Saturday, April 19, 2025

2025 April 19, Walking Tour Historic William Winston Home and Stage Coach Stop. Guide Lorie Johnson

We began our walk at the old location of the Cold Water Bookstore. We walked to the Stagecoach Stop and entered the one-room Stagecoach Cabin. After everyone returned, we took a group picture in front of the cabin.  

Group picture
The Coldwater Stage Stop, located on South Dickson Street, was built in Tuscumbia between 1815 and 1830. It served as a stop on Andrew Jackson's Military Road. It is thought to have been one of several log cabins operated as hotels by Michael Dickson, the first white settler in the town.

We continue up Main Street, and our guide identifies sites of interest. 

Maude Lindsey's photo is atop the piano in the front room, and most of the items in this room belong to her. 

She talked about Maude Lindsey, the granddaughter of William Henry and Judith Winston. Her father was Robert Burns Lindsey, and her mother was Sarah Miller Winston Lindsey. Robert Lindsey was the 22nd governor of Alabama. 

Maude Lindsey taught music at a kindergarten in Tuscumbia. In 1898, she founded and became a teacher at the first free kindergarten in Alabama.

Her home is across the street from the Tuscumbia Courthouse. 

We also visited the Helen Keller Library and the Institute for the Deaf and Blind. 

We continued to Deshler High School, which was built on land donated by  Gen David Deshler.


Brig. Gen James Deshler's painting hangs in the hallway of the home.
His father, Major David Desheler, and his mother had three children, but all three died. So, they gave the land to the city of Tuscumbia.
His request was that when the school was built, it would honor his son, who was killed in the Civil War.


Mrs. Judith M. Winston, who was upstairs in her dwelling, was caught under the falling timbers and died in a few minutes after being brought down. 
Article about Mrs. Judith Winston's Death 
A terrible Tornado on November 22, 1874 
Great Destruction of Property 
When the tornado hit, Mrs. Winston went to the top of the stairs to check the weather.

The stairs were rebuilt after her death. Born Mar 10, 1806, died Nov 22, 1874. 
William Winston was born Mar 24, 1789, and died April 27, 1857. So William Winston had died several years before the tornado hit and killed his wife Judith Winston. 
As you walk up the sidewalk to the home, you can see a historic marker and a piece of fence.

This is a piece of the original fence made in Ireland in the mid-nineteenth century for the Winston Family Cemetery in Tuscumbia, Alabama.
Given by Al, Andy, and Nancy Winston Blackburn 
In memory of their mother 
Judith Winston, 1948 D.H.S.
Graduate 2006

William Winston Home 
Clark T. Barton began constructing the home that would become the center building of Deshler High School in 1824. William Winston purchased and completed the Georgian-style dwelling in 1833. 
The largest remaining antebellum house in Tuscumbia. It features a winding staircase, eight fireplaces, ten original closets, and an inscription on the cellar wall written during the Union occupation, saying. 
It is a dam shame to destroy this mansion." The original log kitchen was placed at the NW rear corner to avoid fire near the house. Listed on the National Register of Historic Places. April 1982. The house and property were purchased by the city of Tuscumbia in 1948 for the site of the new deshler campus, relocating from property bequeathed by Major David Deshler (from his Main St residence, 3 blocks north), memorializing his son, Brig Gen James Deshler C.S.A. killed leading charge at the Balttle of Chickamauga ept 20, 1863.
William Winston (1789-1857), the father of Alabama Gov. John Anthony Winston
Grandfather of Maud Lindsey, a famed educator and author of children's books.
Father-in-law of Robert Burns Lindsay, the only foreign-born governor of Alabama. 
Winton family cemetery is located approximately one mile northwest of the house.


I was excited about this walking tour because I had never been inside the Stage Coach Cabin or the William Winston Home. 
There is a rich history associated with this little town where I grew up, but I moved away when I was twelve. 
It's always interesting to learn about the town where you grew up. 


https://quadcitiesdaily.com/april-saturday-walking-tours-in-tuscumbia-and-sheffield/









Tuesday, April 15, 2025

2025 April 7-11: The Ark Encounter and Creation Museum Trip with the Club-Diamonds in the Rough (Five Day Trip) & Diamond Tours

 Day 1: Monday, April 7:

Hubby and I stopped at Jack's for breakfast. I ordered gravy and biscuits with Diet Coke. 

When we arrived at the club around 7:30, everyone went inside to sign in, pick up their name tags, and use the restroom.

Everyone was on the bus by 8:00 A.M., and we were on the road by 8:30 A.M.

