Tuesday, July 31, 2018

My Cousin was an Interior Designer in Los Angeles

Adele Faulkner designed this room for Carmen Miranda.  Image from AD in the '40s.

My 3rd cousin 1x removed, Adele E. Devoe Loyd (died Adele Faulkner Quinn) was a very successful interior designer and syndicated columnist:
Orange County Register (Santa Ana, CA)
Wednesday, October 25, 2000
Edition 1, page: Obituaries
by Robin Hinch 
Adele Faulkner-Quinn lived life by her own design - An eye for style and a heart for those in need made her more than whole
Adele Faulkner-Quinn used to say that "a life without productivity is an unhappy life.'' By that standard, Adele was deliriously happy. 
Whether at work as a nationally known interior designer or as a longtime volunteer for Interval House Crisis Shelters, she always had a new project in the works well before completing the first. 
She was a whirlwind of activity -- both physical and mental -- who exhausted the far-younger shelter staff members (they say a day with Adele was like having the blood drained out of them) and regarded sleep as a necessary evil. So she did it in short shifts: four hours of sleep, six hours of work. 
After retiring from her design company, Faulkner and Associates in Los Angeles, she spent the next 20 years guiding the construction, renovation or redesign of Interval House's four Orange County facilities for battered women and their children. Her eye for detail and concern for the project's clients had her calling Interval House staff at midnight to ask things like, "Where do they bathe the toddlers?'' as she pondered the best way to arrange the rooms. 
No one who met Adele forgot her, and no one slipped away without learning something from her, from design tips to remembering to dust the tops of door frames (she was big on cleaning.) 
Few got away without donating something. Each time she entered her bank, she'd ask the manager, "When are you going to give those sofas to Interval House?'' They are now in Quinn Residence, named after her. 
On job sites, she sometimes complained to the contractor about inferior materials. He'd retort, "Well, you ARE getting them free.'' 
She'd give him a stony look and say evenly, "When you're giving to the less fortunate, when you're doing work for those that need our help, you need to give the same quality -- if not better -- as for your very best client.'' 
They did, and later thanked her for the honor. 
Adele was 88 when she died Sunday. 
She grew up in Southern California going to building sites with her contractor father. She taught herself architecture and design, and had such a collection of books on the subjects that libraries were vying for it. 
She taught at the UCLA School of Design for many years, in addition to designing home interiors for the rich and famous, including the Mattel (toy) family and comedian Harold Lloyd. 
She also worked for Carmen Miranda -- until she asked Adele to make casts of her legs and use them as lamps. "That,'' said Adele, "is where I draw the line.'' 
Her name appeared frequently in architectural digests -- and also in L.A. gossip columns. 
She was a colorful and eccentric figure in her exotic outfits and outlandish hats. 
She was married four times, the fourth to Bill Quinn, former editor of the Seal Beach Journal. They lived in an artfully converted fishing shack in Sunset Beach and were married 25 years when he died of cancer in 1988. Her only son died of cancer in 1990. 
It was through Bill, who covered its opening, that she learned of Interval House. She began volunteering in 1983, and it became the focus of her life. 
She solicited donations, wrote proposals, wrote a guide to cleaning the houses (if you didn't know how to clean when you entered Interval House, you most certainly knew when you left) and did the chore charts. No job was too menial for Adele. 
She was vain, funny and direct. When hospitalized after an accident, she was demanding blueprints in the emergency room. Her hair was always coifed and lipstick freshly applied. 
She told staffers they should always apply excellence to what they were doing. "Whether buying toilet paper or doing the chore chart, do it like a master,'' she'd say. 
She turned each of the shelters into a work of art -- carrying out the international theme of the Interval House program. She always said she wasn't a counselor, but many clients found her to be both an inspiration and a wonderful listener. 
Adele took pride in her appearance and in her work to the very end. If she had placed a silk ficus, and returned to find it moved, she promptly returned it to the spot she had chosen. 
She "adopted'' all her friends, calling one her adopted daughter, another her adopted son. Carol Williams, executive director of Interval House and many years her junior, she called her adopted mother. 
Adele never hesitated to quip that security was having a mother younger than you are.

Adele was a great granddaughter of Marquis Hartley (1836-1924), an older brother of my 2nd great grandfather James Monroe Hartley (1846-1904).




© 2018 Copyright, Christine Manczuk, All Rights Reserved.

