" to dissipate the effects of a lightening strike, and to cease further use of the inexpensive fuel mixture in favor of a safer jet fuel.

* Frank Sinatra Jr, the 19-year-old son of the famous singer, was kidnapped from his room at Harrah's Lake Tahoe in Stateline, Nevada.  Three men entered the room at 9:30 p.m., half an hour before the younger Sinatra was to open a show with the Tommy Dorsey band, forced him into their car, drugged him, and then drove him to Canoga Park, California.  From there, they called the elder Sinatra and demanded $240,000 ransom.  An amount close to that figure was dropped off in a small suitcase, and the kidnap victim was released, unharmed, on the San Diego Freeway, in the early morning hours of December 11th.  


Cherry, if you're reading this, HAPPY BIRTHDAY!!, and I miss hearing from you.  

Saturday, December 5, 2020

Saturday Night Genealogy Fun - Your 2020 "Dear Genea-Santa" Letter

 From Randy (my newest cousin discovery!!) over at Genea-Musings:

it's Saturday Night 
time for more Genealogy Fun!!!


Come on, everybody!   Join in and accept the mission and execute it with precision. Here's your chance to sit on Genea-Santa's lap (virtually) and tell him your Christmas genealogy-oriented wish list!

(1)  Write your 2020 Genea-Santa letter.  Have you been a good genealogy girl or boy? What genealogy-oriented items are on your Christmas wish list? They could be family history items, technology items, or things that you want to pursue in your ancestral quest.  

(2)  Tell us all about it in your own blog post, in a comment to this post, or in a post on Facebook.  

Here's mine:

Dear Genea-Santa,

I tried really hard to be a good girl, genealogy speaking, this year.  I added more names, facts, notes, and sources to my FTM database.  Thousands of relatives.  I've reached out to more new cousins.  I even found a link to the Mayflower!  

Thank you for the continuing gift of an Ancestry.com membership!  (Thanks, Mom!) Thank you for the Family Tree Maker software.  

Alas, there is still more that I need.  This year, some items I want for Christmas are...

* The FTM 2019 Companion Guide that I ordered way back in September!  I need this book to help me learn all I can and make the most of my FTM program.  I also need it to learn how to configure the reports I need.  It's complicated.

* A way to have internet access when I am out in the boondocks, searching a cemetery for ancestors.

* For my cousins to suddenly become motivated and share their family's story and info with me, such as names  and birth dates of children and grandchildren.  Their daughter-in-law's maiden name.  Where they were born.  Stories for this blog.  Anything to add to the tapestry of the family.

* A breakthrough on the Schwalls line...

* A membership to Newspapers.com.

* Someone who enjoys genealogy and history here in the Durham area that would be willing to ride up to 3-4 hours just to visit a cemetery with me.

Thank you, Genea-Santa, for listening to my wish list.  It's been a rough year for everyone, so it is going to be extra wonderful to see you spread cheer this season.  

Merry Christmas!

Saturday, November 28, 2020

Saturday Night Genealogy Fun - Which Ancestor Am I Most Thankful For?

  From Randy (my newest cousin discovery!!) over at Genea-Musings:

it's Saturday Night 
time for more Genealogy Fun!!!


Your mission, should you decide to accept it, is to:

(1)  We celebrated Thanksgiving in the United States this week, and my thoughts turn to my ancestors.  I pondered, "Which ancestor am I most thankful for?"  

(2)  Tell us all about it in your own blog post, in a comment to this post, or in a post on Facebook.  

Here's mine:

Which ancestor am I the most thankful for? Wow!  I had to do some hard thinking on this one.  I thought about my mother, of course.  But I don't think of her as an ancestor yet.  Could it be her father, my Pop Pop, who left behind the steno pad of family names and connections that led me to this wonderful obsession? Could it be my newest ancestor discovery - Stephen Hopkins who came over on the Mayflower?  It could be any one of the Tapleys, Ranneys, or Drakes who came to this unknown frontier of a country in the 16th, 17th or 18th centuries and began a new life.  Or someone else entirely...

So after some careful deliberation, I decided that my pick for this challenge is Ethel Irene Ranney Tapley, my maternal grandmother.  


