National Day of Prayer
Oh, what peace we often forfeit,
Oh, what needless pain we bear,
All because we do not carry
Everything to God in prayer.
Labels: prayer
Oh, what peace we often forfeit,
Oh, what needless pain we bear,
All because we do not carry
Everything to God in prayer.
Labels: prayer

This was the Lantz home in Illinois.
The public library. It was closed for a very long lunch break while I was in town.
The Christian Church where Abraham & Laura attended. He had been Amish before his marriage. She had been Methodist, so they compromised.
The Denman Cemetery where many members of the Taylor family are buried.
Marker for Stephen Taylor's son Isaac who died during the Civil War of illness.
Labels: Carlock, Illinois, McLean County
Labels: cemeteries
Labels: blogs
Labels: Irish
Labels: blogs
Labels: genealogy, miscellaneous
Labels: poetry
Labels: Boston, historical societies, Illinois, Itawamba County, libraries, Massachusetts, McLean County, Mississippi, NEHGS
Labels: Carnival
Labels: Jefferson County, libraries, Tennessee
Labels: Aberdeen, libraries, Mississippi
Labels: Amory, libraries, Mississippi
Labels: Amish, Holmes County, libraries, Ohio
Your Thinking is Abstract and Sequential |
![]() You like to do research and collect lots of information. The more facts you have, the easier it is for you to learn. You need to figure things out for yourself and consider all possibilities. You tend to become an expert in the subjects that you study. It's difficult for you to work with people who know less than you do. You aren't a very patient teacher, and you don't like convincing people that you're right. |
Labels: meme
Labels: Cincinnati, libraries
Music - I sing. I play instruments. I really didn't realize it was a family trait until I got to the Thornton Family Reunion and noticed that there are quite a few of us that were talented musically. I was the only one of my immediate family members that seemed to have the skill. However, I think that I have a nephew that has inherited the music gene too! Even cousin Terry has that trait.
What traits run in your family? Which of them did you inherit? Do you have your mother's blue eyes? Your grandfather's stubbornness? Your aunt's skill with knitting needles? Is there a talent for music in your family? Or do you come from a long line of teachers? Have you ever looked at an old photo and recognized your nose on another family member's face?
Labels: Carnival
Labels: miscellaneous
Labels: libraries
Labels: technology
You Are a Dash |
![]() Your life is fast paced and varied. You are realistic, down to earth, and very honest. You're often busy doing something interesting, and what you do changes quickly. You have many facets to your personality, and you connect them together well. You have a ton of interests. While some of them are a bit offbeat, they all tie together well. You friends rely on you to bring novelty and excitement to their lives. (And while you're the most interesting person they know, they can't help feeling like they don't know you well.) You excel in: Anything to do with money You get along best with: the Exclamation Point |
Labels: miscellaneous
Labels: Carnival
This is the Illinois memorial at Vicksburg National Military Park.
Isaac's name can be found about 3 from the bottom in the next to the last section on this panel.
Otis' name is in the middle of this panel. It is third from the bottom in the last column of that section.
Isaac became ill on the journey back from Vicksburg and died in a hospital in Memphis, Tennessee.
This is the receipt for Isaac's corpse . It has to be one of the most interesting documents in my genealogical collection.
Now, for my Southern ancestors. I'll start with the Thorntons who also fought for the Union. Actually, some of them fought first for the South and then for the North. I will say that it tends to make life interesting when you lived in a part of the country that was noted for its Union sympathies but the Southern recruiters were forcing the men into service for the South. This has been well-documented in many books about this region in this time, but one of the most readable accounts is called Tories of the Hills by Wesley S. Thompson. It is a somewhat fictionalized account, but contains a great deal that is historically accurate. My cousin Terry has blogged about this very thing. I also blogged about this and the results of Henry M. and Martin V.'s Civil War pension files. I haven't blogged James M.'s pension file summary, but the best summary was written by my cousin Terry in an issue of the now defunct Thornton News that he and I swapped turns editing. It, of course, was much more interesting while he was editing it.
My Aldridge family was also in the Fayette County, Alabama area. The only Aldridge in my family that I have found to have enlisted did so for the Confederate cause. Whether he was forced to enlist or did it of his own volition, I do not know. Some of us have speculated that the Civil War may have created a rift between the Aldridges and Thorntons. However, we cannot prove that. We only know that James M.'s son by his first wife Lucinda Aldridge who died in childbirth was reared by his maternal grandparents and that his children by second wife Nancy Lay seemed to know very little about "Cape" for some time. There's a story to this, but I'll save it for some other time.
My Fowlkes family was in the Cotton Gin Port area of Monroe County. Half-brothers of Josiah Fowlkes (who was born in 1861) fought in the 14th and 43rd Regiments in the Mississippi Confederate cause. Many of the other Fowlkes listed in Mississippi's confederate units are related, although not as closely.
My Hesters were in the Lost Corner or Cason area of Monroe County. My great great grandfather John H. Hester fought for the 2nd Mississippi Cavalry's Company F.
This is the military marker for John H. Hester at the Hester Cemetery in Monroe County, Mississippi.
Mary Ann Harris Hester's brother Charles Newton Harris fought for Mississippi's 12th Cavalry. He lived in Tennessee when he filed for a pension and when his widow was granted hers. His Civil War Questionnaire has been published and is available in libraries which have this book of that state's questionnaires.
This was submitted for the "Where Were You?" Carnival.
Labels: Civil War
Labels: newspapers
Labels: biographies, wikis
After that was the car that least fit my personality--a hand-me down Ford LTD. I think it was a 1980 or 1981 model. I don't really know. It was an ugly pastel blue color.
I was really glad when I finally purchased a 1989 Toyota Tercel. I had it for about 9 years. It was a blue color, but a nice shade of blue--kind of a slate blue color.
I currently drive a 1998 Honda Civic. It's a blue also. I really wanted red, but they didn't have red on the lot so I got the blue one because I liked the interior better than the interior of the green one.
The above was my favorite family vehicle--not the Honda CRV, although I do like that, but the "Minnie Winnie." Brumley wishes he could go camping again in it, but we no longer have it.
This is a better photo of it. Dad is sitting outside.
Labels: automobiles, Carnival