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Epignosis View Drop Down
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: August 07 2012 at 21:09
Originally posted by Finnforest Finnforest wrote:




One of my grandpas....he was a great guy....A tough old Irishman, worked as a lumberjack and railroad man.  Liked a good bar scrap and was amazing with his fists I'm told, used to drop guys twice as big as him.  Never went to the doctor, never ate health food, smoked like a fiend, and lived to a ripe old 96. 


Wow wow wow.
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: August 07 2012 at 21:22
Always liked this one.  My great grandmother, with her siblings, mid 1880s.  She's standing, second from left.  She died in 1938 but my Dad talked about her.  Old German gal, still spoke some German.  Strict as hell, but he remembers getting ice cream when they went to her house, she had a soft spot too. 


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Direct Link To This Post Posted: August 07 2012 at 21:45
I envy your family. 
"One had to be a Newton to notice that the moon is falling, when everyone sees that it doesn't fall. "
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: August 07 2012 at 21:50
I'm waiting for a punchlineLOL

Why so, Pat?
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: August 07 2012 at 21:54
^ Cool story Jim. All of my Granparents are gone. My mom's parents lived in a trailor by the time i knew them. They had 8 kids during hard times. He was Irish and very strong. Worked in the mines up north when there was no other work, broke a Frenchmen's arm once who tried to take him on. He was about 6' 1 " and naturally muscular. He was an airplane mechanic later on. My dad's dad i never met. He died at 56 when i was just a toddler. I was very close to his wife(my grandma of course) who i spent a ton of time with. She died when i was about 17. Man i watched so many hockey games on TV with her. Every Saturday night pretty much, she was my best friend. She was so funny and out going i miss her.
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: August 07 2012 at 22:23
Only my paternal grandfather has died, and he did before I got to know him.

My maternal grandmother is probably the most remarkable of the 3 living. She has had colon cancer 6 times in the past 20 years and gotten through it and returned fully to normal every time. It's amazing. The last time she had it (about a year ago), she was one of the weakest looking people I've ever seen; yellow skin, skinny as can be, small, and barely with it, but she recovered in only a few months and is completely back to normal now. It's amazing what modern medicine and the human body can do.


Edited by Andy Webb - August 07 2012 at 22:24
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: August 07 2012 at 22:49
Originally posted by Finnforest Finnforest wrote:

I'm waiting for a punchlineLOL

Why so, Pat?


Because they look classy as all hell in those photos.
"One had to be a Newton to notice that the moon is falling, when everyone sees that it doesn't fall. "
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: August 07 2012 at 23:05
All gone.......they have travelled this journey before us, so much respect for ancestors regardless of individual flaws, brave souls
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: August 08 2012 at 01:21
Yeah, guys, some really solid stories here. I mean, they may seem all similar, the German ancestors, the Irish ancestors, but really every story actually has something interesting to offer. 

Originally posted by Horizons Horizons wrote:

St. Petersburg is a beautiful place.

Yes, I heart it to pieces with me onion, but the people who inhabit it just s$%t on it in small ways.
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: August 08 2012 at 07:16
My paternal grandfather was a singer with a moderate success (opera and easy listening). He is still surrounded by a veil of mystery. He was also a WWII veteran, pilot, old car collector and what not. He was married four times, my grandma was his third wife - a tailor making costumes in the opera house.

I never met my maternal grandfather - he died when my mother was a little girl. I don't know much about him; I know he was a musician and a womanizer (or so they told me).

My grandma is still alive and well, even able to hike nearby mountains with mum and me. Grandma was quite pretty when young and used to be a photo model.Smile


It's a pity I don't have a scanner here; there are some really interesting photos in my family albums.


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Direct Link To This Post Posted: August 08 2012 at 07:22
I've got an old photo of my paternal grandfather taken when he owned a liquor store behind me.  I can go to the effort to scan it in if anyone is interested, or I may just do it anyway.

I hail from a little city called Carrolton.  Wasn't born there but the grands lived there as did my parents.  It's located in Kentucky next to where the Kentucky river meets the Ohio.  Lots of tobacco warehouses.  Thankfully I never got the taste for cigarets.


Edited by Slartibartfast - August 08 2012 at 07:37
Released date are often when it it impacted you but recorded dates are when it really happened...

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Direct Link To This Post Posted: August 08 2012 at 07:41
All mine are long gone now, sadly..

My Irish grandfather (on my mothers side) died in 1981. He grew up in an around Dublin, and used to work in a factory dying rolls of fabric. He also used to repair radios as a sideline. My Irish grandmother was a nurse and also worked part time in a convent, as some kind of domestic assistent for the nuns.

My grandmother and grandfather on my dads side both died in the 1970's, and I can't really remember much about them. In his younger years, he had worked as a draughtsman for an engineering company. My father followed in his footsteps, in this regard. They lived in a town called Slough, in the south east of England, not far from London. On a side note, just recently I found an old diary, which my dad had kept in 1941, aged 14. Very short entries, but interesting to read about Nazi V1 rockets going overhead!
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: August 08 2012 at 07:48

Released date are often when it it impacted you but recorded dates are when it really happened...