Why did I choose Grandma?  Well, she kept a diary.  I loved getting a glimpse into her life in 1933 and 1934.  (I shared her diary on this blog.  The first post is here.) She also kept a scrapbook with pictures of family members and friends with all of them labeled!  That is amazing right there!  The diary and scrapbook have given me information about her life that I would not have otherwise.  Also information about the times... Grandma was good at mentioning national disasters and other news in her diary.  

In addition, my grandmother demonstrated great strength and courage in her life.  When she was a child, she was uprooted and moved across the country (from Michigan to California) due to her sister's health. She married Hazel, who she had dated for years, only to have him cheat on her with one of her own friends.  That left her a single mother to her son, Bobby.  Just when she found love again with my grandfather, Charles, and had their daughter, Linda (my mom), Grandma became ill. While I do not know all of the symptoms she suffered with, I do know her coordination worsened until she could no longer walk and had to use a wheelchair the rest of her life.  (While she was never officially diagnosed, we believe she had multiple sclerosis or something similar.)  She lost her wonderful mother in 1960 and shortly thereafter was uprooted again and moved across the country (California to Florida to Georgia) because my grandfather, her husband, wanted to go back home, I guess.  

Grandma's sister, Alice, made the move with them.  She helped Pop Pop care for Grandma.  I cannot imagine how that felt for Grandma, to have to depend on others for absolutely everything.  To move across the room, to get in bed, to get out of bed, to go to the bathroom, to take a bath, to eat... everything.  When Pop Pop got sick and went in the hospital, she had to be put in a nursing home because without him, Alice couldn't care for Grandma by herself.  Then came the day we all had to walk in the nursing home and tell her that Pop Pop had passed away.  I believe at that moment Grandma made a decision.  She had the strength and courage to just "give up" and go be with Pop Pop.  She passed gracefully and gently in my father's arms.  On her own terms.

I am very thankful for my grandmother, Ethel Ranney Tapley and the legacy she left behind.


Thursday, November 26, 2020

On Board the Mayflower

 Happy  Thanksgiving!  

The Pilgrims celebrated the very first Thanksgiving 399 years ago in 1621.  After a very hard first year in the colony, the people had much to be thankful for.  Those that had survived the first winter in cold, snowy Massachusetts, a first harvest, and their new friends, the Native Americans who shared the celebration with them.  

2020 has been a very hard year.  A pandemic that has killed about 200,000 Americans; a very contentious presidential campaign; more racial division and violence that we could have thought possible; and for a lot of us, being unable to share Thanksgiving with our loved ones due to the fear of getting our elderly parents and grandparents or other health compromised family and friends sick.  Yet, each and every one has something to be thankful for this year.  Zoom.  Without it, we wouldn't even be able to see our family members' faces.  Food and a home.  At least we still have foot to eat and a roof over our heads.  Pets.  Miniature, fur-covered, full of personality someones who are here with us day in and day out to keep the loneliness at bay.    

I am also grateful for connections.  Connections to the past and where and who I come from.  Connections with "new" cousins around the country.  Connections with historical events and times.  It helps history come alive for me.  

Last weekend, I made an exciting discovery that has really made me realize the roots my family and I have put down in the United States.   I discovered that I am a direct descendent of someone who came over on the Mayflower in 1620.  


Let me just say that the possibility of being a Mayflower descendent never occurred to me.  Most of my family lines are from the southern U.S. and came into the country through Virginia.  But this is where it is handy to have "Yankee" ancestors!  The possibility was there.  Plus the New England colonies kept better records.  

I use a lot of Ancestry hints to help me with my research.  So while I was going through some hints last weekend, one came up that mentioned the Mayflower.  I was like, "What?!"  The last name was Snow, and that did sound familiar.  So I looked up the surname Snow in my Family Tree Maker 2019 database and there was Hannah Snow.  And I could trace her ancestors back to the Mayflower.  Then I searched for a list of passengers on the Mayflower on MayflowerHistory.com - still not believing it was possible.  Oh but it was.  My 10th great-grandfather and his daughter, my 9th great-grandmother, came over on the Mayflower.  

Here's the line from me all the way back:

Mary Elizabeth Tapley (me!)

