- I haven't done anything with Nellie Blake's or Maria Bond's diaries yet.
- I sold Martha Ballard's scrapbook.
- I acquired the 1872 diary of Edward Everett Reynolds of South Acton, Maine, kept when he was 16 years old. My husband and I have transcribed most of it. He was a very hard working young man, who went to school, took night classes, worked on his father's farm, and did jobs for several of their neighbors. I traced him a little bit on Ancestry and found that he grew up, got married, didn't have any children, but became a successful businessman. I also have a diary kept by his sister, Ida Reynolds Shapleigh, in 1889. She was a sad young woman who had lost a child and appears to have lost her home as well, perhaps to a fire. Her husband had to go to Boston to find work at one point. But the year ends on a happier note when he starts a business and they settle in their new home.
- I acquired a very tiny diary with very tiny, difficult to read handwriting. I have not made it all out yet, but appears to have been kept by a young woman living in the northern suburbs of Boston.
- I just acquired a new diary a few days ago. The only identification was a dedication "To Aunt Sarah from Muriel," and the name of the store where it was purchased in New Haven, CT. I've only read through a few months, but was able to identify her using the first names of her husband and children, with the other clues. She was Sarah A. Clark and kept the diary in 1920 when she was 74 years old. She seemed to rarely, if ever, leave the house, and recorded every visit and letter she received. Her 79 year old husband, Ed, was a boat mechanic (apparently still working, at least part time) and Civil War veteran.
Domestic History
The Ordinary Lives of Everyday People
Monday, September 18, 2017
2017 Update
It's been a long time since I have written, but I haven't forgotten about you, dear little blog. Here is what has happened to my collection in the past five years.
Sunday, December 30, 2012
2012 Update
This year I thinned out my collection a little. I sold the photos and ephemera from Elaine Dee Wolf, the photo of Amos B. Sayres and a few other Philadelphia photos.
I acquired a wonderful cabinet card photo of Simeon Hasty (originally of Limerick, ME), and his wife Mary and son Ollie, when they were living in Nebraska. I did a little research on them and listed it on eBay, but am happy that it didn't sell. I have grown attached to them.
I have also made up my mind that I will put Nellie Blake's diary online beginning next year. I would like to go to Providence and visit the RI Historical Society library first, to do a little more research.
Sunday, October 16, 2011
Diarist Identified
In my last post, I mentioned the diary I found with other possessions belonging to H. Morse Bond of Brattleboro, VT. I have since found out that the diary was kept by his grandmother, Maria Louise Knight Bond, who was originally from Dummerston. It appears that Morse's mother died when he was a baby, and he was raised by his father's parents. Mrs. Bond was in her late 70s and early 80s when she kept this diary from 1921 to 1925. She passed away in 1928.
Although her life centered on her home and domestic duties, it was not without drama. She documents difficulties she had with her housekeeper, Mrs. Lee (who eventually quits) and her own depression and physical ailments. Mrs. Bond was very lonely after her husband died in 1924, and relied on visits from family and friends to keep her spirits up. There is also occasional mention of unusual occurrences - an earthquake, an eclipse, President Coolidge passing through town. She was an active member of the Daughters of 1812 and the Colonial Dames. And she made lots and lots of doughnuts.
I was able to find a very detailed family tree of the Bonds, including photographs of Maria, Henry, their son Will, and Morse as a baby, on Ancestry.com. Here she is, looking very Victorian.
Although her life centered on her home and domestic duties, it was not without drama. She documents difficulties she had with her housekeeper, Mrs. Lee (who eventually quits) and her own depression and physical ailments. Mrs. Bond was very lonely after her husband died in 1924, and relied on visits from family and friends to keep her spirits up. There is also occasional mention of unusual occurrences - an earthquake, an eclipse, President Coolidge passing through town. She was an active member of the Daughters of 1812 and the Colonial Dames. And she made lots and lots of doughnuts.
I was able to find a very detailed family tree of the Bonds, including photographs of Maria, Henry, their son Will, and Morse as a baby, on Ancestry.com. Here she is, looking very Victorian.
Wednesday, October 12, 2011
The Beginning
This blog is for my own use, but I'll try to make it intelligible for anyone else who happens to stumble across it.
You could say that I collect people's lives. My collection actually consists of the things people leave behind - diaries, letters, photos, scrapbooks - with which they document their everyday existence. I call this domestic history. I enjoy tracing these folks through Google and Ancestry.com, and would eventually like to document these things online in blogs or websites. Right now my collection consists of the following:
- A scrapbook kept by Martha Ballard, a young girl living in Lynn, Massachusetts during World War II. I found this in a second hand shop, and because I have family from Lynn, it had personal interest, as well as just being fun to look through. It includes photos, newspaper clippings, greeting cards, school and 4-H items.
- Diaries of Sarah Ellen "Nellie" Blake, a young lady from Providence, Rhode Island. They start in 1890, the year she graduated from high school, and end the day before her wedding in 1893 to Selwyn Blake, who I believe was her cousin. I have done quite a bit of research on their family history. Selwyn was fairly easy to track because he had an unusual first name. (Parents - please give your children unusual names that are easy to spell. It will make life so much simpler for the historians and genealogists of the future.) Selwyn ran into some legal trouble during his career, but I'm not sure at this point if he was ethically challenged or just very unlucky. These diaries were what really got me interested in researching domestic history.
- Several identified photos from Philadelphia, dating to about 1870. One of them is of Amos B. Sayres, an African-American man who was employed by the U.S. Mint. I have been able to find many of the people in the photos in the U.S. Census.
- Childhood items belonging to Elaine Dee Wolf of Cincinnati, Ohio. These include a letter she wrote to Santa Claus in 1908 when she was six years old; several pages from her baby book that include photos of her and her family; a couple of other letters; and the program from her graduation from Vassar in 1922. Elaine appears to have had a happy life as the only child of well-to-do parents, and traveled to Europe several times in her life.
- Items belonging to the Miller family of Fairfield and Bridgeport, CT. These include a letter and a few postcards, and many photos that are only identified by first name. Not sure yet if there is enough here to do anything with it. And the stuff dates up to the 1960s, so research will be more difficult (no census records available) and there may be privacy concerns as well. Rather than documenting the stuff, I may try to find them and see if they want any of these things back.
- Books and other personal items belonging to H. Morse Bond of Brattleboro, Vermont. There are a couple of diaries kept by a woman that he lived with when he was a young man in the 1920s - her name is not in them, but it doesn't appear that she was his mother - but the fact that he inherited them and kept them indicates that she was probably a relative. I just got these and haven't finished reading through them yet. So I'm not sure if I'm researching him, or her, or both of them. The diaries are mostly concerned with the weather, who came to call, baking she did, and where they went that day. Several entries from 1924 document the illness of her husband, Henry, from "stoppage of the kidneys." He apparently didn't survive, so if I can find an obituary that should help identify her. Mr. Bond is not listed in the 1920 census. The 1930 census lists him as a World War veteran, so he may have still been in the military in 1920.
So that's my collection up to now. It just occurred to me that perhaps I should get a fireproof box for these things, instead of having them scattered around the house.
If you collect people's lives, write and tell me about it. Thanks for reading.
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