Late-January
and the Christmas things are back upstairs. Oh, wait. There’s still a plastic
bin of stuff in the back bedroom. Out of sight, out of mind.
I decided
that for every trip I made up, I’d bring something old down and go through it.
Oh my goodness, what a find.
Myriad
out-sized calendars from the Missouri Department of Forestry that had photos
taken by Mom’s nephew/my cousin, Mark. A Grand Canyon calendar from the 70s, a
Norman Rockwell calendar from the 80s. I kept the latter two and cut out all
Mark’s pictures with dates and captions from the others.
I
found historical (to me) documents of events both known and unknown. A plat of
Couchwood Subdivision, developed from our land that Dad sold; a legal folder of
neighbor Snodgrass' suit over Dad's allotting of acreage--Ted Boswell,
attorney—this I didn’t know.
I
re-taped Dad's birth certificate, which looked to have been cut down the
center, in the process, learning his mother’s middle name—Allen. Here was Mom's
lifetime teaching certificate and a WSCS or UMW award, a school picture of
Mom’s first grade in 1971-72. If you were in this picture, I’ll give it to you.
There
were letters from Tom Couch to another Couch I never heard of, a letter from Tennessee
cousin Melissa with ancestry information about Mom’s mother Flossie's folks.
Promotion
and Vacation Bible School certificates of our late sister Martha's. She died in
a vehicle accident in 1967. In 1949, Salem Methodist Church’s pastor was J. R.
Martin, Frank Kane was superintendent of Sunday School, and our aunt, Mrs.
Holmes Aston was VBS “principal.”
By
1950, the pastor was Wesley Reutz. In 1951, it was Kenneth M. Goode. By
1953, the certificates were full-size with no ‘pastor’ line. Aunt Evelyn
(Aston) had moved to superintendent, and Pauline Weger was the teacher. She was
also long-time church pianist.
The
old (70s) Benton Couriers need to be recycled since the historical society/library
has them stored on microfilm. And the quilting pattern book from 1975? Does
anyone want it?
Interesting
headlines in two Arkansas Methodist newspapers in late 1974. On the week before
Christian Education Sunday, 4 church leaders answered the question, “Has the
Sunday School ‘had its day’?”
In
early October that same year, the headline was: ‘Belief crisis’ faces
nation,….” What is the old saying, “The more things change, the more they stay
the same.”? BFF Dot will take those.
The
last item I found is actually personal. It’s a program from a concert in 1985
by the five-year-old Arkansas Chamber Singers, of which I am a charter member.
By 1985, the founding director, Barbara Levy, had gone, and Dr. Rosella
Duerksen was director. Don’t remember those names? How about this name? Pat
Paulus? Oh, that was me.
My,
how things change. LOL
4 comments:
Oh I love looking through old papers and documents. Good stuff.
Old stuff in the attic; old stuff in the ground--all old stuff is fascinating, and sometimes, a source of knowledge. At least, of curiosity. xoxo
I love looking at the past. But it is so hard to keep everything until it is time so see it through new eyes! Like your plan of a box at a time.
I inherited a large, open-space attic with enough room for many boxes, etc. Someday, somehow....or perhaps my children/ siblings will get to any that are left. Thanks for commenting.
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