Monday, July 30, 2018

Monday Is for Mothers: Anna (Webb) Slater - Dry Creek, Niwot, Colorado

Obviously on this particular day Dry Creek wasn't living up to its name.

[Courtesy of Olive Slater-Kennedy]

In 2012 Dry Creek Trail was opened to hikers, bikers and equestrians. You can learn more about the area here.


© 2018 Copyright, Christine Manczuk, All Rights Reserved.

Sunday, July 29, 2018

Sunday Drive: Whiskey Run, Oregon Coast - Summer, 1955

This sheltered campsite, far enough back from the beach to be comparatively warm, was one of our favorite places to stay. (And true my parents' frugal habits, it was free.)



In those days the road to Whiskey Run wasn't paved.


 And in one area there were several choices, so Dad always checked out the route on foot to see which one appeared to be the best. We never got stuck in the sand.



Here's a photo of me on my way down to the beach in search of agates and petrified wood which was the attraction this area had for us.

[All photos from my personal collection]

Whiskey Run's history dates back to the early 1850s when gold was discovered in its black sands.


TripAdvisor rates this beach at 4.5--you can see current photos of it here.



© 2018 Copyright, Christine Manczuk, All Rights Reserved.

Saturday, July 28, 2018

Experience With My First Location Report on Legacy 9

A screenshot of some of my Worden relations, from my Ancestry tree.  Up until I had Legacy this was the only way to systematically see where people were, and then it was only birth/death dates.  If I wanted to see any other place where they had been I had to visit each profile individually.

It's just one of those days when things refuse to go as I wish.  The location report I had hoped to blog about today is still generating and is only at about 37 percent after running continuously since 4 p.m. (it is now after 11 p.m.).  I'm sure it is taking this long because I have so many unique locations in my tree.

Since I don't have much report about locations based on the location report, I did want to say that I'm disappointed that I am among those who are unable to see mapping through Legacy 9, apparently due to an API conflict between Legacy and Bing maps.  When I first purchased the program I was able to see maps, but that has since stopped.  This is annoying to say the least.  I might have to purchase another program eventually if the folks at Legacy don't figure this out (this has been a known problem since 2014--it is now 2018).  C'mon, people.




© 2018 Copyright, Christine Manczuk, All Rights Reserved.

Friday, July 27, 2018

School Days: Niwot High - 1934

As you can see from the list on the back of this class photo, my uncle James Slater is in the middle of the back row, right behind the principal H.D. Parrett.

[Courtesy of Olive Slater-Kennedy]


Last month I posted another 1934 class picture from Niwot that included my other maternal uncle Jack Slater.

This paragraph describing Niwot is taken from the 1932 Polk's Boulder County (Colorado) Directory.

[Ancestry.com - U.S. City Directories, 1822-1995]



© 2018 Copyright, Christine Manczuk, All Rights Reserved.

Thursday, July 26, 2018

No Obituary Found for my Grandmother's Sister Alvira Fister

Alvira Fister, January 28, 1918 - July 29, 1924.  Courtesy of Tom Cairns.

Four years ago I posted about my great aunt Alvira Fister, my grandmother Margaret (Fister) Hartley's sister, who died at 6-years-old of whooping cough in Plano, IL in the summer of 1924.  I have not found an obituary for her yet.



© 2018 Copyright, Christine Manczuk, All Rights Reserved.

Wednesday, July 25, 2018

Information Concerning John W. Avery - Mississippi, 1872

A while back Christine posted about our ancestor John Warren Avery and the threats he received from the local Ku Klux Klan, whose members included his brothers and cousins. He received death threats after he testified before a grand jury in Oxford, Mississippi, in 1871 and removed himself and his family from Winston County as a result.

To follow up that story, here's a 1872 newspaper clipping showing how John was regarded by his neighbors in light of his actions, using epithets such as "a simon pure unadulterated scallawag of the meanest type, the double distilled quintessence of all villainy."

[9 May 1872, Page 1 - The Clarion-Ledger at Newspapers.com]


The author of this piece of invective alluded to a statement allegedly made by John's mother Mary (Thornton) Avery who,.having died on December 31, 1871, would not have been available to affirm or deny it.

Even John Warren Avery's military service as a private in the 35th Mississippi Infantry Regiment Volunteers was disparaged and his courage impugned.*



*You can read about his military record here.



© 2018 Copyright, Christine Manczuk, All Rights Reserved.

