Thursday, November 27, 2008

Happy Thanksgiving!


I just wanted to say a quick note of thanks to all my friends in the genea-blogging community! I will be spending the day with the in-laws and then come home to pack for a much needed vacation.

I will be in the Lake Tahoe/Reno area for a few days but have preposted several items for your reading pleasure.

Thomas

p.s. No I did not make these wonderful turkey creatures this year but the project has been on my to-do list for two years now. They seem simple requiring chocolate covered cherries, vanilla wafers, candy corn, jelly beans and melted chocolate to be used as glue.

Wednesday, November 26, 2008

Wordless Wednesday



Putty Basking On A Sunny Morn. Digital photograph taken October 26, 2008 at Mount Tremper, New York.  Privately held by Thomas MacEntee, [ADDRESS FOR PRIVATE USE,] Chicago, Illinois.

Tuesday, November 25, 2008

Giving Thanks - What I Am Thankful For


Julie Cahill Tarr over at GenBlog by Julie has a great meme started called "Thanksgiving Meme & a Game of Tag." You can get more information over at the Genea-Bloggers group at Facebook by clicking here. And if you aren't already a member of the Genea-Bloggers group consider signing up!

It is difficult for me to slim my list of items for which I am thankful down to just two. Even with a tough holiday season coming up due to unemployment and trying to start a new business, and some health issues - I always try to see the glass as half full and my basket filled with thankful items.

Technology

This is a no-brainer for me, but by listing it I hope others will think about even the little bits of technology they take for granted. I am thankful I live in an age where technological advances are made every day. Having worked in the Information Technology field for the past 25 years, I've come to appreciate the many changes and innovations made in the computing field. What I hope is that we can place these creations in perspective both from a personal standpoint and in a historical perspective.

Right now I can't conceive of a world or my life without an Internet connection. But I think about what life was like before the Internet and consider how people interacted differently, for better or worse. I worry that my Internet usage can easily disconnect me from people but at the same time I look at groups like Genea-Bloggers on Facebook and realize I would never have been able to connect with so many wonderful people otherwise.

I try to remember that the technology itself is "innocent" and the good or bad comes from how we choose to use it, or not use it, in our daily lives.

Health

This has been a tough year for me battling increasingly painful osteo-arthritis in both hips and weight gain. I am improving and in fact November has seen great strides made especially at the gym, working with a trainer, etc. Even with these issues, I am grateful I have full use of most of my body parts and all five senses are still intact despite the ravages of age. I am able to get up each morning, get out of bed, dress myself, prepare a meal, look out my patio window and get started with my day. In keeping with my upbringing and what my mother and great-grandmother taught me, there are many people who have it much worse than I do. I consider myself blessed and trust that I am where I am and in the state of health I am for a reason.

There is so much more to be thankful for and I'll think about those things on Thursday as I sit down with family and celebrate.

And I now tag Apple over at Apple's Tree!

"The Rape of Europa"

Just a quick note to recommend a great documentary - The Rape of Europa - which was shown here in Chicago last night on PBS.

On the short list of documentaries for the Academy Award® and narrated by Joan Allen, the movie which is based upon the book The Rape of Europa: The Fate of Europe's Treasures in the Third Reich and the Second World War by Lynn Nicholas explores the various art works looted from Jewish families and museums by the Nazis during World War II.

As I sat there riveted to the screen for two hours, I was amazed at stories of several individuals and tried to put them in the context of genealogy and family history:

- the story of Rose Valland who bravely catalogued almost all the works of art stored by the Nazis at the Jeu de Paume Museum in Paris. Unaware that Rose spoke and understood German fluently, the Nazis never expected this bookish, unassuming wall flower to go home each night and - from memory - write down the names of each item, from whom they were stolen, and their status. Valland produced a valuable index used after the war to return items to their rightful owners.

- the story of a Parisian Jew who was forced to clean and package everyday possessions confiscated once families were sent off to the concentration camps. One day he came across his own family's silver and china and photographs. Knowing the fate of his four brothers and parents, he was able to remove his parent's wedding pictures and other items without notice only to lose them later when evacuating the city.

How often do we wish we had a Rose Valland in our family? Someone who left behind a "rosetta stone" to help decipher names on the backs of photographs, or even identify people in those pictures which have no information? And how many of us have come across items such as medals, pins, photos, or everyday possessions and wondered what happened to the people who owned them?

And there are many other heartbreaking stories of how the Nazis attempted, but were unsuccessful, in wiping out entire cultures such as the Poles and the Russians. I found the stories of the Warsaw Royal Castle and the Veit Stoss Altarpiece in Cracow amazing and how despite having their most prized cultural symbols either stolen or destroyed, the Poles were not demoralized and made it through the war.

If you haven't yet seen The Rape of Europa on PBS think about renting the DVD. Not only does it help explain the systematic way in which the Nazis tried not only to enrich themselves, but also tried to obliterate entire cultures and histories by destroying cherished landmarks and works of art.

The Name Game

I know I've posted about my family's quirks when it comes to first names but my cousin Lorine Massey over at Olive Tree Genealogy Blog has raised the issue once again. In What's in a Name? I Showed you Mine, Your Turn to Show me Yours! she discusses how some nicknames are derivatives of actual given names while others are derived through mispronunciations.

My mother grew up with 11 other siblings for a total of 12 children and not only does it seem that each once has a nickname preferred over the given name, there are other weird naming issues.

First, almost all the girls - eight of them - have names beginning with J. Except for the first born, Patricia, there were:

- Joan Kathleen
- Josephine Eleanor
- Judith Frances
- Jacqueline Barbara
- Julia Therese
- June Marcella
- Jennifer Loretta

And for the boys, the lead letter was L except for one:

- Lawrence Gerard
- Lee Gerald
- Alfred Joseph
- Lemuel Garret

While this naming methodology is not so unusual among large families, the use of nicknames among this group is a bit bizarre:

Patricia = Pat
Joan = Joan
Josephine Eleanor = Jo'El
Judith = Judy
Jacqueline = Suzi
Julia = Pudgie
June= June
Jennifer = Ginny
Lawrence = Butch
Lee = Jerry
Alfred = Al
Lemuel = Lem

I remember fondly introducing my aunts and uncles to friends during cookouts and then later when someone referred to one of them by their actual names, you could just see the look of confusion. Some thought there were more siblings making the group much larger than 12 children.

Tombstone Tuesday



Headstone of Elmer A. McEntee and Margaret DeGroodt. Digital photograph taken by Thomas MacEntee on July 14, 2008 at New Paltz, New York. Privately held by Thomas MacEntee, [ADDRESS FOR PRIVATE USE,] Chicago, Illinois. 2008.

Elmer McEntee, my great-grandfather, was born on November 27, 1881 in New York. He was the son of John W. McEntee and Elmira Wood.

Elmer married Margaret DeGroodt in New York about 1900. She was the daughter Jacob L. DeGroodt and Georgiana Simpson.

Elmer was a carpenter by trade, according to the 1910 and 1930 Federal Census. According to family legend, Elmer was responsible for placing the "a" in the surname to create MacEntee. This is evidenced by the use of "MacEntee" on several of the Federal census records.

