Book of the day, which I am trying to catalog. "State of North Dakota
Dept of Public health statistical desk reference 1930-1935 Vol 2". This
is an original from the state, with hand written statistics in pen [red
and black] and pencil. For instance in 1930 they had 10 deaths from
Airplane accidents. As topic, state, public health, census? Suggestions
appreciated.
The saga of being a family researcher. Or as other family members say: a full time non-paying job.
Saturday, May 30, 2015
Saturday, May 23, 2015
Book of the day [and this does have Memorial Day attribution] published
by the Maryland Commission on the publication of the histories of the
Maryland volunteers during the civil war. History and roster of Maryland
volunteers, war of 1861-5. Vol 2, Press of Guggenheimer, Weil &
co., 1898-99, 285 pages. It was a discard of the Historical Society of
Frederick County and I bought it at Wonder Book and Video [Thanks!]
years ago. Now the impressive facts about this book. As volume 2 in the
set, it includes a listing of all personnel of the Navy, Marines and
the United States Colored Troops. It was interesting to read the names
of those in the USCT who were transferred to the Navy, but only the
Navy. Thanks to them and the descendants of those that served.
Thursday, May 14, 2015
Book of the day: An Order of Worship for the Reformed Church; Published Philadelphia by S R Fisher & Co in 1867.
Now the book isn't special for its contents which carry instructions for church services, but for an inclusion on page 17.
This book printed in 1867, belonged to Cordelia Knode, of Hagerstown, Maryland. She was a daughter of Israel and Sarah Kuhn Knode, and a great-aunt of Peggy Angel Wood of Chevy Chase and "Woodbyrue" Darnestown-Seneca, Maryland
And,
The Operator Johnstown
Message I
The torrent poured across the plain,
lapped torrents from the hills o'erhead;
"It looks as though true going to rain,"
The laughing operators said;
And then she wired-she loved her joke-
"That reservoir may soon be broke,
You'd better all get out your arks!"
They laughed, forsooth, to hear her larks!
Message II
"There is a flood, and here's your proof
We're telephoning from the roof!
Flee for your lives! The muddy foam
Engulfs already many a home;
The waters at our window-sills-
The dam has broken through the Hills!"
Message III
"This is my last message"-a hush
Along the wire; a sudden rush
Of waters-"Help!" Too late-they've swept
Where 2 brave women dying wept,
And weeping died, if they might save new line
The prey of Condemaugh's wild wave!
New York world.
Now the book isn't special for its contents which carry instructions for church services, but for an inclusion on page 17.
This book printed in 1867, belonged to Cordelia Knode, of Hagerstown, Maryland. She was a daughter of Israel and Sarah Kuhn Knode, and a great-aunt of Peggy Angel Wood of Chevy Chase and "Woodbyrue" Darnestown-Seneca, Maryland
And,
The Operator Johnstown
Message I
The torrent poured across the plain,
lapped torrents from the hills o'erhead;
"It looks as though true going to rain,"
The laughing operators said;
And then she wired-she loved her joke-
"That reservoir may soon be broke,
You'd better all get out your arks!"
They laughed, forsooth, to hear her larks!
Message II
"There is a flood, and here's your proof
We're telephoning from the roof!
Flee for your lives! The muddy foam
Engulfs already many a home;
The waters at our window-sills-
The dam has broken through the Hills!"
Message III
"This is my last message"-a hush
Along the wire; a sudden rush
Of waters-"Help!" Too late-they've swept
Where 2 brave women dying wept,
And weeping died, if they might save new line
The prey of Condemaugh's wild wave!
New York world.
Thursday, April 30, 2015
Book of the day:
The Disposal of the Dead, edited by C J Polson, published 1953 by English Universities Press Limited, St Paul's House, Warwick Square, London. Authors, besides Polson, are listed as Brittain and Marshall.
Sections Historical Information, Mediate disposal, cremation, burial, exhumation, embalming, funeral direction.
VERY nice index for a subject you didn't want to know about. I think the sequence of chapters odd. Embalming information follows the section on exhumation.
No Photographs.
The Disposal of the Dead, edited by C J Polson, published 1953 by English Universities Press Limited, St Paul's House, Warwick Square, London. Authors, besides Polson, are listed as Brittain and Marshall.
Sections Historical Information, Mediate disposal, cremation, burial, exhumation, embalming, funeral direction.
VERY nice index for a subject you didn't want to know about. I think the sequence of chapters odd. Embalming information follows the section on exhumation.
No Photographs.
Wednesday, April 29, 2015
75% done organizing book collection along LOC [Library of Congress] coding.
Put a notice into Ancestorcloud saying I might be interested in doing lookups. If questions from readers involve any of the county Heritage books I have, I might be able to make suggestions about data.
Interesting books: 1948 25th anniversary graduation book for Harvard, which means the class itself graduated in 1923. The book includes class photographs.
Another goodie, the 1965 Civil War commemorate Register of graduates of the United States Military Academy. It lists all alumni of the school since 1802; and for those with relatives there is a 'genealogy' section, for fathers, grandfathers, etc.
Put a notice into Ancestorcloud saying I might be interested in doing lookups. If questions from readers involve any of the county Heritage books I have, I might be able to make suggestions about data.
Interesting books: 1948 25th anniversary graduation book for Harvard, which means the class itself graduated in 1923. The book includes class photographs.
Another goodie, the 1965 Civil War commemorate Register of graduates of the United States Military Academy. It lists all alumni of the school since 1802; and for those with relatives there is a 'genealogy' section, for fathers, grandfathers, etc.
Thursday, April 9, 2015
Taking time out!
So much has changed; retired but the list of projects hasn't gotten any smaller.
Currently living in Durham, NC. First week of April and there are hummingbirds and salamanders.
Currently living in Durham, NC. First week of April and there are hummingbirds and salamanders.
Monday, April 30, 2012
Tiffin landmark's steps shattered
Crews start to demolish Seneca Co. Courthouse
Protesters bewail beginning of end, officials' failure to act
BY JENNIFER FEEHANBLADE STAFF WRITER
It was the first blow to the downtown building's sandstone exterior since front-end loaders were brought on site last week.
"It's like mourning. You're waiting for that loved one to die," said Ruth Brown of Tiffin as she watched the work through the chain-link fence.
PHOTO GALLERY: Seneca County Courthouse demolition
Ms. Brown was one of 44 Seneca County taxpayers who filed a last-minute lawsuit against county commissioners with the Ohio Supreme Court and asked the high court to halt the demolition of the courthouse. The court denied the residents' appeal for intervention, and the reality of demolition is sinking in.
"We tried to save it," Ms. Brown said. "You can only do what you can do. I'm just disappointed."
Not everyone has given up.
"It only takes one judge to stop this," Lenora Livingston said, referring to the possibility that one of the county's common pleas court judges could order the commissioners to stop demolition and renovate the courthouse as usable space for the courts.
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