Linda Irene Tapley (my mother)

Ethel Irene Ranney (1913-1973) (my grandmother)

Luther Boardman Ranney (1870-1943) (great-grandfather)

Comfort Ranney (1838-1920) (2nd great-grandfather)

Luther Boardman Ranney (1809-1890) (3rd great-grandfather)

Elizabeth Hubbard (1790-1868) (4th great-grandmother)

Thomas Hubbard II (1750-1803) (5th great-grandfather)

Hannah Snow (1720-1756) (6th great-grandmother)

Ebenezer Snow (unknown-1725) (7th great-grandfather)

Stephen Snow (bef. 1648-1705) (8th great-grandfather)

Constance Hopkins (abt. 1606-1677) (9th great-grandmother) came over on the Mayflower with her father, step-mother, and two siblings.

Stephen Hopkins (abt. 1581-1644) (10th great-grandfather) came over on the Mayflower with his wife and 3 children.  A 4th child was born during the voyage.  

Wow.  That's all I know to say.  Wow.

That's not all.  It turns out that Stephen Hopkins lived quite the life.  There is even a book written about him that I immediately ordered.  The book, Here Shall I Die Ashore - Stephen Hopkins: Bermuda Castaway, Jamestown Survivor, and Mayflower Pilgrim, was written by Caleb Johnson.  I haven't read it yet, but it teases even more on the back cover:

"By the time he {Stephen} turned forty, he had already survived a hurricane, been shipwrecked in the Bermuda Triangle, been written into a Shakespearean play, witnessed the famine and abandonment of Jamestown Colony, and participated in the marriage of Pocahontas.  He was once even sentenced to death! He got himself and his family onto the Pilgrims' Mayflower, and helped found Plymouth Colony. He signed the Mayflower Compact, lodged the famous Squanto in his house, participated in the legendary Thanksgiving, and helped guide and govern the early colonists."

Again, wow!  Can't wait to read the book!  


I will be writing and sharing more once I read the book and other information about the voyage and the Plymouth Colony.  

Saturday, November 21, 2020

Saturday Night Genealogy Fun - How Many Children Did Your Ancestors Have?

 From Randy over at Genea-Musings:

it's Saturday Night 
time for more Genealogy Fun!!!


Your mission, should you decide to accept it, is to:

(1)  Thinking about your direct ancestors back through 2nd great-grandparents - in other words, ancestors #2 to #31 on your ahnentafel chart - how many children did they have?  How many of those children lived long enough to marry?  How many died before age 10?

(2)  Tell us all about it in your own blog post, in a comment to this post, or in a post on Facebook.  

Here's mine:

#2 and 3:  My parents Gilbert Earl Tapley (1928-2008) and Linda Irene Tapley (1942-) had 2 children - a boy and a girl.  One of them married.  One of them died before age 10.

#4 and 5:  My paternal grandparents Lusion Keman Tapley (1870-1935) and Nealie Vermell Drake (1895-1970) had 6 children - 5 boys and 1 girl.  All of them grew up and married.

#6 and 7:  My maternal grandparents Charles Morgan Tapley (1907-1973) and Ethel Irene Ranney (1913-1973) had one child - a girl.  She grew up and married.

#8 and 9:  Great-grandparents James "Jim" Madison Tapley (1847-1912) and Elizabeth Rebecca "Becky" Page (1844-1924) had 12 children - 7 sons and 5 daughters.  Nine of the children grew up and married.  One never married.  Two children died before age 10.

#10 and 11: Great-grandparents William John Drake (1857-1927) and Emma Vermell Harrell (1867-1935) had 9 children - 4 sons and 5 daughters.  Eight of their children grew up and got married.  One died before he had that chance, but not before age 10.

#12 and 13: Great-grandparents Lusion Keman Tapley (1870-1935) and Mattie Schwalls (1877-1912) had 4 children - all sons.  Three grew up and married. One died before age 10.

#14 and 15: Great-grandparents Luther Boardman Ranney (1870-1943) and Bessie Alice Carter (1883-1960) had 3 children - one boy and two girls.  They all three grew up and were married.