Elmer died on November 8, 1848 at Gardiner, New York and is buried at the New Paltz Rural Cemetery.

Sunday, November 23, 2008

8 Things About Me-me - I've Been Tagged!

JewelGirl who runs the Sandwiched Mom . . . Between The Genes blog as well as Searching For Family Branches, has tagged me in the 8 Things Meme. I don't feel very "interesting" today but I know some of you are just dying to find out more about that enigma wrapped in a puzzle wrapped in a mystery called Thomas. So here goes.

Tag Rules

1. Each player starts with eight random fact
/habits about themselves.

2. People who are tagged need to write their
own blog about their eight things and post these rules.

3. A the end of your blog post, you need to choose
eight people to get tagged and list their name.

4. Don’t forget to leave them a comment telling
them they’re tagged and to read your blog.

8 Things About Me-me:

1. Thomas almost never looks back - he is a forward-looking guy. And if I do have any type of "rear view" mirror in my life, it is always tempered with "no regrets." Life is too short for me to live a "coulda shoulda woulda" life. I am a strong believer in karma and that things, good and bad, happen for a reason. Life has many lessons to learn from and I don't think there is much that I would change.

2. Thomas loves discipline. Now before your mind wanders, let me say that I love routine and order. But I try not to let it control me. In the 1980s and 1990s I was what some could call a "hardcore weightlifter." I would get up at 4:00 am to be at the gym when they opened at 5:30 am. I worked out for 90 minutes each morning, five days a week. I was able to leg press close to 700 lbs on the incline leg press.

But I've learned not to get stuck in a routine. Routines need to change over time and I just wish I was able to see that more often.

3. Thomas counts his blessings. When I was younger I didn't pay much attention when I asked someone, "How are you doing?" and they responded by, "Well I feel blessed. I was able to get up out of bed, get dressed, etc." But with severe osteo-arthritis in both hips I now know what it is like to be unable to do even the simplest of tasks.

There are days when I am challenged to do the simple and I no longer see it as mundane.

4. Thomas is a nerd. But you already knew that. Thomas was once called a "fact totem" in school as a child but I didn't take this as an insult. I love trivia, I love facts. I love to quote the bizarre and small stuff and try to see how it fits in the context of today.

5. Thomas loves work. I really do - most of my life has been spent in the Information Technology field working and being on-call on a 24/7 basis (or as someone once called it "31," 24+ 7). It is the nature of the beast having to upgrade technology in the middle of the night while most of your users are home tucked away snuggly in bed. But now with the globalization of the workplace, if I upgrade at night it means my Asian and Indian co-workers must suffer the downtime or slow down.

6. Thomas fears he is becoming a smore. That means "social media whore." I am too hooked on Facebook for words, now I can't remember if I twitted or tweeted and friends think I put too much value in social networking and Web 2.0. But I will continue to insist that it is the wave of the future and if you aren't in it, it is so easy to get left behind.

7. Thomas has met celebrities. Over the years I've met Jimmy Carter at the White House, Ronald Reagan, John Anderson (remember him - ran for President in 1980?), Kathy Griffin, Wanda Sikes, k.d. lang, Al Gore and he is trying to wrack his brain to remember the others.

8. Thomas strongly believes that the universe bends towards justice.


I Tag:

1. Creative Gene
2. AnceStories: The Stories of My Ancestors
3. What's Past Is Prologue
4. Hill Country of Monroe County, Mississippi
5. CanadaGenealogy or 'Jane's Your Aunt'
6. Genea-Musings
7. Granite In My Blood
8. Smoky Mountain Family History

Christmas Blog Tour


Thanks to the efforts of Denise Olson over at Moultrie Creek, I'll be participating in the upcoming Christmas Tour of Blogs and I can't wait.

As I've said before, this year will be a bit low key compared to other past Christmases but I look forward to bringing out old photos and showing off my trees and decorations from years gone by.

Check it out here and sign up today!

Wednesday, November 19, 2008

Why I've Been Quiet - Sort Of

I wanted readers to know what I've been up to the past few weeks and why such activity has impacted the postings here at DAF and my other blogs. Such activities deal with a blogging alter-ego that I created back in mid-September when I realized that the law firm where I worked, Heller Ehrman LLP was sliding towards an implosion very similar to Enron.

Since it seems I have "mad skillz" when it comes to blogging, I decided to set up a Wordpress-based blog entitled Heller Highwater which would help my 1200+ co-workers deal with issues such as unemployment, proper payment of back wages, accrued vacation, filing wage claims. Hard to believe that a 118-year old law firm would screw its own loyal employees and violate numerous labor laws? Yes Virginia it can and does happen more often than you think.

As the blog took off, with close to 15,000 unique hits on some days, and lots of press (mostly legal industry trade papers and blogs but I was also contacted by The New York Times and The Wall Street Journal), it was eating up much of my time. Since my lay-off on October 10th, I've been able to devote more time to helping out my former co-workers, to discuss issues such as continuing health care coverage, how to rollover a 401k, and how to prepare a resume (some of us had worked for this firm for 25 years!).

Where is this all going? Well as I created the blog under the pseudonym Heller Drone, and I created another blog called Thelen The Pain for the staff of another global law firm which has also collapsed and not given its loyal staff that to which they are entitled, I couldn't maintain these different blogging personalities any longer.

So on Monday I had my "coming out" party where I was able to merge ego and alter ego into one. Lots of press as you can see here. Lots of phone calls and emails. But also lots of job leads and work offers to design websites, blogs, etc. Now I can list these two popular blogs in my portfolio and not feel disjointed, from a blogging personality standpoint.

Wordless Wednesday



Liberty Central School, 5th Grade Class Photo, 1972. Photograph. Privately held by Thomas MacEntee, [ADDRESS FOR PRIVATE USE,] Chicago, Illinois. 2008.

Tuesday, November 18, 2008

LIFE Magazine Image Archive via Google


Today Google announced that they have made available about 2 million images from the archives of Life magazine with a goal of posting the other 8 million images during the next few months.

I remember that while we never received Life magazine at home, I was always able to read it over at my great-grandparents' house and occasionally when I went to the doctor or dentist. Yes, even at the young age of six I eschewed Highlights and other children's magazines in favor of the fabulous photos offered by the over-sized Life magazine. Goofus and Gallant had nothing on a good Dorothea Lange photo - this was obvious to even someone as young as me.

While the images are all copyrighted and I'm not sure they would fall within the "fair use" rules in terms of posting on your blog, you can order merchandise such as framed photos of certain images.

Check out the archive here and be prepared to while away at least an hour traveling down memory lane.

Tombstone Tuesday



Headstone of John W. McEntee. Digital photograph taken by Thomas MacEntee on July 14, 2008 at New Paltz, New York. Privately held by Thomas MacEntee, [ADDRESS FOR PRIVATE USE,] Chicago, Illinois. 2008.

