If you have information, stories, photographs, etc., to share about anyone in Jim Howard's family, please contact me - howardka at earthlink.net. If you use anything from this blog, please contact me for permission to post/use elsewhere. I don't mind sharing but would like credit for these original posts and for the family photos.

Monday, November 28, 2011

Surnames I'm Researching

Here are the surnames I'm researching for my husband's family:

Edwin Armstead Howard,  Leon Porter Howard, Sr., Howards of northwest Georgia
Winnie Leah Tucker Howard, James Edwin Tucker, Johnie Ida Parker Tucker, John Alexander Parker - all lived in northwest Georgia - Cartersville, Red Oak, Old Campbell County and surrounding areas, also Oklahoma and Florida

Dorothy Ann Gaines Howard, Guy Gaines, Daisy Victoria Parker Gaines, James T. Parker, Cora Ann Venable Parker Trippe - same locations as above plus North Carolina


Edwin Howard Letters from Monteverde Academy


Last week Jim moved some plastic boxes from our bedroom to the basement. The boxes had photo albums and photos. I raided one box because it had old photos from Jim's family. I also found an old envelope with three letters written by Edwin Armstead Howard, Jim's dad, to his mother, Winnie Leah Tucker Howard, in 1928. Edwin was a boarding student at Montverde Academy in Montverde, Florida. He had just turned 11 years old the month before he wrote the letters. It's interesting to read about life in a child's words.

There were three letters in the envelope dated Oct. 23, 1928, Oct 1928, and Wednesday (no date but probably written in November, 1928). The envelope has a postmark of Nov 28, 1928. All three letters mention a special Montverde school belt that Edwin really wanted, and in fact had already ordered. He asked his mother to send the money so he could get the belt. He described it and gave a good pitch on why he should have it. "They are the cats meow." He also asked that she send him the money in an envelope addressed to him and not to both him and his brother, Leon.

In the second letter he thanks his mother for the check for $3.00 and for packages she sent him and his brother.  He wrote "I was glad to get the check for my belt they will be in soon and I will get mine"

In the third letter Edwin wrote "I want you to send me more money for my belt. Mrs. Carpenter made me cash the check and get a hair cut. I want you to send some more for my belt the belt will be here in two weeks the hair cut cost 25 cents and I got my moneys worth too by golly." He also wrote about needing a winter coat because it was very cold in the school buildings and about the importance of addressing mail for him to him. "addrees the letter to me with the money in it because Leon will try to say you sent it to him"

We have many more letters that Edwin wrote to his mother from school and during World War II. She saved them for decades and Jim's mother kept them as well. I'll post more from time to time.







Letter 1 Front, Oct. 23, 1928



Letter 1 Back






Letter 2 Front, Oct 1928




Letter 2 Back





Letter 3 Front Wednesday 1928


Letter 3 Back


Friday, November 11, 2011

Veterans Day 11/11/11

I wish to give tribute to family members who served in the US military:

Jim Howard, US Navy - my husband
Edwin A. Howard, US Army, World War II - Jim's dad
Guy Gaines, US Army - Jim's grandfather



Edwin Howard, US Army, Ft. McClellan, Alabama
                          

Wednesday, November 9, 2011

A Great Find

When I was in Orlando for my son's wedding, I was able to scan some family photos and documents my sister-in-law, Ginny, had gathered together for me.  There was a wonderful treasure in the bag . . . a post card from James T. Parker, Jim's great grandfather. It was written in either 1906 or 1908, can't tell which, but I'm leaning to 1908.

The post card was addressed to Mrs. C. L. Camp (his sister, Ramath) in Atlanta. On the front side is a picture of James T. and Cora Venable Parker's home in Taylorsville, GA. They are parents of Daisy Victoria Parker Gaines (Granny) and Mary Edna Parker Trippe (Aunt Donna), Dorothy Ann Gaines Howard's grandparents, and Jim's great grandparents. Granny (Daisy) grew up in this house. On the back side is a Christmas/New Year's greeting, along with proof of residence (address) for that year.





In the 1910 US Census the Parkers lived on Stilesboro Road in Taylorsville, Ga. I wanted to see if the house still existed so I went to Google Images. I found a house  that has a similar look with the same porch roof line and an updated modern roof line. The house was built in 1908 according the sales listing. I'm not sure it's the same house. Look at the photos. What do you think? The chimneys look similar.

Front

Tuesday, November 8, 2011

First Post


 A few months ago I started a blog called "Karen's Family Files." (karensfamilyfiles.blogspot.com) Since I retired from teaching first graders two years ago, I finally had more time to put into genealogy research of my family and my husband's family. This blog, "Jim's Family Files" will deal with Jim's side of the house.

I actually started researching in the 1990's, dabbling here and there, but not on a consistent basis. I went to the Orange County Library from time to time and managed to find a little bit of information. I took a class or two in Winter Park, FL.

Since moving to Murphy, NC, I started taking genealogy classes at the local community college. What a blessing that has been! Beginning in the fall of 2009 and during subsequent semesters I've taken these classes: Beginning/Intermediate Genealogy; Genealogy on the Internet; Advanced Genealogy; Legacy (the computer program I use); and my current class Genealogy: Researching Your Family History on the Net (an updated version of my previous class - things change rapidly in the computer world). I've had the same instructor for all the classes . . . the very knowledgeable and experienced genealogist, Larry. In the first class of this semester, he encouraged us to blog about our genealogy.

My purpose is to let Jim's family and my family know what I find out as I go on my treasure hunts and to share what I've already found out. Jim now has a notebook his grandmother, Winnie Leah Parker Howard, put together after his father, Edwin Armstead Howard, passed away in 1968. The notebook has names and pictures of family members.  Jim also has letters his father wrote as a child and when he was in the Army during World War II. He has photos and other items on his mother's (Dorothy Ann Gaines Howard) side of the family. It's been much easier finding out more about Jim's family than mine.

So, here goes . . . another adventure in the blog world.

                                                  Jim's first grade picture