Monday, April 15, 2013

Very longtime friend and colleague Dennis Miller, who runs IndyWorkshops in Indianapolis, IN.  (http://indyworkshops.com/) sent me this photo of his grandmother, Mildred Congdon Boardman, taken on the occasion of Arizona's admission to statehood, July 4, 1912.


It's not North Country, but it is frontier.  Dennis's family become lumbermen in the wilds of Wisconsin back in the day, and thus are kindred spirits in many ways. I think this is a neat photo, and shows some of the stuff of which our forebearers were made.  Photo copyright by Dennis Miller. All rights reserved.  Reprinted here by kind permission.

Wednesday, April 10, 2013

Twenty-some odd years ago, at a Thanksgiving Dinner attended by my eighties something mother-in-law Josie Treggett of Ellenburg Depot and her son's equally aged mother-in-law, I asked the two venerable ladies what was the most important invention that had been made in their time.  Their reply was instantaneous and unanimous:  "The Washing Machine".  Needless to say, my experience with domestic washing back in the early decades of the 20th century was non-existent.  I just had no idea how much work was involved.  Modern detergents didn't come of age until World War 1, due to a scarcity of fats used in making soap.  Well water was often far too hard from dissolved minerals, which  made washing with soap virtually impossible unless you had a rain barrel to collect soft water.
Modern detergents carry their own water softener, making things a bit easier, but we still need a water softener for eveeryday use.

Thirty years before Josie Treggett was born, Ivory Soap published this ad, pointing out that clothes had to be boiled to release accumulated sweat and grime, to say nothing of killing off stray bacteria.  This was done, of course, on a cast iron stove, in the heat and humidity of summer and the cold of winter. Few houses in the north had a summer kitchen outdoors.   Drying was done on the clothesline, which to this day has several advantages over an electric or gas heated rotary dryer.  All of my grandparents and great-grandparents did have a young servant girl, usually Irish, to help out with domestic duties.  Not everyone was so fortunate.  Even with help, doing the wash was pure drudgery.  But no complaint has drifted down to my generation.  Our ancestors were made of great stuff.  We should be proud of them and respect them for the daily work that they did with their bare hands.

Friday, April 5, 2013



 
The last of these photos, that of FDR, was taken during his tour as Assistant Secretary of the Navy in World War I.  Source unknown, but might be FDR Library at Hyde Park.
 
The two photos of Eleanor Roosevelt, the second of which shows her with Nancy Cook, were taken at Chazy Lake.  The pistol belonged to her bodyguard, Earl Miller.  Miller thought that she ought to know how to use a gun, and was her instructor.  Shortly after these photos were taken,  Eleanor, Cook and Miller drove to Malone, NY, where she stopped in and bought some flowers to present to Ruth Perrin in Potsdam, and then proceeded to the Massena home of Nancy Cook's parents. Source: FDR Archives, Hyde Park, NY.