John W. McEntee, my 2nd great-grandfather, was born on January 21, 1840 at Gardiner, Ulster County, New York, the son of Edward McEntee and Ann Freer.

On March 11, 1874 at Guilford, New York, he married Elmira Wood, daughter of William and Elizabeth Wood.

John enlisted as a Private in the Union Army on April 20, 1861 at the age of 22. He fought with the 11th Infantry Regiment New York, Company C and was mustered out June 2, 1862 at New York, New York.

John W. McEntee died on January 21, 1918 at Gardiner, New York, at the age of 78 and is buried in the New Paltz Rural Cemetery.

Friday, November 14, 2008

Spoonflower: Print Your Own Fabric



I know this might seem out of place, but stay with me - this truly is a means of looking at a new technology and combining it with genealogy!

Spoonflower is a new website that allows you to print your own fabric. Based in North Carolina, it advertises the ability to have your own designs printed on cotton fabric for $18 per yard with no minimum. The site already has 10,000 crafters signed up, has its own blog, and has Gart Davis who used to run LuLu on its board. Now Spoonflower is out of closed beta and is available to the public plus it appears that many Etsy users are now big fans of Spoonflower.

Now, I know there are kits from places like Michael's and JoAnn Fabrics that allow you to run a small piece of cotton fabric through your printer. But there are many limitations include size and type of printer, etc.

The concept of a memory quilt or an ancestor quilt has intrigued me for some time. But with the limited methods of printing on fabric, the idea was a no go. However, I could see creating digital scrapbook type pages and having them run on fabric in small groups for a wall hanging or a quilt.

This seems to be the creative season for holiday gifts - go check out Spoonflower and leave us some of your ideas in the comments section!

Thursday, November 13, 2008

I Dream of Genea-Computer

If you haven't already heard, I need to tell this to all my genea-blogger friends and readers: this will be the best year to buy a new computer ever. And with that in mind, I am prepping for a new feature called I Dream of Genea-Computer.

IDGC will include postings on current trends in home computing and I'll discuss a wide array of topics including:

- choosing between a Windows-based or a MAC-OS based computer

- which is right for you - desktop, laptop or even the new microcomputers?

- when to buy new and when to upgrade

- hard drives and external drives - which size combo is best?

- should I keep old peripherals such as CRT monitor and dot matrix printer (yes, some still use these items!)

- if money were no object, what toys would I add to my dream computer?

Between now and November 30th, go over to Facebook Bootcamp for Genea-Bloggers and look at several polls that ask what you'd like to see on a new computer. Make your choices and beginning December 1st I will discuss the results here at Destination: Austin Family.

At the end of this series, as a group we should come up with some recommendations as to the best computer. That's not to say we'll all be in agreement, but we should be able to exchange ideas and opinions as to what a genealogy or family history enthusiast should look for when shopping this holiday season.

Wednesday, November 12, 2008

Wordless Wednesday



Edward Farren (my 2nd great grand uncle) 1880-1942, abt. 1898. Photograph. Privately held by Thomas MacEntee, [ADDRESS FOR PRIVATE USE,] Chicago, Illinois.

Tuesday, November 11, 2008

Thank You Vets



Photo: De Dodengang. Digital image, WikiMedia Commons at http://commons.wikimedia.org/wiki/Image:Dodengang_09.jpg accessed on November 10, 2008. Use by implied permission via Creative Commons License.

Today is Veterans Day here in the United States and is also known as Remebrance Day in other countries. This morning at dawn I will go out and hang my large 8-foot by 5-foot flag and then think about how I'll thank the many veterans, both living and dead, in my family.

I'll call up my father-in-law who served during the Korean Conflict and say, "Thank you" and then we'll likely discuss our ongoing project of documenting his tour of duty at Pusan.

Then I'll go through some old photos of family members and friends who served in wars going back to the American Revolution. Many survived to tell their stories to their children and grand-childen and some did not.

While it is very common for people to confuse Veterans Day with Memorial Day (or Decoration Day as some call it), I think that somehow saying thank you to your family members and ancestors who did not make it back from war is a necessary task.

In that regard, I am going to repost my 2007 Veterans Day entry entitled Kenny's Choice.  Thanks Kenny - and I for one will never forget your sacrifice.


Kenny's Choice

As part of an on-going family history project, I’ve wanted to research the military service and sacrifices made by my ancestors and relatives for the upcoming Veteran’s Day holiday. Although my family has a long history of many veterans who served in each war and conflict since the American Revolution, unfortunately, I did not have to go very far back in my family tree. Only as far back as January 6, 2005 when a cousin, Sgt. Kenneth VonRonn, died in Baghdad, Iraq.

Kenny was one of seven soldiers maneuvering their M2A2 Bradley Infantry Fighting Vehicle just north of Baghdad when an improvised explosive device hit it. Those that did not die instantly died when the carrier tumbled into an irrigation ditch and overturned, drowning the survivors.

The thought of someone, let alone my cousin, dying so far away from their family and at the age of 20 rattled my curiosity as well as my emotions. As if I had received the news just like Kenny’s mom had, I had many questions. The answers I found were honest and painful, and would not only help me form a better family history, but would also help those who loved him.

Answering the Call

By telephone, I spoke with Kenny’s mother, Debbie VonRonn, just before Veteran’s Day in November 2007. Although more than two years had passed since Kenny’s death, and it had become easier to talk about him, you could still sense the difficulty and the sorrow in her words and responses. However, I knew that I could ask her some difficult questions – questions that she could answer now that Operation Iraqi Freedom had stretched on into its fifth year.

My comfort came from having grown up with Debbie, my first cousin, in the Mid-Hudson Valley region of New York. Even though I had over 40 first cousins, she and I were closest in age and location. She lived with my family for a short period in my senior year while she was working at a local supermarket. We used to laugh and joke at the same things. We spent that summer both working in thankless jobs in the Borscht Belt resort region of the Catskills – she as a deli manager and me as a telephone operator. We would swap stories of the antics, gripes and behaviors of what we called the “city people” who spent leisurely summers up from New York City. We also saw and felt the disparities in wealth during those summers. We knew where we came from and very often we were made to know what our place was.

Losing Touch, Building Lives

Debbie and I went our separate ways once I left for college. Debbie married, had four children and built a life completely dedicated to her son and daughters. I spent close to 20 years in California, which was geographically and socially light years away from my roots. Debbie’s parents, my aunt and uncle, passed on in 2000 and 2001 respectively. After my mother was diagnosed with Alzheimer’s disease at the age of 58, I moved closer to home so I could help manage her care and her finances.

We met up once again, after close to two decades, in July 2005 – less than six months after Kenny’s passing. At the family reunion, I could tell that Debbie’s emotions were still raw as they showed in her face and body movement. There was quite a bit of small talk among the group, venturing only into safe subjects. It was not that we all did not want to talk about Kenny. We were just more concerned about Debbie’s state of being and giving her and the girls enough time and room to talk when they wanted to talk.

