Saturday, May 31, 2014

Society Saturday - Touring the O Street Museum

The Daughters of Founders and Patriots of America always conclude their General Court meeting with a fun tour of a local site.  This year's tour was particularly novel.  We walked about 1/2 mile to the O Street Mansion.

Some of our ladies waiting to go in the mansion
This mansion is also a museum, bed & breakfast, meeting location and gift shop.  It consists of five row houses which were acquired over the years and combined into one unique building.  Several of the bedrooms have themes, such as the John Lennon bedroom, the Teddy Roosevelt bedroom, the Rosa Parks bedroom, and the Log Cabin bedroom.  The walls are covered with artwork and there are books, and knickknacks throughout the building.  Everything is for sale - if you see a painting on the wall that you want, you can purchase it.

Standing in the entry hall listening to a brief history of the mansion.
The most fun part of the building are the secret doors.  We were told that there were 72 secret doors and that over half were accesssible to the public.  Thus the hunt began.  We were able to spot about 10-15 of them.  Some were small, and simply opened up to storage areas, but some were full size and were the only way in or out of part of the building.

I am standing in the wine cellar, entered only by one of the secret doors
After touring the museum, we had a nice brunch in one of their dining rooms.  This is definitely someplace fun to visit when in DC.

http://www.omansion.com/

Monday, May 26, 2014

Amanuensis Monday - Grandma Hill's Poetry, Week 38


Decoration Day

Another Decoration Day, for our honored dead.
And again, we hear the martial tread.
Again we see our young men called to fight
The same vandals, who’d rule by might.

Again, they have challenged the rights of free men
To work and live decently with wives and children.
May our Armies strike them with tank and plane

‘Till never they’ll seek to wreck civilization again.






Nancy Jane Wiley Hill (1875-1960) was always writing something.  Many of those poems are now in the possession of her granddaughter Shirley Kern.  Shirley, with the help of her sister-in-law Ruth Ormsby, transcribed these poems in 1996 for a Hill-Ormsby-Kern family reunion.  I am going to post many of these poems so that they may be enjoyed by all.

These are copyright 1996 and reprinted with permission.

Saturday, May 24, 2014

Society Saturday - Happy Birthday to the NOC

Just prior to the Annual General Court meeting of the Daughters of Founders and Patriots of America, there is a luncheon of the DFPA National Officers Club.  The Club consists of former and current National Officers of the Society.  This includes Chapter Presidents.  This year marked the 50th Anniversary of the National Officers Club.




Club President Carla Odom did a wonderful job presiding over this special anniversary meeting.  Everything had a "Golden Anniversary" theme, from the table decorations to the candy favors.  Everyone who attended received a special pin for the Club Anniversary.  The Club luncheon is always a nice way to meet with friends before the actual meeting starts, and this was no exception.

Monday, May 19, 2014

Amanuensis Monday - Grandma Hill's Poetry, Week 37

Gold Star Mothers

We Gold Star Mothers, seen looking today through a sheen.
We who were saddened, ere the truce of 1918.
We were glad to see the return of the other brave boys
Our sorrow, momentarily eased, by their gladness and noise.

We saw them  greeted by happy mothers,
as they marched gaily along
And then we thought of our own dear sons,
they had left behind
We were glad to see them march gaily to the music and song
But it made our tears fall so thickly, they made us blind.

We thought of our own boys, who fought so bravely, and fell
On the blood stained battlefields, in the cold muddy trench
Causing us a sorrow, no tongue can possibly tell
And no show of pomp or glory, can ever quench.

We think of the many saddened mothers of today
As they watch their sons, march so blithely away.
Will they be called upon to suffer, so bitterly as we?
Or will their boys come back, and gladness they’ll see?

May our sad lot be spared these brave mothers, we pray,
Tho’ our sons fell for their country, on a foreign main
May their brave sons bring back our proud emblem and say

We finished their victory, they died not in vain.







Nancy Jane Wiley Hill (1875-1960) was always writing something.  Many of those poems are now in the possession of her granddaughter Shirley Kern.  Shirley, with the help of her sister-in-law Ruth Ormsby, transcribed these poems in 1996 for a Hill-Ormsby-Kern family reunion.  I am going to post many of these poems so that they may be enjoyed by all.

These are copyright 1996 and reprinted with permission.

Saturday, May 17, 2014

Society Saturday - How the Railroad helped win the War

At the Annual Banquet of the National Society Daughters of Founders and Patriots of America, we were entertained by Mr. David Shackleford, Chief Curator of the B&O Railway Museum.

I had the pleasure of sitting next to Mr. Shackleford during dinner.  He was a very interesting person, telling me of his career in the army, and his attraction to trains.  He seemed genuinely interested in our Society as well.  It was clear that he has a love for history.



His talk was on the history of the B&O Railroad and how it helped the Union win the civil war.  During the talk, he gave us a lot of information about the history of the railroad itself.  For example, each railroad company laid its own track and the gauge (distance between rails) of one railroad often was different from another.  Even if the difference was only an inch or two, a train built for one gauge of track could not run on another company's track.  Most trains only ran between 2 cities.  Thus, the cargo was pulled by horses through the city streets to get from one train to another.