We traveled north on Savannah Highway to Natchez Trace, getting off in Lawrenceburg. We traveled north on Highway 43 through Columbia, TN, to I-65, then to I-264, and finally to I-74, I-275, and US 27, before arriving at the Comfort Inn, room 226, located at 1610 Flossie Drive, Lawrenceburg, TN. 

We stopped at Love's in Bear Creek. The building was being repaired, so they had installed a bathroom outside. We had to stand in line outside in the cold, waiting to use the restroom stalls. (3) Loves was located just off I-65 on Highway 312. 

Grilled Cheeseburger and Tater Tots 

We stopped for lunch at Freddy's Frozen Custard & Steakburgers in Bowling Green, Ky. $14.92

Hubby and I split a grilled cheeseburger with tater tots and ordered a Diet Coke. 

We stopped at Thornton's gas station in Buckner for a restroom break. 

We crossed the Ohio River into Cincinnati. Dinner at Logan Roadhouse, 3720 Stone Creek Blvd. Cincinnati, Ohio.

Hubby and I ordered Grilled pork chops, a salad, creamed potatoes, rolls, and a cookie. 

We arrived at our hotel around 8:00 P.M., took a hot bath, and went to bed. 

Comfort Inns & Suites 1610 Flossie Dr. Lawrenceburg, Indiana 

Photos

7198-19 @ 12:30 P.M. Freddy's Frozen Custard & Steakburgers Bowling Green, Ky

7202-7221 @4:05 04:13 P.M. Traveling Louisville, Ky

7224-25 @4:42 Thorntons Gas Station

7227-28 @ 6:28 P.M. Ohio River Tannery Island Lawrenceburg, IN 

Day 2: Tuesday, April 8:

Breakfast at the hotel consisted of gravy and biscuits, accompanied by sausage links and eggs, and served with cranberry juice. 

We depart for the Ark Encounter around 8:30 A.M. and arrive at 10:09 A.M. 

The Ark Encounter 

Our step-on guide greeted us and instructed us on where to line up for the shuttle and when to meet at the end of the day.

We got off the shuttle at the Answer Center and were on our own for the rest of the day. 

Our first stop was to ride the carousel, where I rode the camel. 

Our next stop was the Virtual Reality Experience, where we traveled back in time to meet Noah. $30.74

We witnessed the construction of the Ark and experienced the flood alongside Noah.

We walked into the ark, which was terrific. It was filled with animals, Noah and his family, and the history of its construction. Several Diamond buses were present, making it difficult to see everything. 

We skipped a lot of the ark because we were getting hungry. 

We had a buffet meal at  Emzara's Kitchen, where I got chicken fingers, salad, slaw, creamed potatoes, and pineapple cake. $36.02

We visited the Ararat Ridge Zoo area, where we watched children ride camels. It was cold outside, so Hubby bought a cup of hot chocolate. $5.29 

Our last stop was the Answer Center, where we were entertained by Stage Song, a Christian group that sang gospel songs. 

We made a group picture in front of the Ark.

We stayed at the Ark until 3:35 P.M.

When we were leaving, someone said, "I don't have my phone," so we turned around and returned to the Ark. Our leader informed the park about the lost phone. It had been left in the men's restroom. Someone at the park retrieved the phone, which was brought to our bus. Dinner at Cheddar's Scratch Kitchen, 3633 Springdale Road, Cincinnati, OH, at 5:00 P.M. 

I ordered chicken fingers, French fries, coleslaw, and ice cream. It was a huge plate, and I didn't even eat half of it. 

We head back to the hotel around 6:30 P.M. 

I took a hot bath, wrote in this journal, and went to bed. 

Photos:

7229 Breakfast at Jack @ 7:13 A:

7230-31 @ 7:45 A.M. Smoking Factory 

7232 @ 10:09 A.M. The Ark Entrance

7233-34 @ 10:36 A.M. Riding the carousel 

7235-42 11:04 The Ark 

7243 @ noon Lunch at Emzara's Kitchen

7244-46 @1:03 P.M. Zoo

7247-49 @2:25 P.M. True Song Entertainment 

7251-53 Group Picture

7254-55 Receipts

Day 3, Wednesday, April 9:

For breakfast at the hotel, I ate apple strudel and cranberry juice. 

Depart for the Creation Museum, 2800 Bullittsburg Church Road, Petersburg, KY, around 9:00 A.M. 

Dinosarus

We watched two 4-D Movies, and True Song entertained us. 