“He Was a Good Kid”

Kenny was born on September 21, 1984, and was raised in Ulster and Orange counties. He was the oldest and the only male in the family after his father left the family. Kenny’s boyhood activities were typical of boys in the rural settings of the Mid-Hudson: hiking and shooting as well as model making. He was also known as a lover of practical jokes and his impish, boyish grin allowed him to get away with it most of the time.

As I spoke with Debbie she mentioned, “I have a lot of good memories of Kenny. He was a good kid. Right after I received the news of his death, I ran around my bedroom looking for something that I had received from him. I just had to hold something of his close to me. I opened up and read many of his letters. At the end of each he always wrote, ‘Love always Kenny. P.S. The Best Son in the World.’”

Kenny was also strong-willed and determined. If you were to ask me, he got that from his mother. I should know because Debbie got it from her mother. My aunt grew up, along with my mother, in a family of 12 children during and right after the Great Depression, in Jersey City, New Jersey. There were eight girls and four boys. It was a tough time and a tougher place. You had to have a strong voice just to be heard and a strong will to get what you needed as well as what you wanted.

A Decision Made

In 2003, Kenny arrived home from high school one day and told his mother, “I made an important decision today.” It was his senior year and he was now 18 years old. Kenny knew what he wanted for his future and that he had a decision to make about that future coming true. His dream was to become a registered nurse, preferably in the emergency room arena, and then eventually become a pediatrician.

As Kenny told Debbie “I enlisted in the Army today,” she experienced, in a flash second, the normal concerns that would race through a mother’s mind. Moreover, with our country at war since 2003, the concerns were much more heightened. “Would he come back alive?” “Would my boy be hurt?” “Is this what he really wants?” “Is this what I would want for him?” “Does he know what he’s getting into?”

Like most mothers, you try to support your child’s choices. What they choose may or may not match their dreams or meet their goals but the choices made become lessons, which become wisdom which is then passed down to their own children. Debbie just wanted what was best for her son. And she knew that Kenny was happy.

Limited Choices

As I knew from growing up in the same circumstances as Kenny, with few well-paying jobs and the same economic hardships, the opportunities available to fulfill your dreams were scarce. Like Kenny, I grew up in a household where Mom worked, clothed and fed her kids, and still somehow made 10 cents seem like 15. The only routes out were either a college education or enlistment in the military.

For kids like us, Kenny and I had only these two choices or the choice to get a menial, low-paying job and be, what I used to call, “stuck.” While my hometown and the surrounding towns were picturesque and brought in the tourists, the scenery hid a dearth of social problems behind its Potemkin village façade. Sullivan County more recently had a per capita income of close to $19,000 compared to the state average of $40,000 and that of Manhattan at $43,000. More children under the age of nine died in Ulster and Sullivan counties in 2005 than almost any other area in New York State. New York City’s problems often became ours due to its close proximity at 90 miles or less. For a sleepy rural area, the population had a disproportionate number of residents who abused drugs, committed welfare fraud, or were suffering from HIV.

I was able to scrape together enough college funding, loans and scholarships to attend a private university far from home. Kenny’s choice was to enlist in the military and then attend college afterwards with the help of enlistment bonuses and the GI Bill. Get in, get over there, then get out. In an interview after Kenny’s death, his best friend Dan Boen said that Kenny “. . . wanted to finish school, settle down and have a normal life that didn't involve war.”

Let Me Call You Sweetheart

Love and companionship were also part of the big plan which included:
1) graduating from Pine Bush High School in June 2003; 2) going to basic training and army medic training that Fall; 3) marrying his high-school sweetheart; 4) shipping off to wherever the Army told him to serve;
5) and then coming back home and building a life just like Mom did, hopefully with lots of kids.

Kenny VonRonn and Kira Conklin knew each other since they began attending the same school back in 6th grade. Debbie said it seemed as if they were always together. During a break in training, he came home for the Christmas holidays and they got married on December 23, 2003. However, all too soon he would be off again for more medical training at various places including Oklahoma, Texas and California.

Duty Bound

Once basic and combat medic training were completed, Kenny was assigned to the United States Army National Guard, 42nd Infantry Division, 69th Regiment, 1st Battalion, based in New York City.

Better known as the Fighting 69th with its armory at Lexington Avenue and 25th Street, the 69th Regiment dates back to 1851. Formed by Irish immigrants as the 69th New York Militia, this combat unit has fought in many wars including the Civil War, the Spanish-American War and both World Wars.

Kenny and his unit deployed to Iraq in October 2004 as part of Operation Iraqi Freedom and were stationed just outside Baghdad. He was part of a platoon of soldiers and support personnel known as Task Force Bengal. The unit comprised the 69th Regiment as well as a group from the Louisiana National Guard, the 256th Mechanized Infantry Brigade, and was responsible for equipping, training and assisting the 40th Iraqi National Guard.

One Last Kiss, One Last Hug

On November 24, the day before Thanksgiving, the ringer on Debbie’s cell phone went off while she was scrambling to gather items for the next day’s feast. It would be another holiday without her son. Soon a lucky choice made by another would bring Kenny home one last time.

Kenny talked to everyone on that call and wished his family a happy Thanksgiving. Then as his mom got back on the phone, he told her that he had some news and that she had to keep it a secret. “No emotions please. Don’t give it away,” he said. He was coming home for two weeks and would see them all that Saturday. He had won a chance for a short leave in a drawing when his name was pulled from a hat that day. He said there was no time to give details. The transport was literally waiting for him and if he missed it, his chance would be gone.

Of course, his last visit was too short and over before you knew it.

Christmas Day came and went without a call from him, but the family was not necessarily alarmed. They rationalized that Kenny could have been on maneuvers or that the circuits were just overloaded from all the troops reaching out to their own families. When the phone rang the next day and it was him, relief was able to sweep away those thoughts Debbie had. Thoughts you fight with every day as a mother or a father or a sibling of someone serving in a war. While your loved one fights, you fight too. Even though your fights are ones of thoughts and emotions, sometimes you too are wounded. And you almost always have scars.

The last time that his family heard from Kenny was on New Year’s Eve, 2004. He called home to wish everyone a happy New Year but was only able to speak to his grandmother, Maria VonRonn, his aunt and two sisters. Debbie had gone out to drive one of the girls to work that evening.

In speaking with Debbie, I could tell that she regretted not being able to take that call. When we look back, sometimes we only see the things that could have been or that should have been. In that search, we often forget the many times that moments of love actually did take place. As his mother said to Kenny on many phone calls while he served in Iraq, “Be safe. Watch your back. Keep your head down. And I love you.”

Receiving the News

When I asked how she first found out that her son had died, Debbie said that a little after midnight on Friday, January 6, 2005, she was awakened by a phone call from her daughter-in-law Kira. She said, “The Army’s just been here.” Still not awake, Debbie tried to understand the meaning of Kira’s words. She thought to herself, “Kenny was just injured. He’s had close calls before.” In fact, shrapnel had hit Kenny in late 2004 but an “action figure” in the pocket of his flak jacket had taken the brunt of the injury. “Batman took it for me,” he said.

This time Debbie could tell that something was different in Kira’s voice.

“Don’t tell me. Just don’t tell me. Is he dead?”