Tuesday, July 24, 2018

Top 10 Locations On My Family Tree

This is a list of the top 10 most "popular" unique locations for people on my family tree. Screenshot from my "Family File Statics" report in Legacy 9.

Although I have over 29,000 unique locations in my family tree database, the above shows the top 10 most inhabited places for people who are either related to me by blood or by marriage.

I am a little surprised that the state of Iowa isn't on there, but Fairview Township, Jones, Iowa is (obviously I am related to a lot of people from that one place).

I am not surprised by the 2 locations (York and Hopewell Township) in York County, Pennsylvania, since I felt like I spent forever on my location cleanup there.  People from there generally seemed to stay there, with only an occasional individual or family group leaving (as my Frederick Grove/Leah Bixler did in the 1830s).



© 2018 Copyright, Christine Manczuk, All Rights Reserved.

Monday, July 23, 2018

Monday Is for Mothers: Violet Cora (Porter) Cook, Her Son Calvin & Dallas Baby Camp - 1927

Violet is one of my paternal grandmother's sisters which makes her my great aunt. As far as I can tell she married a man named Roy or Ross Cook sometime between 1925, when she was listed in the Dallas City Directory and 1927 when Calvin was born in Wichita Falls, Texas.

As you can see in Calvin's birth certificate, his father's given name is listed as Roy (or possibly Ray).

[Ancestry.com. Texas, Birth Certificates, 1903-1932 [database on-line]. Provo, UT, USA: Ancestry.com Operations, Inc., 2013. Original data: Texas Department of State Health Services. Texas Birth Certificates, 1903–1932. iArchives, Orem, Utah.]

Although Roy (or Ray) Cook isn't an uncommon name and there are several candidates for Calvin's father, I'm not prepared to claim that any of them are the right man.

Baby Calvin only lived for one month and 1 day before his death in Dallas. According to the death certificate he was born prematurely.

[Ancestry.com. Texas, Death Certificates, 1903-1982 [database on-line]. Provo, UT, USA: Ancestry.com Operations, Inc., 2013. Original data: Texas Department of State Health Services. Texas Death Certificates, 1903–1982. Austin, Texas, USA.]


What caught my eye was the place of death, Dallas Baby Camp. So I decided to do a bit of research which led me to a 1947 newspaper clipping about its history.

[3 Jan 1947, Page 3 - The Courier-Gazette at Newspapers.com]


I also located this article published five years ago by the Dallas Morning News which gives a more comprehensive overview of the Baby Camp.

[Dallas News powered by the Dallas Morning News]


The next public record for Violet is the 1930 U.S. Census where she's a widow living in her mother's house (along with several of her sisters, including my grandmother and my father).


In the next census ten years later, Violet, now single, was still living with her mother and extended family. She died in 1944 and here's her death certificate which states that she died of encephalitis of 15 years duration which would put the onset of the disease back to 1929. Perhaps that's why in both the 1930 and 1940 federal enumerations no occupation is listed for Violet.

[Ancestry.com. Texas, Death Certificates, 1903-1982 [database on-line]. Provo, UT, USA: Ancestry.com Operations, Inc., 2013. Original data: Texas Department of State Health Services. Texas Death Certificates, 1903–1982. Austin, Texas, USA.]





© 2018 Copyright, Christine Manczuk, All Rights Reserved.

Sunday, July 22, 2018

Sunday Drive: Cape Perpetua, Oregon - 1954

Here we are, seven-year-old me standing next to the Forest Service sign, while Mother watched from the truck. Whenever our summer trips took us to Washington state, we always stopped at Cape Perpetua.*

[From my personal collection]


*You can find out more about Cape Perpetua in one of my previous posts.

© 2018 Copyright, Christine Manczuk, All Rights Reserved.

Saturday, July 21, 2018

Some Notes on Ival Lenard Fister (1915-1984)

Ival Fister was one of my grandmother's brothers. Courtesy of Tom Cairns.
Ival Lenard Fister (April 4, 1915 - July 6, 1984) is one of my grandmother Margaret (Fister) Hartley's brothers.  Most of what I know about him, unfortunately, revolves around his criminal record.

The only personal anecdote from my father about Ival was that Ival once came to San Diego (in the 1960s probably), looking for money, and my grandfather George Hartley Jr. gave him some with the stipulation that he not come around anymore.