We visited the New Exhibit, "Borderland: Israel in the Time of Jesus," and the Allosaurus fossil exhibit.

We saw dinosaurs & Dragons, and the Garden of Eden. 

We walked through the creation Zoo, where Hubby petted the goats. We saw Kangaroos, Alpacas, goats, and other animals. We visited the Conservatory and walked through the gardens. 

We ate lunch at Noah's Cafe. Hubby and I split a hamburger and fries. We had to eat outside because the cafe was full. $25.70

We returned to the hotel to freshen up around 2:30 P.M. 

We had dinner at The Radisson Hotel, located at 668 W 5th Street, Covington, KY, around 6:00 P.M. Seven other diamond buses were also present at the Radisson. 

We were served a buffet-style meal. 

I got baked chicken with gravy, roast beef, creamed potatoes, steamed green beans, and various rolls. Each table had a large plate of chocolate chip cookies. 

All the group leaders were called to the front to showcase their work.

There was music, entertainment, and some dancing. All the Veterans were honored. 

Everyone was singing, and we sang back to the hotel. 

Return to the hotel around 8 P.M.

Photos

7256-57 @7:30 A.M. Breakfast at the hotel

7258-64 @9 A.M. Creation Museum 

7265-75 @10:22 The Dinosaur Area 

7276 @11:47 Lunch 

7277 video 

7279-80 @12:33 P.M. outside

7282-84 @2:29 P.M. Traveling 

7285-86 @6:Dinner. Dinner 

Day 4: Thursday, April 10:

Breakfast at the hotel

Leave for Cincinnati History and Natural History Museums around 8:15 A.M. 

Arrive around 9 A.M. 

We watched National Parks at the Omnimax Theater.

At the History Museum, we saw Public Landing, Cincinnati in Motion, Shaping Our City, You Are Here, and Made in Cincinnati.

You are here 

At the Museum of Natural History and Science, we saw Dinosaur Hall, the Science Interactive Gallery, The Cave, the Neil Armstrong Space Exploration Gallery, the Ice Age Gallery, the John A. and Judy Ruthven Get into Nature Gallery, Ancient Worlds Hiding in Plain Sight, Advancing Health, and the stem lab. 

My favorites were the Cave, the Ice Age, the model train, and the town buildings. There is so much to see and little time to see it all. 

Depart for the Levee around noon.

Several in our group ate lunch at  Hofbrauhaus, a German Restaurant. Hubby and I split a Munchi Sampler. $31.80

A sampling of Jagerschnitzel grilled bratwurst, and bratwurst, served with German potato salad and imported sauerkraut.

The People's Purple Bridge spans the Ohio River, dividing Ohio from Kentucky. 

The Purple People's Bridge

After lunch, we walked across the People's Purple Bridge. 

Everyone loaded back onto the bus and rode back to the hotel. Five of us rode to the nearby Walmart.

$50.91 for candy and $74.24 for iPhone connections. 

We depart for dinner at The Farm, 239 Anderson Ferry Rd. Cincinnati, OH 

Arrived around 5:15 P.M., there were several other Diamond buses there. 

We were served a buffet-style meal. I got BBQ baby back Ribs, green beans, Mac and cheese, salad, and creamed potatoes. For dessert, I had strawberry pie and Cheesecake. 

After eating, the owner's son and daughter sang several gospel songs, and we sang with them.

The owner then shared the history of the barn, Cincinnati, and the notable people who had become famous in Cincinnati. 

Returned to the hotel around 6:45 P.M. 

We've packed, and we're leaving for home tomorrow.

Photos:

7287-7387 @8:56-11:46 P.M. Cincinnati History and Natural History Museum 

7388-7409 12:04-12:16 P.M. traveling Cincinnati 

7410—7428 @12:17-12:33 P.M. Newport, KY 

7429-7436 @12:28-1:39 P.M. Hofbrauhaus German Restaurant 

7437-38 @2:35 P.M. Newport, KY

7439-7481 @2:36-2:40 P.M. Cincinnati 

7482-86 @ 2:41 P.M., Covington, Ky 

7487-97 @3:07-4:21 P.M. Lawrenceburg, IN

7499-7505 @ 5:41-6:02 P.M. Delhi Hills 

7506-7529 @7:36-7:50 P.M. Traveling Cincinnati, Addystor, North Bend, Cleves Sunset

Day 5, Friday, April 11:

We set our overnight luggage outside our room and went to breakfast.

I got gravy, biscuits, and cranberry juice.