Kira said, “Yes.”

All Debbie could do was let out a scream as the truth sunk in. Her daughters Samantha, Courtney and Gina were still awake, watching television in the living room, and they rushed in to see what was going on. The girls were counting on the following day being a “snow day” and having schools closed due to a heavy snowstorm on Thursday. There would be no school on Friday for far different reasons.

“Could it be a mistake?” Debbie thought. She wasn’t the only one with that same thought, that same hope.

Saying Goodbye

While the days following the news were all “a blur,” as she put it, Debbie can now look back and remember how her family, her friends, her employer and her community selflessly reached out to help. One of the first phone calls she made in those early morning hours was to her employer. Debbie said that within 10 minutes both her bosses were at her home to comfort her and to see how they could assist. Debbie had asked them to go with her to see the flag-draped coffin at the funeral home. She knew she might need support in case the sight was too overwhelming for her. Kenny had not come home as his mother, or anyone, had expected. A steady stream of family followed over the course of the next few days until Kenny’s body arrived on Wednesday, January 12.

Kenny was the sixth member of the Armed Forces from the mid-Hudson region to be lost in Iraq. At the funeral, you would have thought it was meant for the first casualty. For most everyone, any casualty, in any war or conflict, is one too many.

Debbie told me that at one point, while she was riding from the service in Pine Bush, she looked back and realized that she and her son were leading a 2.5-mile motorcade. As it slowly and deliberately snaked up Route 17, the procession included the New York State Police, Ulster County Sheriff, Orange County Sheriff and Sullivan County Sheriff members. She said that the troopers even closed off exits so that oncoming traffic would not interrupt the procession. A driver would have to be blind, visually and emotionally, not to realize what was going on.

The burial, with full military honors, took place at the Sullivan County Veterans Cemetery in Liberty. I asked her why the burial was there and not in Arlington Cemetery. Debbie said that while they could have had Kenny buried at Arlington, Kira and everyone else agreed that they wanted to have him closer to home.

The Remembering

As we come up on Veteran’s Day, I asked Debbie how she and the girls work to remember Kenny. I used the word “work” because sometimes it is just that. There are visits to the grave, gifts of flowers, and thinking of him on his birthday and other holidays.

Over time, the remembering is easier and there are more details about the little things. Looking back, Debbie said that at about 11:00 pm on January 5th, barely an hour before she first received the news, a story appeared on the local news about a roadside bomb killing seven soldiers in Awad al-Hussein, north of Baghdad earlier that day. She had the sinking feeling as she did whenever she heard similar news in the past. The battle of the thoughts began again. This time the thoughts would win.

Debbie knows that over time, while she may not forget what her son achieved, others might. So she and others like her, Gold Star Mothers and Gold Star Siblings, the American Legion, the VFW, make sure there are events, dedications and remembrances. Like the one on October 27, 2007 at the Sullivan County Veterans Cemetery when a tank that had been part of his National Guard unit was dedicated in his honor. Over 100 family and friends as well as strangers came to see the tank that now watches over his grave and those of other veterans. It has been nicknamed VonRonn’s Express.

Was The Choice Worth It?

Some of the more difficult questions that I felt I had to ask were “How do you feel when you see people in this country speak out against our operations in Iraq? Do you think that a person can speak out against the war but still be patriotic? Do you think that someone can actively oppose the war but still be supportive of our men and women over there? How would you feel if one of your daughters now said they wanted to make the same choice as Kenny?”

Debbie told me: “I’m not political by any means and I don’t blame the Army at all. The way I look at it is that my son chose to do something and he believed in what he was doing. I believed in my son. People need to realize that Kenny made a choice.”

She added that with the protracted engagement and the mounting casualties, as well as the lack of evidence as to weapons of mass destruction, now she just wants everyone to come home. “Coming home now doesn’t mean failure; it’s just time to come home.”

My cousin Kenny made a choice back in 2003 so that I, and many others, could still make choices even after he was gone. Freedom to choose the church, synagogue or mosque I want to attend – or not attend. Freedom to choose who I want to vote for – or to not vote at all. Freedom to make my own plans, reach my own goals, see my own dreams come true.

Luckily, we can choose to voice our opinions about a variety of issues and can choose to support the war or not support the war. Support does not make you a rabid jingoistic hawk. Opposition does not make you a bleeding-heart unpatriotic dove. Kenny had a choice and thankfully, we all do.

Kenny’s choice may not have been the same as my choice or your choice. It was his choice. Remember to thank a veteran today for their service and their choice.

Copyright November 7, 2007 by Thomas MacEntee

Tombstone Tuesday

Headstone of Edward McEntee and Ann (Antje) Freer. Digital photograph taken by Thomas MacEntee on July 14, 2008 at New Paltz, New York.

Headstone of Edward McEntee and Ann (Antje) Freer. Digital photograph taken by Thomas MacEntee on July 14, 2008 at New Paltz, New York. Privately held by Thomas MacEntee, [ADDRESS FOR PRIVATE USE,] Chicago, Illinois. 2008.

Edward McEntee, my 3rd great-grandfather, was born on January 14, 1795 in County Monaghan, Ireland, the son of Charles and Mary McEntee. He arrived in the United States as a young child and eventually settled in the Ulster County, New York region.

On June 29, 1833 at New Paltz, New York, he married Annetje (Ann) Freer, a descendant of one of the original Huguenot families who settled New Paltz in 1675.

In the 1850, 1860 and 1870 Federal Census his occupation is listed as farmer or farmer/weaver.

Edward McEntee died on February 11, 1875 at Gardiner, New York, at the age of 80 and is buried in the New Paltz Rural Cemetery.

Monday, November 10, 2008

Alzheimer’s Disease – A Duty and A Toll

This post was written for the 60th Edition of the Carnival of Genealogy hosted by Jasia at Creative Gene.

[Editor’s note: A little more than a year ago, on October 16, 2007, I posted about my family’s journey down a road all too familiar to many other families: the road called Alzheimer’s Disease. In that post, I discussed recent developments in a blood test that could predict the probability of developing Alzheimer’s Disease. I challenged readers with this question: would you take such a test, even if you had already traveled through what I call “the long goodbye” with a loved one? Would you want to know your chances of having to walk that same path? Below is that post in its entirety.]

I heard the news yesterday that a new blood test was being developed at Stanford University in California that could help detect the probability of developing Alzheimer's Disease within two to six years. While the results are still preliminary and the next step is to open up the testing to a larger test population, it has had a 91% accuracy so far.

Some of you know that my mother, Jacqueline Austin MacEntee, was diagnosed with dementia, one of the early indicators of Alzheimer's disease in 2000 at the age of 58. I can relate to you what I and my family had to endure just to get Mom diagnosed.

The diagnosis currently starts with a visit to a doctor for basic tests (blood, liver, cholesterol, heart, etc.) and then being sent to a specialist for neurological testing such as an MRI. Once everything is cleared as to possible causes, comes a visit to a gerontologist and a test consisting of about 30 questions. Questions are basic (the current day or year, the current president, etc.) and some are more complex (reading a small story and then relating what the story was about or who the main character was). This is usually when the diagnosis is positive as to Alzheimer's Disease.

