Kathleen was looking for a project to get into and, for whatever reason, settled on reading and digitizing the materials we have from my mother and father. These include a scrapbook compiled by Kathleen for my parents' 40th wedding anniversay (1989). along with various legal documents and printed letters.
But the most intriguing document is a diary written by 9-year-old John W. Kennedy, detailing one year in his life. That year was 1937. I don't like to get in Kathleen's way when she is immersed in such projects, though she is generous in sharing little tidbits that amuse, fascinate, or puzzle her. A future post may relate some highlights.
But once I can wrap up my St. Luke's UMC history project for the time being - I am pausing after taking readers from the late '70s through 2004 - my goal is to begin writing some sort of history of at least part of my family. My current model is a good one: Kathleen's book that she wrote on her mother and father, complete with their descendants. She quite logically argues that the sheer number of people involved in going further back would be overwhelming.
So, right now, focusing on John and Barbara Kennedy is the specific goal. Kathleen has digitized so many images over the years (long before her current efforts) and she has the subscription to Ancestry, which I can borrow from and maybe use for even more arcane research.
Neither of us remembers how we came to possess so many documents from my parents, though I suppose Mike must also have quite a few. Particularly legal ones, of course, as he functioned as the family attorney for many years. Just the other day, I sent him a plea for some details on the history of Walnut Ridge, the housing development just south of West High School in Iowa City, developed along with Mace Braverman, a business partner of dad's.
Just to show how life goes, today Kathleen shared a copy of a document I wrote on June 14, 2023... Barbara's birthday. When she asked me about it, I had no recollection. But seeing it reminded me that I wrote it as part of this very blog. Brother Tim has asked for the siblings to write down some memories of our mother and send them to him to compile this coming June 14. Mom would be 99.
One of the points of that post, clearly, was to point out the irony of our elder granddaughter going off to Iowa that coming fall to attend college. I also speculated a bit on how Grace might have been affected by her great grandmother, even though they never met.
I guess we can reasonably speculate on how we are products in some diffuse way of our ancestors, most of whom we never met and many of whom we know nothing. We do know they lived and reproduced, of course. We are living proof.
My interest in the history of my family, or my church, or community or long-time home is in trying to better understand HOW people lived and how some of their journey led to the always compelling story of... ME.
I still haven't come up with the specific anecdotes I will contribute to the family project. But having some primary source documents should help me.
And later today we will drive up to DIA to pick up granddaughter Anna, flying back due to receiving a jury summons and without recourse to defer. She is flying back from Iowa, a second great granddaughter now living where Barb spent so many years making a life.
To brag a tiny bit: Anna earned four A's and one A+ this past semester. That is the sort of thing my mom would have shared widely, perhaps at bridge or at the Elks pool.
But now I am straying into memories of Barbara Fern Guffey Kennedy.