No Place Like Home

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One ancestor that had a homestead was my grandmother, Elva Bryant. For years after her mother died, my grandmother lived with family and friends and never really had a home of her own. When she finally had her land and her cabin, I often wondered how she felt when she stepped through the door of her new home and knew it was really her very own place. Continue reading “No Place Like Home”

The Elf on the Shelf

With her inquisitive stare, bright eyes, and tiny pouty smile, the little elf dressed in red has always been one of my favorite family heirlooms. She sits quietly on a small shelf each Christmas season, her felt outfit a little faded now, her painted cheeks softened by time and she now is missing one tiny eyebrow. To anyone else, she might look like an old doll. But to me, she holds a story.

This little elf once belonged to my mother.

Mama received her one Christmas when she was just five years old. She often told me that story, her voice warm with memory as if she could still see the moment as clearly as if it had happened yesterday.

Christmas in Mama’s childhood home was simple, but to her it was magical.

Each December, the family would bundle up in coats and scarves and head out together to find the perfect Christmas tree. They didn’t buy one from a lot; instead, they searched until they found just the right one to bring home. Once inside, the tree was proudly placed in the living room, where the family decorated it with the ornaments she had carefully saved from year to year.

Mama remembered the smell of fresh pine filling the house and the warmth of a coal stove that chased off any winter chill.

But Christmas of 1939 came during the hard years of the Great Depression.

Money was scarce, and every dollar mattered. My grandfather worked long hours on the ranch, often leaving before the sun rose and returning after it set. My grandmother cleaned houses for neighbors and families in town to earn a little extra money.

Even with all their hard work, there wasn’t much left over.

Still, Grandma was determined that Christmas would feel special for her children, my mother and my aunt.

Each year, they received one “big” gift and a stocking filled with small surprises: an orange tucked in the toe, a few pieces of hard candy, maybe a ribbon or hair bow. Those small treasures felt just as exciting as any expensive present.

That year, Grandma found a secondhand doll.

It wasn’t new, and it certainly wasn’t fancy. The little elf wore a red felt outfit and a pointed hat. Her face had been carefully embroidered with bright eyes and a mischievous smile.

To Mama, she was perfect.

She loved that little elf with the fierce devotion only a child can give a beloved toy. The doll became part of her Christmas memories, brought out each December and placed somewhere special where she could watch over the holiday celebrations.

Years later, when I was a child, Mama would carefully unwrap that same doll from a box of ornaments. She handled it gently, the way people do when they are holding a memory.

“This was my Christmas doll,” she would say, smiling softly.

Then she would place the little elf somewhere in the room where she could be seen.

I didn’t fully understand it then, but Mama wasn’t just setting out a decoration. She was honoring a piece of her childhood, a reminder of a time when life was hard, but love made everything feel abundant.

Now that the little elf lives in my home.

Now she rests on her own little shelf, keeping watch as the seasons come and go. She remains there all year long, a gentle reminder of the love, sacrifice, and simple joys that shaped our family’s Christmases.

Her red outfit is a little worn now, and the years have softened the brightness of her face.

But to me, she still carries the same magic.

She reminds me that Christmas was never measured by the size of a gift.

It was measured by the love that made even the smallest gift feel like magic.

Wedding Bells

One, two, three…um four times married?! One grandmother, that I recently discovered, married several times. Although some information suggested that she might have been married five times, I discovered three actual husbands that came with marriage licenses. What do ya say? Go Granny! In an age nearing Victorian prudence, I am not to sure how my 3x grandmother would have fit into the social climate of her day, but it seems she kept trying until she found the right fit! Continue reading “Wedding Bells”

New Beginnings: Hamtramck, Michigan

My 3x great grandfather August Frederick Strassburg was born in Prussia on October 15, 1822 to Johann George Wilhelm Strasburg and Juliana Sabina Bauer. Although I could not locate records of his baptism, his younger sister and brother were baptized at Rettgenstaedt in Hannover, present day Germany. This was the same parish where August married his wife, Maria Eva Mudth, in 1852. Continue reading “New Beginnings: Hamtramck, Michigan”

The Road to Freedom ~ Abolitionists: Levi and Catharine Coffin

Throughout their lives, Levi and Catharine Coffin helped thousands of slaves find their way to freedom. This Quaker couple opened their homes and their hearts while defying government mandates and relying on the truths of a heavenly Father to guide them while helping those in need. Continue reading “The Road to Freedom ~ Abolitionists: Levi and Catharine Coffin”

A Country Western Singer, Mama, and Morning Sickness

“Please excuse Ann for being late this morning. She has morning sickness.”

I turned back toward the house, but my mom was already standing in the doorway, arms crossed, grinning like a woman who had just played her final card. She waved sweetly and called out, “Guess you’ll be on time tomorrow, huh?”

And I was. Mama always knew exactly how to end the nonsense

Turns out nothing cures bad hair habits faster than the threat of a fictional pregnancy documented in your mother’s handwriting.

Heroine of Buffalo Creek Valley: Anne Rowe Hupp

On a frosty March night, a young wife and mother had a frightening dream. In her sleep, the wife witnessed a copper snake attack her husband. She watched in horror as its venomous fangs sank deep into her husband’s palm. As hard as she tried, she could not loosen its deadly grip. Continue reading “Heroine of Buffalo Creek Valley: Anne Rowe Hupp”

Ranch Life and Whiskey

My grandfather, Tom Allen, was a rancher who raised sheep on the western slope of Colorado, near the town of Hotchkiss. Ranching played a vital role in my family for a long time; it was a way of life. Grandpa grew up on a ranch and began helping his father at a young age. As a child, he understood the cycle. Ranch kids have always known that raising livestock means food on the table, which is why this tale warms my heart.

One year, Grandpa went hunting with his brothers and some neighbors. This was another way to provide for the family, and it allowed the men to bond and enjoy some good old-fashioned fun.

On this particular hunting trip, the men brought alcohol to relax around the campfire after a long day of hunting. My grandfather also brought whiskey, which was not unusual, as he often had it around the house. However, Grandpa didn’t drink; he used whiskey for doctoring. When a person or an animal was injured or sick, he would use whiskey to help them.

As children, if we were ill and heard Grandpa was coming, we cried. We knew we were getting his version of a hot toddy, a concoction that burned out whatever ailed us. Bless his gruff heart, his rough mannerisms softened, and our grandfather became the sweetest of saints. In a gentle voice, he would calm our fears, place a cool cloth on our foreheads, and keep the covers pulled up tight. He would sit with us until we fell asleep and only leave our side if he believed we were on the mend. He treated animals with the same gentleness.

While on this hunting adventure, Grandpa shot a buck. When his fellow hunters returned to camp, they discovered that my grandfather had indeed shot a buck, but it rested quietly after its injury. Apparently, he had grazed the animal and brought it back to camp to clean its wounds with whiskey. The problem was that he didn’t have enough to properly tend to his patient, so he used others’ private stash too.

Mama recalled that people laughed at my grandpa for years after this incident because he brought his deer home. He bought a red collar with a bell, put it out to pasture, and kept it on his ranch where he knew it would be safe. That was also the last time the rancher ever went hunting.

A Teacher’s List: Things A Teacher Will Say in the Classroom

In April, my students and I began working on our poetry chapbooks. For one of the poems, we wrote a list poem. List poems have always been fun, for they can rhyme or not, and they can pretty much be about anything. Continue reading “A Teacher’s List: Things A Teacher Will Say in the Classroom”