And so it begins. You know it eventually has to end, and how it ends, but it just seems like it never ends.

You notice a marked change in behavior and instances where Mom just isn't herself. Many times you call and ask her what she did over the weekend or what movie she saw and she can't remember. Then it becomes the lack of remembering simple things like how to drive from point A to point B in a small town where Mom has lived for over 40 years. But you also rejoice when your mother utters her disgust about Bush and the other's in his administration who've hijacked our democracy. Part of you says "it's just the Alzheimer's" while part of you says it is clarity and another part of you hopes that all the years of discussing your own views have influenced her.

The disease progresses to affect employment and the means of earning a living and surviving financially. You deal with the chief at the village police office where she works as a dispatcher and clerk when he tells her that she has "psychological problems." She loses the second job at a local restaurant because she can no longer handle the bookkeeping responsibilities. You step in to get Mom out on early retirement via Social Security and still you need to fight, hire an attorney, and attend hearings, meetings, etc. But you feel good that you are able to get Mom out on retirement early so that she can enjoy the few good years she has left going to movies, shopping, etc.

And the denial, the denial, the denial -- from both Mom, me and the rest of the family -- that this is really happening. Much of the denial is the realization that by watching Mom and the deterioration of her condition, you could be looking in a mirror held up to your face so that you know your own mortality. Even worse, that you come to the realization that this could be you. "There but for the grace of God . ."

You drag your partner into the mess, the person you want to spend the rest of your life with, the person who may very well be doing all this for you one day. But you know that he'd gladly make the sacrifices just as you would for him or for his parents.

Then there are the financial scammers that come out of the woodwork. Her "financial advisor" at New York Life who talked her into an annuity that only made money for the advisor. And then the same advisor selling Mom expensive health books and vitamins as a treatment for the disease. I know - I cleaned out the house, saw the books, and have the receipts.

And as the months progress into years, the gerontologist's test is given at least yearly and the number of correct answers dwindles from 22 to 20 to 17.

You decide to take the car away after several instances of U-turns through the grassy median of a 4 lane highway. You notice unexplained dents and dings to the car or even to the house or garage. You have to fight and get a letter from the doctor to give to DMV in order to take the car away.

If you are smart or lucky or both, you find a good elder law attorney and you do this early when Mom can adequately communicate her wishes. Wishes such as "do not resuscitate", funeral and burial, will, assets, care, etc. The power of attorney kicks in and you have so much more responsibility than just making sure Mom is comfortable. But you know you and your family are lucky, and smart, because you did this early. You didn't wait to find out that investments were sucked dry by scammers who sell home improvements or driveway repaving or annuities. Boy were you lucky.

While you sort through the tangled financial web of the past five years, you try to arrange for in-home care for Mom, knowing that having the familiar around her is the best thing. You arrange for adult day care at the local hospital where on a given day she is probably the youngest one there but most definitely the most ambulatory. You bring in local women who specialize in elder care to stay with her the other 16 hours of the day and also to transport her to day care and doctors' appointments. You want to keep her in the home she bought 25 years ago, as a divorced parent with two boys and little credit. You know she deserves this and you and the rest of the family make sacrifices so this will happen.

You decide that while you've enjoyed living in California for the past 20 years, you can't handle all the tasks and responsibilities from so far away. The telephone, e-mail and the internet only work up to a point. You move to Chicago so you are at least a short two hour flight away, with three flights to New York each hour from O'Hare. You feel blessed because your employer in California believes in you and your work and the sacrifices you are making so much that they let you work from home in Chicago since they don't have an office there. You thank Heller Ehrman LLP and all your work family from California to London for being so supportive.

You get so caught up in the politics of family, and the squabbling and the pettiness that you decide to walk away altogether. You decide it isn't that you aren't up to the responsibility but that you don't know why family has to make it all so complicated - especially those who are selfish and want this to be about them and not about Mom. A simple Thanksgiving day phone call turns into a yelling match with your aunt who doesn't know how to handle Mom or why she has been accused of stealing a book or moving furniture. You decide you need a break so you don't call for close to six months and you drop out. And you feel guilty, as you should. And every time you are willing to put it behind you and focus on what Mom needs now because you are back in the mix, someone is there to remind you of how you walked away.

And besides bleeding tears, you bleed money. Your mother's money. The money she worked so hard for at the phone company before she went out on retirement due to a bad back. The money she earned working for the state at the police station. The SSI money. You run credit reports and find out there are over 100 credit cards in her name, many from stores like Macy's (where she had 6 accounts!) with clerks who say "would you like to save 15% today by opening a Macy's account?" knowing that Mom already had other Macy's accounts but the $5 commission was all that mattered. You close all the accounts, cash out IRAs and that damned annuity at a loss. You end up paying federal and state income tax as if Mom earned over $100,000 that year all because you had to cash in the investments for her care. But you also know that this is the best thing to do in this moment because it means months of in-home care, and safety and security. That's why we save for rainy days and right now it is pouring.

And the number of correct answers, at least on that test, becomes 15, then 12, then 10. For the rest of the process there are no correct answers, there are no touchstones because you've never been this way before. Oh how you don't want to be here right now but oh how you do because it's all about Mom.

Besides untangling finances, you have to untangle agreements and understandings that Mom entered into with other family members but had not the mental capacity nor the right to enter into. You deal with the house in Florida and you deal with Mom's home. You deal with the Grahamsville property that Mom inherited from her great-grandmother (Therese McGinnes Austin) for all her years of sacrifice and care. You realize that Mom entered into a purchase agreement with a family member who has since rented the property out but that person can't prove their payments to Mom or for taxes. You know that property meant so much to Mom as a kid but you also know the best thing is to let it go and realize that she was taken advantage of and to just deal with it. You deal, you deal, you deal. Until you think all the cards are dealt.

You fight with other family members who either think they know how to care for an Alzheimer's patient or want to keep denying that their sister has the disease. Because there's a small chance, given that the oldest sister already died from Alzheimer's, that they are next on the list to get it. But you also find other supportive family members who are glad to pitch in and actually make so many sacrifices for your mother when you know they already have their hands full.

Then comes the time to talk to Mom about finding a "facility" for her long-term care when either the finances or patience runs out, or both. You dread the discussion you have to have on Mother's Day, of all days, but you find she takes it well. Then you wonder if she really understands that a facility means a nursing home. You wonder if she is clear enough to figure it out over the next few weeks and retreat back into the denial stage. You have visions of that scene in the Exorcist when the priest puts his mother in an inner city nursing home yelling "Demi, why you do this to me? I'm afraid Demi." But you realize that when you see her a month later that she's lost over 20 lbs, she's eating better, she has lots of activities. She is safe, she is happy, she is living in the moment.