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Direct Link To This Post Posted: August 08 2012 at 07:53
Originally posted by Blacksword Blacksword wrote:

he had worked as a draughtsman for an engineering company.!

Drafting is a major part of my vocation.  My dad had the drafting kit.  He went in to chemical engineering.  But getting my hands on it led me to it.
Released date are often when it it impacted you but recorded dates are when it really happened...

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Direct Link To This Post Posted: August 08 2012 at 09:42
Yes!  Keep the stories and PHOTOS coming!  This is a great thread, I love history and real life stories. 
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: August 08 2012 at 10:06

My dad is having the time of his life these past two weeks.  Him and my mom are on vacation on the East Coast visiting his roots.  He lived in Coopersville, New York from the ages of 2 to 8, and that was their first stop.  Apparently, my dad ran into a guy in a rest stop near there and started talking about heading to Coopersville to look for his old house and to hopefully meet up with a friend of my grandpas.  As luck would have it, this guy lived in Coopersville and knew exactly what my dad was looking for and new exactly where this friend of my grandpa lived.  I guess that there are only two main streets in the town, so it sounds like an everybody knows everybody kind of place. 

They then headed up to Montpelier, Vermont, which is where my dad was born.  He took pictures of the hospital that he was born in, and then they think that they found the house that he lived in until they moved to New York.  While they were there he was planning on visiting with a 96 year old aunt of his that he hasn't seen in ages, but apparently found her on the Internet of all places (Facebook I think), and has been communicating with her. 
 
Now they are somewhere in Maine, where he was meeting up with a cousin of his, who lives in Houston, Texas.  I guess my parents visited with her in Houston about 10 years ago, but he hadn't seen her for nearly 50 years before that. Anyways, he called her on Sunday to confirm that they were there and to set up a visit and got a bonus that two of this cousin's sisters were there visiting too.  He probably hasn't seen them in nearly 60 years.   I haven't heard this story yet.
 
Anyways, their next stop is Shrewsbury, Massachusetts, which is where he lived from the ages of 8 to 16 or 17.  He moved to Michigan prior to his senior year in high school.   I should mention that while he was in Vermont he stayed at the home of the guy who was his best friend during the days that he lived in Shrewsbury.  I am pretty certain that the last time that he had seen him was when I was 16 and we had taken a vacation out to the East Coast, so that was over 25 years ago.  At any rate, it sounds like my dad is having a great time revisiting his roots.
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: August 08 2012 at 10:30
All grand parents dead during the 80's and 90's and they were all in their late 80's
.
On my mother's side, her father was a judge, prisoner of war (two years forced labour in Germany).
On my father's side, his father was an steel engineer, himself a son of a engineer in France, but but had a stint as a parliament member.
Both grandmothers were raising their kids at home.
 
Recently, I lost my dad to Alzheimer (died at a fairly younger age then his own parents), leaving us a lot of administrative and inheritance issues... who spent 30 years under a diplomatic consulates status in Canada, US, Scotland and France.
Mum's fine, enjoying her life in mid-France
let's just stay above the moral melee
prefer the sink to the gutter
keep our sand-castle virtues
content to be a doer
as well as a thinker,
prefer lifting our pen
rather than un-sheath our sword
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: August 08 2012 at 11:32
I bever knew my grandparents on my mother's side, only those on my late father's.

My grandfather Rudolf, was the last of the German born Gartens (came over to England from Saxony in 1888), was interned during WW1 & put into a reserved occupation in WW2 as a baker - stayed a baker until he retired following losing his leg to disease & died in 1979.

My grandmother Hilda on the other hand was a proper old-school north London granny - about 4'6" tall, round, always a source of additional pocket money ("don't tell yer dad"), kettle never cold, cakes & sweets always in the cupboard ("don't tell yer mum") & if you crossed her... the quickest back-hand in Enfield - bless'er. Eventually lost her a few years back at the ripe old age of 102.

Jon Lord 1941 - 2012
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: August 08 2012 at 12:07
The best thing I learned from T-mo was is if you don't like something (food-wise) don't say you hate it, just say you don't care for it.  My brother gets the credit for nicknaming our grandparents.  The guy in the pic above is T-po.  Kind of Star Trekian, but predates it.


Edited by Slartibartfast - August 08 2012 at 12:15
Released date are often when it it impacted you but recorded dates are when it really happened...

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Direct Link To This Post Posted: August 08 2012 at 12:16
I have no grandparents left, and have only known one grandmother (my mother's mother) during my life.
At already an old age she was married again to a man who I really considered my grandfather, a typical grandfather for me, who smoked a pipe and told stories. It was only at a later age that I realised that he wasn't my real grandfather. It didn't matter, because he was a grandfather to me anyway.
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