Ival's Christmas card, date unknown, probably 1930s.  Courtesy of Tom Cairns.
Ival did make the papers.  I don't know what problems he had before these newspaper stories, but it struck me that they happened only 9 months after his mother Mette Karine "Mary"s death (his father Ben Fister had died a year earlier):


Daily Illinois States Journal (Springfield)
8 Sep 1935, Sunday
Page 9, col 4
from GenealogyBank 
Escapes Jail
Ival Fister, 20-year-old prisoner charged with housebreaking, escaped from the Morgan county jail this morning by hiding behind a cell block and taking his bid for freedom while the turnkey and assistant turnkey were serving the morning rations.
A search was soon started for the youth, who in July confessed to several house robberies here.  He was being held under bond awaiting action from the November grand jury.

Daily Illinois State Journal (Springfield)
21 Nov 1935, Thursday
Page 19, col 8
from GenealogyBank
Ival L. Fister, 21, who escaped from the Morgan county jail on Sept. 7, has been arrested by police at St. Joseph, Mo.  His identity was established by means of fingerprints sent ot Washinton, D. C. previous to Fister's jail break here.
The fugitive was arrested at St. Joseph, Mo., on charges of attempted robbery.  State's Attorney W. B. Absher stated today that if Fister secured an acquittal in Missouri, he will be returned here to face a charge of house burglary.

Daily Illinois States Journal (Springfield)
12 Dec 1935, Thurs
Page 13, col 8
from GenealogyBank 
Morgan Sheriff Takes 2 Men to Penitentiary
Jacksonville, Dec. 11. - Clarence Miller, Jacsonville, recently sentenced to an indeterminate term at the Menard penitentiary, and Ival L. Fister, confessed burglar, were taken to Menard today by Sheriff Kenneth Woods.  Miller was found guilty of a part in the recent shooting of Sheriff Woods.

Daily Illinois States Journal (Springfield)
22 Apr 1939, Saturday
Page 4, col 1
from GenealogyBank 
to receive hearing on Monday by the states parole board:
"Morgan county.--Kenneth Busch, Ival L. Fister."

Daily Illinois States Journal (Springfield)
27 Apr 1940, Saturday
page 3, col 8
from GenealogyBank 
to receive hearing states parole board:
"Harry Wilson and Ival L. Fister, both of Morgan county,"

The Morning Call (Allentown, Pennsylvania)
9 Aug 1942, Sun
Page 4
from Newspapers.com 
Watch Girl's Home and Catch Convict
Philadelphia, Aug. 8. (AP) - A Washington girl's love for a fugitive convict unwittingly brought about his capture, detectives testified today.
 
The story was told to Justice of the Peace Howard C. Meredith, who ordered Ival L. Fister, 27, turned over to Virginia officers. 
Recently Arlington county authorities learned that a young woman known to be friendly with Fister had quit her Washington job and come to Philadelphia, gaining employment as a domestic in a suburban Merion home. 
They followed and with local officers took up watch outside the place the girl worked.
Last night, the detectives said, Fister alighted from a bus and came to the apartment house.  He was arrested.
 
Police added they understood he also was wanted in Oregon on a homicide charge.

Evening Star (Washington, DC)
15 Aug 1942, Saturday
Page 16, col 4
from GenealogyBank 
Arlington Jail Fugitive gets 30-Year Sentence
Ival L. Fister, 27, yesterday was sentenced to 10 years each on three counts of burglary by Judge Walter T. McCarthy in Arlington County Circuit Court.  The sentences are to run consecutively. Fister will serve his sentence in the Virginia State Penitentiary.
The prisoner, who previously had pleaded guilty, escaped from the Arlington County jail in January by cutting through his cell bars with several razor blades and then soaping his body to squirm through a narrow space.
He was seized August 7 by Detective Capt. Hugh C. Jones in Ardmore, Pa., after Capt. Jones had trace the man through a Washington girl.  The girl, police said, gave up her job here and went to Philadelphia where she was employed as a domestic.  Fister was taken into custody at the girl's apartment by police who were watching the place.
  

Daily Illinois States Journal (Springfield)
6 Jul 1961, Thurs
Page 9, col 1
from GenealogyBank 
granted parole
"Ival L. Fister of Morgan County, who has served 5 years and 10 months of 1 year to life sentence at Menard,"

Ival died in Chicago, Cook, Illinois on July 6, 1984.  It is unknown to me if he had any wives, girlfriends, or children.


© 2018 Copyright, Christine Manczuk, All Rights Reserved.