Next you have to clean out the house you grew up in and you don't know where to start. You make six trips in one year, buying boxes when you step off the plane to Newark. Working long hours sorting through every scrap of paper, every wadded up tissue in a sweater or pants pocket because it might contain something of value, every book some of which would have a gold bracelet as a bookmark. You remember that Mom took care of your great-grandmother and your great-aunt (Ethel McCrickert Hannan) in that same house and realize that their possessions are still there. You get angry when you find all the crap and junk she's been sold, be it greeting cards (why are there 100 of the same Thanksgiving card from a Hallmark store? I know I won't ever live to see 100 Thanksgivings), or the wrapping paper that people sell for their kid's school, or the needless health books, vitamins, and other quackery and the expensive overpriced dolls from China which are probably decorated with lead paint. And you hope that however crappy or tacky or useless, these things brought her joy and made her happy, even if for a moment.

You sort, you throw away. You become cold, efficient, without feeling as you decide not to pause and look at a photo album - you just toss it in The Box. You donate clothing to thrift stores, you sell antique items that no one wants and that you can't send home to Chicago. Your aunt has a great idea to donate most of the 100+ dolls to a shelter for battered women and children. And when you are back home, you enjoy The Box and all its photos, diaries, etc. later in the year - it is the beginning of this project and other genealogy projects. You feel lucky to have photos from your ancestors and to begin to know who you are.

You have lots of help from family members that you can never thank enough. You didn't do it alone although you feel lonely and have a deep sense of loss most of the time. You thank your Uncle Jerry for all the help from the beginning - for attending hearings, meetings, taking care of finances, arranging in-home care and the nursing home. All of this was not possible without him and without Nan's support. You thank your Uncle Lem and Aunt Judy for helping clean out the house. You thank your Aunt Joan for providing a year of room and board to Mom despite the aggravation and the problems. You thank Beth for making the trip from Delhi and visiting. You thank all your other relatives who make visits at the nursing home, visits Mom won't remember five minutes later, but visits that you know make her happy despite the visitor being saddened by what they see or wanting to cry. And you thank all her friends, even the ones who no longer keep in touch because it is just too uncomfortable.

You keep in touch with family and friends who call and want an update on Mom. Or you get updates from them when they go for a visit at the nursing home. While you notice the deterioration in her condition on each visit, you hear from relatives that she has an ankle brace due to a fall, or this problem or that problem. And still you know you've done the best thing for Mom.

The time you get to spend with Mom becomes shorter and shorter - not because you don't want to visit, but because her attention span doesn't enable her to focus on any one thing for more than 30 seconds. You call the nurses’ station to talk to her and after a short conversation, you realize she put the phone on the counter and walked away. Not because there was something more interesting, but because she can't focus.

And the list of correct answers to that test are now in the single digits. You know what the future holds and you dread it. You don't want to go through the first time Mom doesn't know who you are, but you know it will happen. You already see the difficulty she has in eating, getting on and off an elevator (she won't get on because she thinks you are getting off to visit her), or getting in and out of a car. You know what the next steps are because just like this article, you've read them in some blog or book or news article or website. You know Mom will suddenly stop talking, stop walking, stop eating, stop breathing.

But you will always know that you are your mother's son. And that she knew that too.

I've decided that I can either be bitter or I can be better. And bitter won't change my mother's condition - just mine. I choose better and the way I can do that is to:

a) talk about my mother's experience with people like writing this article;

b) mention the bad times as well as the good times, the negative as well as the positive but focus more on the positive - the negative is there as a reminder but not something to regret for it can't be changed;

c) not regret the journey of Alzheimer's for me, for Mom and for the others involved - for a journey has lessons;

d) understand that I did and do the most that is possible for my mother's care given the circumstances, finances and that I was lucky to have other family members involved; and

e) honor my mother and the way she raised me by not forgetting her sacrifices and her love, her challenges and her gifts, her mistakes and her accomplishments.

After all this, would I want to take a blood test, or any test, that would help predict whether or not I was to have Alzheimer's Disease? You're damned right I would. Not only would it help progress the research that has already been done, but it would help me prepare for the future. And I could live life and every day as if it were important and my last. I wouldn't make someone else go through that dark twisting tunnel of care unguided and with those feelings of helplessness. Knowledge is power and power, be it the power of health, finances or love, can help you conquer all adversities.

Would you take the test?

Sunday, November 9, 2008

The Baby Picture That Started It All

This post was composed for the 7th Edition of Smile For The Camera ~ A Carnival of Images



John Ralph Austin, age 18 months. Lowville, New York, 1898. Digital image. Privately held by Thomas MacEntee, [ADDRESS FOR PRIVATE USE,] Chicago, Illinois. 2008.

My great-grandparents, John Ralph Austin and Therese Rose McGinnis were the first people to get me interested in genealogy and the history of my family. Growing up, I would hear stories of who my Dutch ancestors had arrived in New York during the 1660s.

But while the stories were always interesting, and always seemed to be embellished with each telling, it was the albums of photographs which captivated me the most. The photo above is of my great-grandfather and was taken at a professional studio in Lowville, New York where he was born.

I never saw this photo while my great-grandfather was alive but only after he had died in 1976. My great-grandmother gave this and others to me since she probably felt that I would be the one most likely to preserve the memories and keep telling the stories as they had.

John Ralph Austin was born on January 31, 1896 in Lowville and would be the last of the five sons of William Dence Austin to die, on April 20, 1976. Being the second youngest, I imagine that his outfit - which many today might call a "gown" - was passed down from his oldest brother Maurice Ira Austin who was born in 1890. With his blond hair, posed on an elaborate Victorian style over-sized chair, little did he know that 100 years later he would leave behind over 200 descendants across five subsequent generations.

New Paltz French Church (Crispell Memorial)



French Church (Crispell Memorial). Digital image. Historic Huguenot Street (http://www.huguenotstreet.org/assets/vt_fc.jpeg), Copyright© 2008 Huguenot Historical Society.

At the end of our tour of Huguenot Street in New Paltz, we came upon what is called the French Church. What you see above is a reconstruction done in 1972 of the original building constructed in 1717.

While the first congregation was formed in 1683, the first church was not erected until 34 years later and then replaced in 1773 with a larger structure. In 1839, the Dutch Reformed Church of New Paltz erected a large brick building further north on Huguenot Street which is still standing and has an active congregation even today.

The Crispell Family Association raised the funds for the 1972 building which is as true as possible to the original structure based on archival information.



Baptismal Pitcher and Bowl, New Paltz French Church. Digital image, taken Sunday, October 26, 2008 in New Paltz, New York. Privately held by Thomas MacEntee, [ADDRESS FOR PRIVATE USE,] Chicago, IL. 2008.

Although I realize it was not the original church, the building which is situated on the location of the original produced feeling of awe as I entered and my eyes were immediately drawn to the windows on the far end. Sitting there was a large pewter bowl and pitcher which had been used to baptize many of my ancestors beginning with my 7th great-grandfather, Hugo Freer, Jr. who was baptized on October 17, 1691.



Freer Family Pew, New Paltz French Church. Digital image, taken Sunday, October 26, 2008 in New Paltz, New York. Privately held by Thomas MacEntee, [ADDRESS FOR PRIVATE USE,] Chicago, IL. 2008.

