If you want to understand today, you have to search yesterday.
Pearl S. Buck
I did not know my grandfather. I used his WWI diary as the basis for my stage play: Clean Dry Socks: Diary of a Doughboy. As far as I know, this diary was never found until after his death in 1948. And most of the family did not know about it until after my grandmother died in 1961.
I have vague memories of my grandmother. I was only three when she passed. I remember her baking gingerbread. And I have a visual image of driving away from the hospital where she was taken in the later stages if dementia.
I stood their graves and said “thank you.” And the word I thought of was “legacy.”
Because I was in far Southwest Virginia for work I had, as I mentioned yesterday, a lot of drive time. And because I visited Martin’s Station which was the fort settlers would pass through just before heading through the Cumberland Gap, I thought a lot about the people who traveled that road.
My ancestors didn’t make it to Cumberland Gap. They chose instead to settle in Grayson and Tazewell Counties along with many of their other Scots-Irish brethren.
My father’s side made it to neighboring Bland and Giles Counties.
I’ve spent some time doing research, and I want to spent more time. During the first of the lockdown, I took advantage of a 90 day free trial from Ancestry.com and built a substantial family tree.
But the free trial ended and other projects were calling. So it sits there for when I have, no, for when I make the time to continue the research.
I finished the weekend visiting my Mother. Before I left my hometown, I visited my father’s grave, along with my stepfather, and my paternal grandparents. Because this is where I grew up, and because most of my dad’s siblings are buried on the same hillside, I’ve been here much more often.
I’m not sure what I’m going to do with all of this information, or all of these feelings. I have multiple project ideas.
I also have many, many things to get to before I can get to those projects.
But last week’s trip was a little different. Or maybe this has been growing for a while.
Along with those feelings came a new appreciation for the people who have gone before, the people of the mountains, and a new appreciations for the mountains they traveled through and settled in.
I will never know all of the stories that happened over the centuries to get to the place where my grandparents, and later my parents, met and had their families.
Did they wonder about the legacy they would leave? Or was life such a challenge that they merely fought to survive, or to hope to build a better life.
There is much pondering going on here. Much to think about.
Sing it Karen…
THINGS YOU SHOULD READ
Make Joe Biden Pay
Townhall.com staff
We’re less than six months away from the November elections, and Joe Biden has already caused so much destruction and fueled so much chaos in less than a year and a half. Read more
https://townhall.com/columnists/townhallcomstaff/2022/05/16/make-joe-biden-pay-n2607331
Elon Musk slams Biden: ‘The real president is whoever controls the teleprompter’
FOX News
“I do feel like if somebody were to accidentally lean on the teleprompter, it’s going to be like Anchorman,” the CEO added, referencing the 2004 film in which Ron Burgundy reads whatever is written on the teleprompter, even if it would ruin his career. Read More.
https://www.foxbusiness.com/politics/elon-musk-biden-real-president-teleprompter?intcmp=tw_fnc
BORN ON THIS DAY
1911 – Maureen O’Sullivan, Irish-American actress (d. 1998)
1936 – Dennis Hopper, American actor and director (d. 2010)
1955 – Bill Paxton, American actor and director (d. 2017)
1956 – Sugar Ray Leonard, American boxer
BENEDICTION
The Lord will keep you from all harm—
he will watch over your life;
the Lord will watch over your coming and going
both now and forevermore.
Psalm 121:7–8