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Showing posts from March, 2022

Born on St Patrick's Day: Happy 115th Mary

They say that its good luck to be Irish, and that the luckiest of all are those who are born on St Patrick's Day. No doubt this is what was said the day that my great grandmother was born. However, her life was not necessarily filled with the good luck that the superstition had predicted. As much as she had a hard life, her life was also an "ordinary" one of a young British immigrant to Canada. Despite that, the simple life she led in youth was filled with fun. She embrace the changing times, new found freedoms, and innovations. Its the heirlooms from that chapter of her life that fascinate me the most because they show aside to her that none of my relatives knew - a woman who was happy. So today, I am going to share the side of her that one of those heirlooms tells. I have a small black autograph book that was hers.  At almost 100 years old, the book binding has all but disintegrated yet the leather cover is in near pristine condition and the partially bound pages are al...

A Shamrock for Mary: Happy 113th Birthday!

St Patrick's Day. A simple holiday that most of the world celebrates with beer, shamrocks, and all things green, but in my family the day is known as my great grandmother's birthday. She would have been 113 today. It's kind of crazy when I think about it like that because she died within my lifetime. Although I was too young to have really known or remembered her, I did meet her many times and by all accounts I was her favourite great grandchild. She pretty much knit me an entire baby wardrobe which is now packed away in my parent's basement awaiting the day that I have a little girl of my own. I wish that I was old enough to remember her. I wish that I had had the chance to ask her questions about what my family now considers 'lost history'. For the past several years the majority of my genealogical research has been focused on getting to know her posthumously. She has come to represent an entire era. She was an immigrant, felt the impacts of WW1, survived the ...

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