We loaded the bus at 8:30 A.M. and began our journey home. 

We stopped at a Rest Area in Shepherdsville, Kentucky.

We stopped at Buc-EEs in Smith Grove, Ky. 

We ate lunch at Panda Express in Nashville. Hubby and I shared a large plate of walnut shrimp, broccoli, beef, and orange chicken. 

Arrive home around four P.M. 

Photos

7530 Receipts

7532-33 @10:07 A.M. Louisville, KY

7536-49 @10:2910:39 A.M. Rest Stop Shepherdsville, Ky 

7550-53 @11:04-11:11 A.M. Buc sees Smith Grove, Ky

7555 -81 @1:09- -1:24 P.M. Traveling through Nashville, TN

7582-83 @1:32-1:38 P.M. Panada Express Nashville, TN


Wednesday, April 2, 2025

Palliative Care

 You are given Palliative Care when all hope is gone.

Mom was given meds so she no longer struggled to live.

As she drifted, my siblings and I sang Amazing Grace.

What had happened to this soul that had raised eight loving children?

When did the sadness and unhappiness begin?

When did Mom develop an addiction?

Was it when she was hurt in a car accident, which left her in constant pain?

Was it when she lost her mom and sister?

Was it because her husband was unfaithful?

Was it because her children stopped coming because they were too busy?

Was it because she no longer felt needed?

So many questions to be answered.

There is no one-step cure for addiction, and many times, Mom was detoxed.

In the last few months, Mom seemed to be coming out of her addiction and returning to her old self, but it was too late. The drugs had destroyed her body.

Mom was seventy-seven when she died, and Dad was eighty-three. 

Mom was seventy years old when her mother died, and she was forty-three when her father died. 

Mom was seventy-two when her only sibling died. 

Mom's paternal grandmother (her dad's mother) died when I was about three and a half. I don't remember her. 

Mom was close to her grandmother; she helped care for her when she was sick. 

Hubby and I moved from Missouri in 2002. 

Some days, Mom would be her loving self; other times, she just wanted to be left alone. 

We all had busy lives, and family members stopped visiting Mom when she did not respond to our visits.  

Mother's Day, Father's Day, Christmas, Thanksgiving, and birthdays became spotty. 

Holidays with my parents were significant events, but they slowly drifted away over the years.

When did Dad become addicted?

Was it when he became involved with a drug addict?

Was it when a tractor turned over on him, crushing his ribs and arm?


Was it when he lost his dog, Jack?

Was it when he lost his mom and his drug-addicted girlfriend?

Dad lived alone for about five years, struggling to make ends meet. 

Dad did well for a while, but I think Depression took over.


We sold most of Mom's things, which Dad did not want, to pay for the funeral expenses, which her policy did not cover, including their marker. 

All of Dad's funeral expenses are paid in full when he leaves us. 

Dad moved in with my sister in January 2017.


Dad fell and lay on the floor all night because he couldn't get up by himself.

My sister noticed that Dad was taking his medicine correctly.

She would go to his house in the morning and leave his morning pills.

In the afternoons after work, she would drop off his nighttime pills. Sometimes, she would leave both day and night pills. 

She had gone by to drop off his morning pills, and that is when she found him on the floor. 

She called a sister who lived close by to help her get Dad up.

I went by later, and he had fallen once again, so we called the ambulance.

He was admitted to the hospital, and he stayed for several days. 

Dad was out of his head and would not stay in bed. They were not giving him narcotics; he was having withdrawals. 

He was sent to Rehab, where he stayed for over a month. 

He was out of his head; he would not stay in bed, so they started giving him drugs to make him sleep.

We finally got him out of Rehab because he was not improving. Dad said they were trying to kill him. 

He was angry at them, and he started spitting on the floor. 

His doctor said Dad could not live alone, so my sister took him in.

He had to adjust to a new home.

Dad lost some of his memory when he was in Rehab from the medicine they were giving him, which is one of the side effects. 

Dad only remembers Mom when she was a young woman. 

He does not remember the last few years when he and his mother argued. 

He no longer talks about the other woman. Maybe he has forgotten her.

Drugs took her life a month after her mom died. 

Dad's only friend for many years was his faithful dog, Jack.

Jack was at Dad's heels every time he walked out the door. 

Jack would jump inside Dad's truck, and off they would go. 

One dark day, Dad and Jack crossed the road, going to the mailbox. 

A car came speeding up the road, nearly hitting Dad, but Jack pushed Dad out of the way.

Jack was hit but did not die right away; he started having seizures and had to be put down.