As the tour guide explained to the group that the congregation had its roots in Calvinist tradition in that families sat in pews which faced each other and which could be rented for a yearly fee. As with any society, those who could afford to pay a higher rent, were able to have the front pews.

Needless to say, the Freer Family Pew is second from the last on the north end of the square church.



Pulpit, New Paltz French Church. Digital image, taken Sunday, October 26, 2008 in New Paltz, New York. Privately held by Thomas MacEntee, [ADDRESS FOR PRIVATE USE,] Chicago, IL. 2008.

The church has been reconstructed entirely in wood and stone as you can see from the pulpit in the photo above.

One interesting note about the Huguenot church in New Paltz: having had a history of adaptability, the congregation merged with the much larger Dutch Reformed Church in the city. The Huguenots appeared to have no issue with eventually dropping their French language for the preferred Dutch language of the region. And with their religion, while they brought their Calvinist beliefs with them to these shores, they were able to meld them with those of the local Protestant church.

Light On Posts

Just a quick note to my regular visitors and to the new ones as well: I've been bogged down with setting up my new company - now that I am among the many unemployed - and have been lacking in terms of blog posts.

I have lots of news and lots of posts coming up.  I am also going to pre-post several weeks of regular items such as Tombstone Tuesday and Wordless Wednesday.

Other highlights coming up this month:

- a special post on Veterans Day; remember to thank a vet not just this Tuesday but every day!



- introduction of a new series for those thinking of purchasing a new computer this holiday season called I Dream of Genea-Computer!

- information on a genealogy wiki that I am developing called Lowville Long Ago using the same platform as Wikipedia.  This project is so complicated that it needs its own blog just to explain the construction phase!

Stay tuned.

Tuesday, November 4, 2008

Election Day 2008



Ballot Receipt, Chicago Board of Election Commissioners. Digital image, taken Tuesday, November 4, 2008 in Chicago, IL. Privately held by Thomas MacEntee, [ADDRESS FOR PRIVATE USE,] Chicago, IL. 2008.

In an unbroken 27 year tradition for me, and following in the footsteps of my ancestors, I voted here in Chicago this morning.

I arrived about 6:10 at my polling place which opened at 6:00 am and there were already 50 people in front of me.  I vote in the 19th precinct of the 46th Ward of the city and my polling place was also shared with the 14th precinct.  Since there were many more 19th precinct voters in line, those from the 14th were able to get in and out quickly.

I think the snails pace of the voting (I was the 61st voter after two hours - that means a rate of 30 voters an hour!) is due to a lack of manpower and the poor physical layout of my polling place.  When I lived in the 44th Ward, I voted in the lobby of one of the residential high rises along Lake Shore Drive and it was easier to maneuver from the registration area to the booths and then to the scanner which reads the ballot.

In Chicago we had a relatively short ballot with only two referenda (one was to convene a statewide constitutional convention and the other was to allow recall elections for statewide officials) but almost 100 judges had to be confirmed with a yes/no vote.

So now that I have my "I voted" receipt, I am off to Starbucks (giving away a Tall coffee for each voter).

Saturday, November 1, 2008

The Family Politic

This post was written for the 59th Edition of the Carnival of Genealogy hosted by Jasia at Creative Gene.

I was fortunate enough to have been raised in an extended family that regularly shunned television in favor of discussing the issues of the day. This practice was most frequent when visiting my great-grandparents, John Ralph Austin and Therese McGinnis who lived about 15 miles away in Grahamsville, New York.

These two simple people raised in New York City during the turn of the 20th century somehow settled easily into the backcountry ways of the Catskill Mountains and came to be accepted by their neighbors as more than just “city folk.” In the late 1940s when Grandma and Grandpa purchased the house on Low Road, they made it clear that their intent was to stay full time and not to simply savor the weekend joys of the mountains.

The spot where they settled probably could not have been more remote in time and in location from the rest of the world but their means of staying connected was daily reading of one or more newspapers and listening to the local radio. Although I always found their views quite conservative, I think they appreciated the fact that someone was well informed as they were, and did not tolerate braggarts or windbags whose knowledge only skimmed the surface of what was going on in the world.

As a family member, if you had a seat at the adults’ table in the dining room, then you were expected to fully participate in the conversations which covered the latest political scandal, current or recent legislation, as well as old folk medicine remedies and the like recommended by a farmer friend just “down the way.” And to participate meant that even at age 13 you had better know what was going on, have the ability to listen to what others were saying, and respond even though your views may not be in agreement.

To that extent, my great-grandparents were dyed in the wool Republicans who could speak for hours about the evils of President and Mrs. Roosevelt. My great-grandmother reserved her best comments for Eleanor Roosevelt – that she was too involved in her husband’s career, that she was a busy body etc. Many women held this same view during the 1930s but those views seemed to change once we were at war and women were a vital source of labor for our country. In my mind, Mrs. Roosevelt was not afraid of that rough road of criticism especially if it made the road farther on down a bit smoother for other women when they were forced to trod it.

In my mind, my great-grandparents were Goldwater Republicans and held on to these ideals despite the turn of the party in later decades to one of “extreme conservatism bordering on lunacy” as they called it. I think they would be disappointed to see recent actions of the executive branch that eroded basic rights that their ancestors fought for when founding this country. I know they would be disappointed in a legislative branch with members of each party that could not reach across the aisle to each other and accomplish something for the greater good of the country.

While my personal politics lean more towards the progressive (not to be confused with liberal) – stressing personal responsibility, social welfare only as a means of improving circumstances not as a lifestyle, strong civil rights and freedoms, separation of church and state – my great-grandparents provided a safe place for me, and for anyone, to express their opinions. Sure, there would be intense arguments and debates. In fact, during the recent presidential debates I laughed as I watched them since to me they were “too tame.” In my family, a debate meant yelling, rapid-fire recitation of facts, someone running out of the room crying, someone else opening a bottle of scotch, etc. A debate was not a debate if it did not include tears and liquor.

Nevertheless, at the end of every evening, one could still stand up, go over and shake someone else’s hand despite having been in strong disagreement with them over the previous three hours. It is a damned shame that you hardly see that sentiment anymore.

Today is Data Backup Day!



Wow, another month has flown by and here it is time to backup data once again! As I do (and I hope many of you at least entertain the idea of doing), I will spend some time organizing files and backing them up to my 250gb External Hard Drive.

I've decided to wait until next month to highlight external hard drives, thinking that many of you might want to ask Santa to slide one under your tree this Christmas. I'll also be highlighting other hardware and software apps which make up a genea-blogger's "dream machine."

This month, I want to highlight the many options available for online storage. Many of the programs listed below have a free option - with a limited amount of storage such as 2GB or 5GB - and they also have a paid option. Your only limitation is your "upload" speed which is usually 25% of your download speed (example: if my download speed on DSL is 1.5 Mbps (megabits per second) then the upload speed will be about 360 kps).

The list below is posted, maintained and constantly updated at Lifehacker.




Photo: Backup Backup Backup - And Test Restores at Flickr courtesy of Topato