Friday, July 20, 2018

Orville Tracy Porter: Divorce and Marriage

When I posted about O.T. Porter in 2015, we didn't know when this paternal great great grandfather's marriage to Matilda Biddle Porter ended but it appears that my daughter found a notice in an Albany, Oregon, newspaper dated November 2, 1888.

~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
[The state rights democrat. (Albany, Or.) 1865-1900, November 02, 1888, Image 4]


What drew me to O.T.'s profile today was one of those green leaves that denotes a hint from Ancestry which turned out to be the 1890 marriage certificate for his marriage to Carrie Delph in Sitka, Alaska, on August 21, 1890.


[Alaska State Archives; Juneau, Alaska; Description: Marriage Certificates, 1890 - 1913; Reference Number: VS 2999; Volume: Vol. 1. Ancestry.com. Alaska, Vital Records, 1818 -1963 [database on-line]. Lehi, UT, USA: Ancestry.com Operations, Inc., 2017.]

Alonzo E. Austin, the Presbyterian minister who performed the ceremony, was the chaplain of the Industrial Training School where Carrie was teaching when she met my great great grandfather.



© 2018 Copyright, Christine Manczuk, All Rights Reserved.

Thursday, July 19, 2018

Hashtag Fever!

My growing list of hashtags in Legacy 9.

Nerd alert!  I'm excited to begin adding hashtags to people on my tree in earnest, for categories like occupations, memberships, DNA matches, and military service.  For the past 8 years I have relied on what Ancestry's very limited database functions have allowed, so this will be a big step forward for me.

To see hashtags used in Legacy see "New Legacy QuickTip Video - How to Create a Custom Report, using hashtags, DNA, Q/A and more" by Geoff Rasmussen.




© 2018 Copyright, Christine Manczuk, All Rights Reserved.

Wednesday, July 18, 2018

Working on Wednesday: Delno Fritz (1871 - 1925) Master Sword Swallower

Oh, how I wish this man was one of my relatives!* Mine are so boring by comparison.

Born William Sherman Fritz near Wilkes-Barre, Pennsylvania, he ran away to the circus at the age of eleven and performed all over the United States and Europe under the name Delno Fritz.

[7 Dec 1924, Page 33 - The Los Angeles Times at Newspapers.com]


The paragraph below (originally printed in the British medical journal The Lancet while Delno was appearing in the U.K with Barnum & Bailey and quoted in Gaillard's Medical Journal) gives a doctor's view of how he was able to perform these crowd-pleasing feats.

[Gaillard's Medical Journal,Volumes 68-69; 1898. Source: Google Books.]


His 1925 obituary provides us with a good overview of Delno's career.

[15 July 1925, Page 5 - The Wilkes-Barre Record at Newspapers.com]

Next week I'll post about his niece Edna Price who followed in his footsteps.


*I learned about this man from an acquaintance who is a great nephew of his.

© 2018 Copyright, Christine Manczuk, All Rights Reserved.

Tuesday, July 17, 2018

Obituary For My Grandmother Margaret (Fister) Hartley

Me and my grandmother, Margaret Alvide (Fister) Hartley (1912-2000), circa 1981.  From my personal collection.
I've been posting my grandmother's siblings' obituaries in birth order, and she was next.  I knew Grandmother all my life, and I wish I had asked her more questions about herself (isn't that always the way?):
San Diego Union-Tribune, The (CA)
July 29, 2000
Editions: 1,2,7
Pages: B-7:2,7 B-9:1
HARTLEY, MARGARET 
Margaret Fister Hartley 88, died on Wednesday July 26, 2000, at Scripps Memorial Hospital, following a heart attack. She had been in good health until her death. She was a resident of Pacific Regent in San Diego.
Mrs. Hartley had resided in San Diego for 55 years. She was the widow of the late Dr. George Hartley, Jr., a prominent physician who served as Chief of Staff at Scripps Memorial Hospital in 1959. Dr. Hartley was a member of a pioneer San Diego family which has been involved with the growth and leadership of the city. 
Mrs. Hartley took an active roll in cultural organizations. She served on the boards of the San Diego Symphony Association, the Globe Guilders, the Assistance League of San Diego County, and the San Diego Medical Auxiliary.
A Memorial service will be held in the sanctuary of La Jolla Presbyterian Church, 7715 Draper Avenue, La Jolla on Saturday, July 29, at 10:30 a.m. A reception will follow at Pacific Regent, 3890 Nobel Drive in San Diego. Survivors include a daughter, Margaret Ann Hartley of McLean, Virginia, sons Robert F. Hartley and George G. Hartley, both of San Diego, three grandchildren, Julianna Dudas, Alexandra Dudas and Christine Hartley. Also survived by two sisters.