I think that is when Dad slipped into a deep state of Depression.

He went downhill after that. Nothing mattered anymore. 

Dad would cry at the drop of a hat; nobody knew why. He would tear up whenever he talked about his best friend, Jack.

Time heals all wounds, even the mind.

While Dad was in Rehab, a preacher visited him. He said, "The preacher saved my life." 

Dad wanted to go to church when he got out of Rehab.

Now my sister takes him every Sunday.

My dad went from a scruffy older man to a clean-cut, well-dressed gentleman. 

His demeanor has changed. 

When Dad was on drugs, he cried a lot, Dad cussed, and threatened to kill one of my brothers.

Now, he is the dad I remember from growing up —a kind and loving father. 

It is incredible how your life changes when you stop taking narcotics. 


I recall precious memories. 

We worked together, we played together, we were a team. 

We spent many weekends swimming, boating, and skiing on the Tennessee River.

Mom would load our station wagon with everything she needed for the day, which included food, clothing, diapers, and formula. (for there was always a baby)


Mom married Dad when she was fourteen, and I was born a month before she turned sixteen.

Two years between the first children, but the other children came closer.

She had eight children before age thirty, so we grew up together.

When my sister started dating, she and my mom looked alike, and people often mistook my mom for my sister. 


Dad would load the car and hitch our boat to the back of the station wagon.

Dad would back our boat into the Tennessee River with the older children helping.

Most of the time, it took two trips to get all the children across Seven Mile Island.

All the children had to wear those orange life preservers. 


We did not care what we ate because we were too busy having fun. 

We would get sunburned if we did not use sunscreen.

Mosquitoes bit us; we did not have insect repellent. 

We would get leeches on the mosquito bites. 

Sometimes, we ate bologna sandwiches, chips, pork n' beans, and drank tea or Kool-Aid. 

Sometimes, Mom would deep-fry fish that Dad had caught in the Tennessee River.

She would make Hush Puppies and French fries. 

This was quality time with family.  

We moved to Florence when I was twelve, and things changed. 

We still went to the river, but not as often. 

Moving from the country to the city brought disease because people lived in closer proximity to one another. 

When we lived in the country, we did not have this problem.

The diseases the children contracted were whooping cough, Scarlet fever, Chickenpox, measles, sore throat, and rheumatic fever. 

Mom spent many hours at the Florence Clinic with her children, which she never had to do when we lived in the country.


When I was a teen, Dad's job took him out of town, so Mom was on her own.

All the children would pitch in and help do chores. 

I recall that we had an automatic washer, but no dryer. My sisters and I would hang clothes on the clotheslines and our neighbor's fence. 

Dad built several shelves in the utility room to store the laundry. 

Dad moved the family back to the country.

Two of my sisters and I had married and left home.

All my younger siblings went to Brandon Elementary School when we lived in town.

When they moved to the country, my siblings went to Wilson School.

My youngest sister and brother were the only ones in our family to graduate from college. 

Several individuals obtained their GED, and some later pursued higher education. 

When Mom and Dad got married, they moved to Detroit, Michigan, and Dad got a job at the Chrysler Plant, earning a good income.

Mom missed home; she didn't like big-city life. 

Mom wanted Dad to stay with her, but Dad enjoyed playing cards and spending time with his friends. 

So, Mom packed her bags, caught a bus, and went home to Alabama. Dad followed several weeks later. 

Dad worked for Reynolds but hated working inside, so he quit.

Dad worked for Mr. Jerrod moving house.

Dad worked for Tom McCravey for several years.

Dad may have worked for other people that I'm not aware of.

Dad worked for Billy Hensley for many years and then ventured out alone.

Dad got his license for plumbing and electrical work.

Dad could learn just about any work. He worked on cars and added to every house we lived in.

My brothers worked with Dad for many years before venturing out on their own.

Dad could not work alone, so he hired helpers after my brothers left. 


I was fortunate enough to know my grandparents and great-grandparents. 

My great-grandfather died when I was twelve. (Mom's grandfather) His first wife died when my grandmother was about nine years old. 

My grandmother's dad married a woman named Cora, who was the only great-grandmother I knew.


Cora lived eleven years after my great-grandfather died, and my grandmother took care of her in her last days. 

At one time, a train carried passengers from Sheffield to Town Creek.

My grandparents traveled the rails many times to Town Creek.

When they arrived in Town Creek, her dad would pick them up in his car.

When the train stopped carrying passengers, my dad would drive the family and my grandparents to Town Creek to visit. 


