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Just Leave the Dishes | “Granny's Notes” | My First 84 Years |
Memorable stories are a
wonderful gift By Sue Gerard First published in Columbia Daily Tribune on 1998-12-08 As an over-anxious, first-time author I’ve made the
mistake of assuming that the "scheduled shipping date"
as cast in stone! Not so. My book, "My First 84 Years, Granny’s Notes" is
slightly delayed. Instead of the scheduled "signing" at
the Boone County Historical Society at 2:30 p.m. Sunday,
I’ll be there helping people get started writing
"notes" for their own families. Don’t we all wish
some ancestor had done that for us? It’s easy, once
you’ve started. One memory triggers several others. Bob Priddy, well-known author of three volumes of "Across
Our Wide Missouri," says, "The best history is in the
life of the average person. It puts us in context for the time in
which that person lived." I’m thankful for the few notes I have from parents and
relatives. Fire destroyed all of our family treasures but a
relative gave me a letter that my dear Mom wrote in 1916. She
told about our new 80-acre dairy farm that was a half-mile from
the gravel road and the telephone line. She took Jim and me to
the woods to watch Dad cut telephone poles to bring phone lines
to our home; he later improved the half-mile driveway with gravel
from our own creek. One of my Grandma’s letters tells about her marriage to
"Mr. Henry." Grandpa was older and was rearing three
children after the death of his first wife. He was a Civil War
veteran and lived to a ripe old age. On the back of a photo
Grandma wrote, "This is Nancy’s and Lando’s home.
We spent several days with them recently and got to ride in an
automobile." Your grandchildren may not know terms like "white
owl" or "thunder mug." Say, "That means
chamber pot" and they’ll ask, "What’s it
for?" Here are other questions youngsters ask: P "What’s an ice house, Grandpa?" You’ll
tell them what it was and where ice came from and how to put up
ice. P "Grandma, how did you keep the hen from biting you,
when you played with her baby chickens?" P "Why didn’t you call 911 when your house caught on
fire?" P "What did you play with when there weren’t
batteries?" P "What did they serve for your hot lunches at
school?" Wouldn’t you like to tell young people how to shock
bundles of wheat or oats to keep water from ruining the grain?
Then you’d tell them what a tiny amount of money the farmer
gets for the grain in a $4 box of dry cereal! They’d like to hear about the big meals on thrashing days
and about men who knew how to stack hay with a pitchfork so it
wouldn’t blow away in a storm. Maybe you remember when there
were chains across roads and you had to pay to pass with your
horse and buggy. On Sunday I’ll be at the Boone County Historical Society
building at 3801 Ponderosa Drive, discussing how to start writing
family stories. Some won’t read the stories until after
you’re gone, but they’ll read them and understand
family history as they never understood it before. Money can’t buy this wonderful Christmas gift and you can
start it now, for your children and theirs. The museum is just beyond the Nifong Home where you go to the
annual Heritage Festival in September. Of course there’s no
charge for the meeting. I hope you’ll bring three or four
old snapshots and we’ll help each other get started writing
stories from the past. Bring a notebook or at least some scratch
paper for jotting down ideas lest they slip from your memory
before you develop them into stories. Hopefully we’ll know the shipping date of "My First
84 Years" by then. |
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