© 2018 Copyright, Christine Manczuk, All Rights Reserved.

Monday, July 16, 2018

Monday Is for Mothers: Bernice Evangeline Grenfell (1902 - 1980)

I found this snapshot of Bernice (Grenfell) Currey (the mother who raised me) in one of the family's photo albums. None of the pictures pasted on this page have captions or dates but I'm guessing it was taken sometime in the late 1930s, probably somewhere in California.*

[From my personal collection]


*I don't recognize anything in the background that helps me with the location.




© 2018 Copyright, Christine Manczuk, All Rights Reserved.

Edith F. Bornhoeft Dies

Edith Fister (1910-1985), a sister of my grandmother Margaret (Fister) HartleyImage courtesy of Tom Cairns.
I didn't know Aunt Edith as well as I knew Aunt Fern, but I do have a memory of her as a health nut.  A search in Chicago newspapers in the late 1950s/early 1960s shows she was a regular participant with various week-end hikes associated with the volunteer organization Prairie Club of Chicago.

Chicago Tribune (Chicago, IL)
July 18, 1985
page 11 (Sports Final edition)
from GenealogyBank 
Services for Edith F. Bornhoeft, 75, a retired Atomic Energy Commission employee, will be held Friday in San Diego. 
Mrs. Bornhoeft, a former Western Springs resident, died Tuesday in a San Diego nursing home. 
She had been a technical employee of the commission at the University of Chicago and at Argonne National Laboratory near Batavia. 
She was active in the Prairie Club of Chicago and was a member of the San Diego Chapter of the Sons of Norway. Survivors include four sisters and a brother.


© 2018 Copyright, Christine Manczuk, All Rights Reserved.

Sunday, July 15, 2018

Sunday Drive: Pismo Beach, California - 1936

This snapshot from the Currey family album was taken on the beach at Pismo. Mother and Junior are are posing in front of their 1935 Dodge truck. From the caption you know what they were going to have for dinner.

[From my personal collection]


This picture, taken a few days earlier at a different campsite, gives us a glimpse of the interior of the tent structure Dad had built on the back of the truck as well as a peek at their cooking arrangements.

[From my personal collection]






© 2018 Copyright, Christine Manczuk, All Rights Reserved.

Saturday, July 14, 2018

Fern Evelyn Fister, 1907-2003

Fern Evelyn Fister (1907-2003), my grandmother Margaret (Fister) Hartley's sister.
Finally, a Fister that I knew!  She was my great aunt, although I just called her Aunt Fern.  She was one of the nicest people I've ever known, and always sent birthday and Christmas cards and a family newsletter (how I wish I had a copy now).

Me and Aunt Fern, circa 1980.  From my personal collection.

Her obituary doesn't say it, but she was a secretary for author Norman Maclean while they were at the University of Chicago (some time between 1940 and 1973):
San Diego Union-Tribune, The (GenealogyBank)
October 25, 2003
Edition: 1,2,6,7
Page: B-6:7 B-4 B-10:6 B-8:2 
FERN EVELYN FISTER
Dec. 4, 1907-Oct. 20, 2003 Fern Evelyn Fister, 95, of San Diego died Monday. She was born in Newark, Ill., and was an administrative assistant at the University of Chicago. She was a member of the American Association of University Women and the Pacific Beach Garden Club. 
She is survived by a sister, Doris Shulkin of San Diego. 
Services: 1:30 p.m. Monday, Pacific Beach Presbyterian Church, 1675 Garnet Ave., San Diego. 
Entombment: El Camino Memorial Park, San Diego. 
Donations: Pacific Beach Presbyterian Church, 1675 Garnet Ave., San Diego, CA 92109. 
Arrangements: Pacific Beach Chapel.


© 2018 Copyright, Christine Manczuk, All Rights Reserved.