My grandmother and grandfather (my mom's parents) were financially struggling, but we didn't realize it because they always had food and gifts for us. They were kind and loving.

Sometimes, their grandchildren lived with them. 


My grandfather and grandmother, my dad's parents, were not wealthy. They raised three grandchildren while their parents worked and lived in Chicago.


We kept the roads hot when we went from one grandparent's house to the other because our grandparents lived within walking distance.

We had cousins living with both grandparents, so there was always someone to play with.

We never stayed indoors in our grandparents' home because we were used to playing outside.

Dad was fifty-eight when his mother died and sixty-four when his father died. 

Dad visited his parents like clockwork, helping them as much as possible. He was a devoted son.

One summer, Mom got a job surveying the City of Florence. She worked with another woman (whose name I cannot remember), but that woman did not drive. For some reason, Mom had to give up the job, so I took over surveying the City of Florence. 

I worked all summer driving without a driver's license. That fall, I turned sixteen, but I had not yet taken the driving test. 

With the money I made, I bought my class ring and got my driver's license.


We attended the First Assembly Church faithfully. Mom made many lifelong friends when we lived in the city.

When my parents moved to the country, they attended church at various people's houses or at a different church. 

I heard my boys talk about attending church with their grandmother and watching them be filled with the Holy Spirit.

They said they would escape and go outside when Granny was filled with the Spirit and no one was watching. 

I laugh at their stories about going to church with their grandmother.

They said it was not funny then.


My oldest son is six years younger than my youngest brother, so they were like brothers growing up.


Dad was a kid at heart and enjoyed spending time with kids and grandkids. 


Dad would take a truckload of grandkids to the Joy-Land Drive-In. Mom usually stayed at home because she did not like the movies Dad watched.

We ate a lot of pizza when Dad was doing construction work for Domino's in Cloverdale.

He either got a free pizza or a cheap pizza.

Dad owned several trucks; the family favorite was his large blue van. 

In the 1970s, Dad drove his van, along with his mom, dad, and son-in-law, to Canada. 

My grandmother was a Canadian; she had not been home since she married my grandfather in 1926. 

My grandfather met my grandmother while working for his great-uncle's farm in Canada.

My grandparents wrote letters to each other for a couple of years while my grandfather traveled in search of work. 

After the war, my grandfather joined the army and learned to work on airplanes in the hangar bay. 

When he returned from the army, he asked for my grandmother's hand in marriage.

They married in Canada, and my grandmother moved to Michigan with my grandfather.

They heard about the New Deal and the TVA Dam Project in Sheffield, Alabama.

 

They loaded all their belongings into my grandfather's truck and traveled to Sheffield.

They stayed in the old Sheffield hotel until they found a place to live.

They lived in Muscle Shoals for several years. They moved to Tuscumbia and finally settled in Sheffield. 

My dad and his siblings attended a Catholic School in Sheffield. He attended School in Muscle Shoals and High School on Colbert Mountain.


My grandmother was the oldest of thirteen children, two sets of twins, and two died in infancy.


Some of my grandmother's siblings were very young when she left home. 

My grandmother had a sister the same age as her oldest son, whom she had never met. 

She and her younger brother had moved with their mom to British Columbia, where the climate was warmer, but they did not come for the reunion.

My grandmother communicated with all her siblings via telephone and mail. 

My grandmother got to visit with one of her sisters and several brothers. 

My grandmother was not in the best health, so Dad made her a bed in the back of the van so she could rest on the long journey to Canada. 


Over the years, many trips were made to Michigan to visit relatives. 

All of my grandfather's siblings lived in Michigan. 

Sometimes, it was just family. Other times, Dad would take my grandparents. 

As the family grew, so did Dad's vehicle. We went from a small car to a station wagon, a pickup truck with a camper, and a large side van. 


There was at least one addition to our family every year. So our family grew and grew. 

We started spending more time at home with our families, taking vacations with them, so our time with our grandparents dwindled.


Now I feel the pinch as my grandchildren have grown and married, and some have children of their own. Once they become teenagers, they no longer need their grandmothers. 

Time is spent with their friends and family, just as we did with our grandparents. 

As I get older, I wish I had spent more time with my parents and grandparents. I could have learned a lot more about my heritage. 



Museum that we have visited

  Dates & Places of Museums   1988 Dec 3-4, The Jack Daniels Distillery 133 Lynchburg Hwy, Lynchburg, TN 1989 Dec 22, Kennedy Space Ce...