During the Civil War, rail lines were a prime target for Confederate soldiers, who knew that destroying the rail system would weaken the advantage of the North who used their trains to move troops and supplies. The railroad was the target of several raids, including the Great Train Raid of 1861. Although the railroad was considered collateral damage during the war, this did not stop the B&O agents from helping the Union cause.  They often would pass along information about Confederate troop movements.  This intelligence helped the Union forces know when and where to prepare for battle.


http://www.borail.org/

Monday, May 12, 2014

Amanuensis Monday - Grandma Hill's Poetry, Week 36

Hoarders

The hoarders help Hitler, when they grumble, groan and mutter
And say they are cheated, when they can’t get
sugar, coffee and butter.
They carry home great sacks full of foods
and juices in cans
Get irate at the grocer and baker, when not able
to get all demands.
Patriotic?  A, yes, the American flag is on
the windshields of all their cars
Yet they drive these cars to haul home their ill-gotten jars.
Just hear the clamor and roar, when they speak about meat
I wonder, were they in Europe, how much
could they get to eat?
They bootleg on gasoline, rubber and tires
Who says they are scarce are big liars.
And now, when they have to plod along
on their poor shoeless feet
They are yelling so loudly, that it’s giving the dictators a treat.
That there is a war on, they don’t seem to be aware
And what’s more, are too selfish
and greedy to care.
Business and leisure must go on in the same usual way.
Hungry, shoeless, unarmed soldiers will save them
while they idle and play.
So why should they do without what they want,
or try anything to save?
What care they for mothers who weep, and think

of sons asleep in a foreign grave.

Note: There is little doubt as to how Grandma felt about rationing (or not).






Nancy Jane Wiley Hill (1875-1960) was always writing something.  Many of those poems are now in the possession of her granddaughter Shirley Kern.  Shirley, with the help of her sister-in-law Ruth Ormsby, transcribed these poems in 1996 for a Hill-Ormsby-Kern family reunion.  I am going to post many of these poems so that they may be enjoyed by all.

These are copyright 1996 and reprinted with permission.

Saturday, May 10, 2014

Society Saturday - The National Museum of the U.S. Army

At the Candlelight Dinner of the National Society Daughters of American Colonists, we learned about the building of the National Museum of the U.S. Army.

This museum is being built at Fort Belvoir, Virginia.  It will tell the history of the United States Army as well as teach what it is like to be in the army.

There will be an interesting exhibit about Artwork depicting the Army, and a unique experiential learning center where groups of school children will simulate problem solving on a rescue mission.


The museum is still in the construction phase but it sounds like a very interesting place to visit when it is completed.

http://thenmusa.org/index.php

Monday, May 05, 2014

Amanuensis Monday - Grandma Hill's Poetry, Week 35


Hope

There is a grandmother,
living on Bancroft Street,
Who waits, not too patiently,
for the sound of the youthful feet
That were so ruthlessly sent away
to tread on a foreign strand
Hoping the time is now short,
when again they’ll walk
on their homeland.

And she hopes that never, never again,
the occasion will arise
When war’s devastation will
darken the world’s skies
And that our country will take
the place of a kindly big brother
Teaching other nations how to live
at peace with each other.

Twice, in my lifetime, I’ve seen
my boys sent to a foreign shore
One of them, lying asleep in France,
will return to me, nevermore.
But let’s hope, this time,
your task will not have been in vain
And that the four of you, safe and sound,

will soon be in your homes again.






Nancy Jane Wiley Hill (1875-1960) was always writing something.  Many of those poems are now in the possession of her granddaughter Shirley Kern.  Shirley, with the help of her sister-in-law Ruth Ormsby, transcribed these poems in 1996 for a Hill-Ormsby-Kern family reunion.  I am going to post many of these poems so that they may be enjoyed by all.

These are copyright 1996 and reprinted with permission.

Saturday, May 03, 2014

Society Saturday - First Families of Maine and New Hampshire

On Tuesday of Lineage Week, there is a joint meeting and tea for the Order of the First Families of Maine and the Order of the First Families of New Hampshire.  These two organizations have met jointly for four years and it works well.  There is a lot of overlap in membership.

The Order of the First Families of Maine conducted their business first.  Membership is open to men and women who can trace their ancestors to Maine prior to 1652. Their prime objective is to support historical projects in Maine and it was agreed again to support the Maine Historical Society.


The Order of the First Families of New Hamsphire offers membership to men and women who can trace their ancestry to that state prior to 1680.  It was exciting to see the Order's Flag presented.  This was a dream of Founder Shari Worrell, and it took nearly 3 years to raise money and find a company to make a suitable flag.


Historian Margie Knight told of the origin of the Order's seal which is depicted on the flag.


http://offme.homestead.com/
http://offnh.homestead.com/