Sepia Saturday provides bloggers with an opportunity to share their history through the medium of photographs.
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The theme photo this week pictures Enginists of the Finnish State Railways playing chess on call duty. (1951) With back to the camera, caps pulled low, and several profile views, one might be hard pressed to identify these men. And that is my last-minute take on the theme:
Who is this man?
This week I found a couple of photos on ancestry.com identified as my 2nd great-grandfather, John Sylvester Strange. One of the photographs was obviously him – looks like other photographs in the family archive and a couple of cousins think they have copies of the photograph.
This photograph also appears in Lincoln – that County in Kansas by Dorothe Tarrence Homan. My copy arrived in the mail just yesterday! I took this photo right from the book. So that is definitely my John Sylvester Strange on the right.
It was the other photograph I found on ancestry that day that caused a lot of discussion among the cousins once I posted it on Facebook for everyone to see.
This second photograph is identified as John Sylvester Strange and one of his wives. JSS was married first to Elizabeth Hendrickson. She died while he was away during the Civil War. Upon his return home, JSS married Elizabeth’s sister, Susan, who is my 2nd great-grandmother.
My cousins have serious doubts that this is our John Sylvester Strange. And it is all about his eyes. JSS had blue eyes and this man’s eyes do not look blue. At. All. Other features are similar to our guy – but those eyes! Could the photo have been tinted and the eyes darkened?
I asked the person who shared the photo to ancestry where she got it and she said she found it on FamilySearch.org. I finally found it and messaged the person who shared it there. I asked her a few questions about where she got the picture and how we would be related – there have obviously been more than one man with the name John Sylvester Strange. Her linage fits our family tree to a T. We are related to the same man. She said that her father and grandfather said this was JSS.
So, I give you the photos we know to be our JSS with this man added to the mix. What do you think?
It is hard to tell with that pesky beard, but the cheekbones, forehead, hairline, and nose seem to me to be very much alike.
Besides your input on the facial differences/similarities, I have another question for you. The woman with the photograph kindly provided me with her phone number so that I could call with any further questions. What would you ask her?
By the way, we can’t really go by the wife to make the identification. No one has a picture of Elizabeth and the only one we have of Susan was much, much later in life. And, well, our attention is focussed completely on John.
Looking forward to your input!
Be sure to visit others who have participated in Sepia Saturday this week!
Sepia Saturday provides bloggers with an opportunity to share their history through the medium of photographs.
Last month I noticed that the 120th birth anniversary of someone in my family tree was coming up – the perfect prompt for a blog post! And so I began to look through my files to see what information I have on Thomas Wesley Bryan.
I remembered that several years ago, I did a little research on him and received a few records. I reviewed what I had and decided that I needed to request military records to really be able to complete his story. I wouldn’t get the information back in time to post on his birth anniversary, but I could do it later. I sent off my request, full of anticipation.
I waited expectantly.
I waited some more.
Until at last, I received an answer in the mail yesterday!
Alas. My basket is empty.
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A boy, arms outstretched to hold onto something used to carry other things, a building in the background … and my sad tale of disappointment.
Wheel your hopes and dreams – or your dried fish – over to Sepia Saturday and see what others have offered.
Sepia Saturday provides bloggers with an opportunity to share their history through the medium of photographs.
Sepia Saturday Theme Image 413
When my daughter was upper elementary school age, her piano teacher was a little perturbed that this was the age when parents began giving their children an ultimatum: You have to choose between activities. You can’t do them all.
She sweetly told a student who decided to drop piano lessons in favor of cheerleading, “I hope you will come over when you are forty and do some cheers for me.”
I’m thankful that my parents provided me with the opportunity to take piano lessons and the encouragement I needed to continue throughout high school. I confess that I did not always practice joyfully.
My mom and I lived with her parents when I was young. The living room was small and the coal stove took up more than its share of the space, so the upright piano they had was relegated to my grandparents’ bedroom behind curtain #2 – on the right behind my mom in this unflattering but kind of funny picture of mom and her sister one Christmas morning.