#16 and 17: 2nd Great-grandparents George Washington Tapley (1814-aft 1880) and Elizabeth MNU (1824-aft 1880) had 7 children - 3 boys and 4 girls.  Three children grew up and got married. One never got the opportunity to marry because he was killed in the Civil War, and three children possibly died before age  10.

#18 and 19: 2nd Great-grandparents Solomon Page (1800-1860) and Elizabeth Caroline Scoggins (1802-1880) had 4 children (that I know of).  Of those, all 4 were girls and three grew up and married.  One I am not sure.

#20 and 21: 2nd Great-grandparents James William Drake (1829-1908) and Mary Ann R Brantley (1837-1891) had 9 children - 5 boys and 4 girls.  Four of the children grew up and got married.  One child died before age 10.  The others grew up, but never married.  

#22 and 23: 2nd Great-grandparents William Robert Harrell (1838-1908) and Catherine M Odom (1841-1875) had 3 children - 2 girls and a boy.  All off them grew to adulthood, but only two of them married.

#24 and 25: same as #8 and 9.

#26 and 27: 2nd Great-grandparents George W Schwalls Sr (1837-1908) and Lincelia E Claxton (1839-1882) had 7 children - 3 boys and 4 girls.  Six children grew up and got married.  One child died before age 10.

#28 and 29: 2nd Great-grandparents Comfort Ranney (1838-1920) and Mary Margaret Hesser (1842-1920) had 4 children - 2 boys and 2 girls.  They all grew up and married.

#30 and 31: 2nd Great-grandparents Charles Kelso Carter (1843-1916) and Sarah Schoonover (1840-1918) had one adopted daughter.  She grew up and married.

There were 36 male children and 30 of them married.  There were also 36 female children and 25 of them married.  (Does this indicate that men marry more often or that there were not enough men to go around?)

Two families had only one child; one family had two children; two families had 3 children; two families had 4 children; one family had 6 children; two families had 7 children; two families had 9 children; and 1 family had 12 children.  

That's a lot of family in four generations!

Saturday, November 14, 2020

Saturday Night Genealogy Fun - In Childhood, What Did You Save or Collect?

 From Randy over at Genea-Musings:

it's Saturday Night 
time for more Genealogy Fun!!!


Your mission, should you decide to accept it, is to:

(1)  In your childhood (and into the teenage years), what did you save or collect as a hobby or interest?  Do you still have them?

(2)  Tell us all about it in your own blog post, in a comment to this post, or in a post on Facebook.  

Here's mine:

My mother and I really had to dig deep to remember me collecting anything as a child.  But a few things finally floated to the top...

* Little Golden Books.  I have always loved to read.  I remember having the Little Golden Books, but I can't think of any specific titles.  However, I do know they were the truly classic ones (not the ones they are calling classic now like The Lion King.  We didn't know what a Lion King was back in the 1960s and 1970s!).  No, I probably had Bambi, Snow White, Cinderella, maybe even The Three Little Pigs.  I no longer have them.  I probably gave them to my great niece at some point.

*  Stamps.  I do not remember who got me started in stamp collecting, but it never went very far.  I wasn't that into it, and it cost money to buy the stamps for my collection, and I didn't have much of that.  I have a couple of small albums in storage.  

* Genealogy.  Yes, I started collecting family connections and dead people while I was a pre-teen.  I found my Pop Pop's steno pad of family history, and I took it and ran with it!  I was so into it that Ray Tapley, the cousin who wrote THE book on the Southern Tapleys, TAPLEY, A Family of Georgia and the South,  gave me a signed copy of the book when it came out as a thank you for my contributions!  And yes, I still have Pop Pop's steno pad, along with tons of other genealogy materials!

* 45 records.  I had a stack of them in a holder.  I had a stereo in my room (one of those old box ones that looked like a piece of furniture) that I played them on.  I had Alabama, Rupert Holmes (Escape), Sad Eyes by Robert John, Dr Hook, Andy Gibb, Donna Fargo, and many more.  I eventually got rid of them when I no longer had a record player and they became hard to find.

* Postcards.  I buy them wherever I go, and I keep every one I receive.  I still have some from my childhood.  The ones I get now, I use in my scrapbooking.