Friday, July 13, 2018

Fantastic Find: "The prehistoric shoreline of the Gulf of Mexico is so fertile you can see it from space"

The Washington Post published a piece about the region of Mississippi and Alabama known as the Black Belt and used this satellite image to illustrate their point:
It is subtle, and it blends in well with the surroundings, and if you are not looking for it there is a good chance you will scan right over it. But once someone points it out on a true-color map, it is impossible to unsee: a crescent of off-hue land in Mississippi and Alabama that is so perfectly-arced it looks unnatural.
[NASA via The Washington Post]

More from the Post's article:
In reality, this arc is super-fertile, cultivated land surrounded by dense forest. It is the shoreline of the Gulf of Mexico as it existed 145 million years ago.
[NASA via The Washington Post]


As you can see, Macon County is one of the Alabama counties in the Black Belt and that's where my Warren, Hardy and Freeman ancestors moved as soon as the land was forcibly taken from the Creek Indians. They settled in an area called Cotton Valley which is located in the southern part of Macon County.
[The University of Alabama Department of Geography via TrueSouth.com]

Before intensive agriculture changed the land forever, the Black Belt comprised at least 356,000 acres of open prairie of which only a small fragment remains. Here's more information (with photos) about some of the plants and insects found there.

Cotton Valley proved to be a stopping point on my ancestors' way west as younger generations all moved on to Texas in the 1850s.


© 2018 Copyright, Christine Manczuk, All Rights Reserved.

Thursday, July 12, 2018

No Obituary Found for Myron Fister (yet)

My great-uncle Myron Benjamin Fister (1905-1986), posing with his saxophone in this undated picture.  Image courtesy of Tom Cairns.
My grandmother Margaret (Fister) Hartley's brother Myron was unknown to me until recently.  I haven't found an obituary for him but here is what I know about him so far:


  • He (and a twin sister Glady May Fister, whose fate is as yet unknown) were born August 20, 1905, to Benjamin and Mary Fister (likely in LaSalle County, Illinois, alternately in Newark, Kendall, IL).
  • He grew up in the Plano/Newark area of Kendall County, Illinois, which is just west of the larger Chicago metropolitan area.
  • He married Linnea Ruth Hedwall (1904-1993) on September 1, 1928 in Chicago.
  • He was living with his wife at his mother-in-law's house in Chicago near Washington Park in the 1930 Federal Census. He was working as an agent in an insurance office.
  • His only child, daughter Ruth Elaine Fister, was born on July 5, 1930, in Chicago.
  • 10 years later he and his small family were still living with his mother-in-law Hilda in the same place.  He was working as a service worker for the Root Bros manufacturing company.
  • As of July 1966 he was living at 9316 50th Ave, in Oak Park, IL, a little less than 10 miles west of his previous home.
  • His daughter Ruth Elaine Fister Johnson died October 12, 1969, at the young age of 39 in Midland, Michigan (she had one surviving daughter).
  • About 1971 he was made assistant band leader of the Valley of Chicago Shrine Band.  I think that further research on Myron should include information about his membership with the Scottish Rite/Shriner organization.
  • He died in Illinois on December 21, 1986 (likely in Lake Bluff, Lake, Illinois, midpoint between Chicago and Milwaukee, WI).
  • I find a record in the United States Public Records, 1970-2009 database of Myron Fister living in Traverse City, Traverse, Michigan, as of July 13, 2001.

© 2018 Copyright, Christine Manczuk, All Rights Reserved.

Wednesday, July 11, 2018

Working on Wednesday: Barbara Hoadley Porter (1916 - 1978) Historian

Barbara Porter and her twin sister Betty were born in Seattle, Washington, in 1916. Here are their senior pictures from Garfield High School, Class of 1934. (Barbara is on the left)

[Ancestry.com - U.S., School Yearbooks, 1900-1990]

According to U.S. Census records Barbara was still living with her parents in 1940. By 1953 she was married to Ernest V. Elkins, which seems to have been a second marriage for both of them. 

Barbara is one of my paternal first cousins, twice removed; the ancestors we share are B.R. Biddle and his wife Maria Evans.

[Ancestry.com]

I just learned about Barbara from these index cards in the State of Oregon's Biographical and Other Index Card File. So far I haven't been able to find out much more about my cousin's life, but it's clear she was very proud of her descent from Oregon Pioneers. (Note that the reference to scrapbooks--I wonder what's in them?)


[Ancestry.com. Oregon, Biographical and Other Index Card File, 1700s-1900s [database on-line]. Provo, UT, USA: Ancestry.com Operations, Inc., 2014. This collection was indexed by Ancestry World Archives Project contributors. Original data: Oregon, Biographical and Other Cards. Oregon Historical Society, Portland, Oregon.]




© 2018 Copyright, Christine Manczuk, All Rights Reserved.