I’m sure I enjoyed doing my share of banging on the piano, although I don’t think my grandmother was big on banging. When I went to Kindergarten and was the youngest and least adept student at everything, my teacher assigned me singing homework. I was to have my mother play an octave on the piano and I was to try to match the sounds of each note. Lacking in self-awareness, I didn’t realize this homework was probably assigned because my off-key singing was driving my teacher crazy. I only thought of it as an assignment to spend time with my mom, and that was fine with me. I learned to play “Chopsticks” and “The Knuckle Song” on this piano – right hand only and only the beginning of the song.
When my mother remarried, we moved to Kansas and we got a piano. I don’t remember if I begged for one, or if my parents just found a deal on an old upright and thought it would be a good thing for our growing family to have. My piano teacher lived close enough for me to walk or ride my bike to her house and I enjoyed learning to play. It was low key – no recitals, just practice at home and lessons at her house.
The move to Joplin, Missouri meant a new piano and new teachers. The only thing I remember about the first teacher is that she had draperies that covered a large swath of windows that included a corner and it was a bit of a drive for my mom. Then I started taking lessons from our minister’s wife, Mrs. Conklin. All was good.
Next was the move to Corsicana, Texas, where I found myself taking lessons at a piano studio – a large older home with several teachers, each with a room for teaching. There were Bach festivals, hymn festivals, recitals, and auditions for the National Piano Guild. Yikes. I was a junior in high school by this time and had no experience with any of this stuff. They were so serious. I was less than pleased.
I can’t find the photo I know exists of the piano 🙁 , but I found several programs and this treasure.
You have a lovely light touch – especially your leggero & stacccato – You are hampered by insecurity – both in memorizing and depth of tone – Command the instrument & try notto be timid – and do work on memory – carefully – It will give you much more confidence & pleasure.
When my youngest daughter was preparing for something similar to the above only on clarinet, I was talking to my mother on the phone about how much my daughter did not want to do it. She loved music and playing her instruments, but despised these tortures. Mom told me that she had always felt terrible for making me participate in a recital when I really, really didn’t want to. Sure enough, right in the middle of my lengthy piece, my mind went blank. I tried and tried to jump back in, but just couldn’t and walked away from the piano without finishing. I guess I had not worked on memory as carefully as the judge had implored me to do. I had completely forgotten about this particular humiliation until mom mentioned it, and I was surprised at her memory of it – and her regret – after so many years.
After my husband and I had been married a few years and moved into a house, he surprised me with a piano. I started playing some again, but when I started having babies, I quit. Our kids all took lessons, some longer than others. There were a few memorable recitals – like the one where young A decided that she would not only play “Beauty and the Beast,” but sing it as well. I was very nervous for her and gave her every opportunity to opt out, but she did it. I was not the only mom in the room with teary eyes after her sweet rendition.
Over the years, I would vow to get back to playing, but I never seemed to stick with it. I could play some of the more difficult pieces I’d learned years earlier through sheer muscle memory, but couldn’t play others that were of equal difficulty.
About 18 months ago, I started playing again as a challenge from a relative. She had been challenged by one of her young relatives to play piano or another instrument 10 minutes a day for 100 consecutive days and she opened up the challenge to her Facebook friends. I said I was in. Well, I was about 10 days into the challenge when I missed a day. I confessed on Facebook and asked if I had to begin again. The former teachers in the family all said, “Yes! You do!” So I did and I completed the challenge – only missing on days when I was sick or traveling and picking up the count when I was back. I still had my childhood piano books and started with a book that I could play – but not perfectly. Ten minutes was a perfect amount of time to commit to. Who can’t find ten minutes? And, surprisingly, I improved.
But this was not the only benefit. After cancer, I had a lot of difficulty with brain function – especially executive function and it has persisted. Although I had improved before the piano challenge, I noticed that I was improving more quickly. My very quiet mind began to hold more than one thought at a time.
Another fun thing happened. When I completed the 100 days, I posted my accomplishment on Facebook. A couple of weeks later I received a letter in the mail.
I look forward to meeting Hazen some day! His challenge brought me back the piano.
“Piano-playing is an ideal, all-weather, lifetime hobby or a profitable profession.”
Be sure to play along and discover another ideal, all-weather, lifetime hobby – participating in Sepia Saturday.