Why did the pigeon-toed girl cross the board?

To avoid wearing orthopedic shoes.

Do you see the problem here?  How about here?     Certainly not here!
           

Yup, those are my little pigeon-toed legs in the first picture. When we lived in Great Bend, Kansas, Mom took my little pigeon-toed legs to an orthopedic doctor to see what he could do about them. He looked me over and had me walk back and forth across the examination room. Then he told my mom to walk across the room. “Um hum,” he said, “She got that from you, Mom.”

As Mom’s puzzled expression changed to realization, you could hear the indignation in her voice as she replied, “Well, I’ve never had a problem with my legs!”

And you can see, as we are pointing out in that last picture, Mom did not have a problem with her legs.

The doctor stuck by his professional opinion and did his best to explain that the problem resided in our knees… the lower leg bone turned in at the joint. (That middle picture is of Mom’s little girl legs.) Mom wasn’t buying her part in this, I could tell, but she didn’t argue. The good doc pulled out the ugliest, clunky, oxford-style brown shoes you would never want to wear and told me these would be mine…. unless I followed his instructions.

I was to practice walking on a board every day until my return visit and if I could walk with my feet pointing straight ahead when I came back to see him, I could avoid those ugly shoes.

Dad (Jim) went to the lumber yard and bought me my own 6-foot piece of lumber. He laid it in an open space in the basement and I walked back and forth on that board every day because there was no way I would be caught dead in those shoes.

 

 

Wisdom Wednesday – Is that Grandma’s newspaper clipping on Facebook?

You know how there is a feed on the right-hand side of your Facebook page that shows all of the things your friends commented on or liked?

I confess. I hover there from time to time….. just checking to see if my friends are up to something I ought to know about.

I was hovering the other day when I read something that sounded awfully familiar. I read it again and then went to the notebook where I have some of my grandmother’s papers – including some newspaper clippings that she kept. Sure enough…. an almost identical match.

Here is what my friend had liked on Facebook:

And here is what my Grandma Hoskins (Eveline Coates) had clipped and saved from the newspaper:

My best guess was that Grandma’s newspaper clipping was published sometime in the 1960s. Some 40 years later here it is, making the rounds on Facebook. What’s up with that?

A little googling led me to some explanations.

“The Northland Age has inadvertently created an internet sensation, with a page 3 brief published two years ago being picked by social media and shared tens of thousands of times worldwide,” reports The Northland Age (Kaitaia, Northland, New Zealand) in an article titled “Exporting to the Americans” and published August 23, 2012.

It goes on to say that Principal John Tapene quoted the words of an American judge (written in 1959) in an April 2010 newsletter. The Northland Age reproduced it in May. Then it was picked up by a Canadian radio station, and later an Alaska-based parenting blog posted it on its Facebook page. That’s when it went viral.  There was even an article about it in the Huffington Post.

I was relieved to know that John Tapene is a real person, alive and well, living and working in New Zealand.

A January 2010 article in the Pierce County Tribune in Rugby, ND states: “We recently came across this message that appeared on page two of Pierce County Tribune’s Dec. 17, 1959 issue. It was quietly nestled between the area news and local happenings. No reason was given. I suspect the editor just thought it was a good message.” The original message/advice is attributed to Judge Philip B. Gilliam of Denver, Co., a judge in the Denver Juvenile Court and Juvenile Hall from 1940 until his death in 1975.

The article includes the original version as it was published in 1959.

So how did Principal John Tapene come across this bit of wisdom from 1959? No idea. Maybe it has something to do with its republication in January of 2010 by the Pierce County Tribune just a few months before Mr. Tapene quoted it. Maybe he googled “advice to teenagers” while preparing his newsletter.

Or maybe his grandmother had clipped it from the newspaper and Mr. Tapene came across it while working on his genealogy.

It could happen.

Both the version my Grandmother clipped from the newspaper and the one currently circulating on Facebook and Pinterest and blogs around the world have been edited from the original.

Grandma’s clipping is pretty close to the original, although it leaves out the line “Repair the sink, build a boat, get a job.” Also missing are the references to being a crybaby and lacking a backbone – providing a tone that is a little less harsh.

The version currently making the rounds has a few more omissions and substitutions:
* No storm windows to hang, but windows still need to be washed.
* No raking leaves, painting woodwork, shoveling the walk, washing the car, or scrubbing some floors.
* “Learn to cook” was added and “build a boat” was changed to “build a raft.”  Lowering expectations?
* No “helping the minister, priest, or rabbi, the Red Cross and the Salvation Army” or “assist the poor.”
* No appeal based on the sacrifices made by one’s parents, nor on being “their dearest treasure.”
* No references to poverty or the poor. I guess teenagers no longer owe the world their time and energy and talents so that no one will ever be in poverty again.

So, to answer my original question, “Yes, that is (almost) Grandma’s newspaper clipping on Facebook.”

 

 

 

 

 

Sepia Saturday – Mystery Couple on a Bike

Sepia Saturday provides an opportunity for genealogy bloggers to share their family history through photographs.

I wonder how far these couples succeeded in riding arm-in-arm and in heels and a rather tight skirt?

This prompt provides me the perfect opportunity to share a couple of mystery pictures that were among my grandmother’s photographs. My “couple” are a girl and a dog.

Mystery Girl and Dog

Mystery Dog

 

I have no clue as to the identity of this little girl or the dog. My suspicion is that these pictures were sent to my grandmother by her English relatives. My grandmother, Eveline Coates Hoskins, corresponded with several of her cousins and her aunts who lived in Durham, England in the early to mid 1900s. They often included photographs and postcards with their letters to her. The surnames of those she corresponded with are Coates, Elgey, Hall, and Dawson.

I don’t know enough about postcards to know if the back of the postcard provides a clue as to its origin. Help, anyone?

Another possibility is that it is some family member in the U.S., or a neighbor. In either case, the location would likely be Mystic, Iowa or somewhere nearby. Our family names in Mystic, Iowa are Coates and Hoskins.

In any case, the dog looks like he has done this before.

You can find more lovely photos by following the link to the Sepia Saturday Blog.