Character Traits of 12 more Ancestors
Because I am on a roll, here are 12 additional character trails of 12 more ancestors. Details about these family members can be found in other blog entries as well.
Service-John Griffiths
For
fifteen years John Griffiths walked all over Lancashire County, England spreading the Gospel of Jesus Christ. He was the President of the Rose Park Branch for 15 years. Then the PEF (Perpetual Emigration)
Funds became available and they moved with many in the branch to become
part of the Martin Handcart Company. He lost his two sons on the trek
and died the day after arriving in Salt Lake Valley. His two daughters
survived him, both faithful to the end.
Education-Max Leslie Weiss
Max
grew up in a home where education was important. He did well in high school
and went to college first at Princeton, graduating in Math Science. He obtained his Master's Degree at Cornell. He did further graduate work at Reed College in Portland, Oregon and then received his Doctorate at the University of Washington. He worked at the University of California
at Santa Barbara for many years as an outstanding math professor and
as Provost.
Activism-Ralph Eugene Owen
Alcoholism
had destroyed the family of Walter Bruce Owen. Ralph had to protect his
mother from his alcoholic father. His mother eventually
divorced her abusive husband in 1909 because of "the bottle." As a direct
result of observing his father's addiction, Ralph joined the Anti-Saloon
League and went around the country trying to teach about the evils of alcoholism.
Sacrifice-Reva Maxine Moulton Owen Webb
She instantly became a "nurse" when
her 31 year old husband had polio. Maxine would travel by bus to the Veterans Hospital to feed her husband while he was in an iron lung. She worked to help him through Chiropractic School in Portland. She later became the office manager and insurance
biller during the days at Willamette View Chiropractic Center. She was
the legal transcript composer and always supported her husband in his "freedom fight". She was the unofficial general contractor of building a home in
Leeds, Utah. She returned to her role of nurse and ran the dialysis
machine in Leeds. She acted as an editor to help her second husband
publish his writings. She brought into the world nine children who
honor her for her many sacrifices during her 93 years on earth.
Hope-Marilyn Ballegooie Weiss
Marilyn
was clinging to "hope" for many years. She raised her family with good
values. She supported her husband as he grew his business. After 40
years of marriage, her divorce caused her to look to her own spiritual growth. She
prepared to receive her endowments in the Portland Temple. She served
faithfully in the Relief Society. She always hoped for greater
happiness and contentment.
Teaching-James A. Owen
Jim
frequently found himself as "the teacher". He taught in the Army Radio
school during WWII. He taught seminary for 3 1/2 years in Burley,
Idaho. He taught as a Stake missionary in two different stakes.
Frequently he was called to teach the Gospel Doctrine classes. He loved
to teach the nine children in his family and besides regular Family Home Evenings, he held special "Ask Gospel Questions" sessions with his children on Sunday afternoons.
Desire to Learn-Clarissa Dean Chase Weiss
Claire was
married at 18 years of age. She was always a great student and extremely well read
in the classics. She loved discussing philosophy and took great pride
in her ancestry, especially being related to one of the Mayflower
Pilgrims (John Alden) and the early LDS pioneers of 1847 (Isaac &
Phebe Chase). She encouraged her three children in their pursuits: her daughter who became a school teacher, her first son who became an inventor and businessman, and her youngest son in his academic pursuits.
Hard Work-Ida Ellen Fish Owen
Ida was left as a widow in
1938 after being married to her husband, Ralph, for 19 years.
She started a boarding house for students and later worked as a cook at
the Weslyan University to support her family. She moved from Nebraska to Oregon to be closer
to her two children.
Cheerfulness-David Simon Weiss
Dave was a great salesman
because people liked being around him. His native cheerfulness made
people happy. He enjoyed playing with his grandchildren. He enjoyed
sailing, flying, and restoring his 1941 Packard. His playful personality endeared many to him and he was well respected in the RV Industry and among those he worked with the in the Boy Scouts of America.
Spiritual-Annie Wahrhaftig Weiss
Hannah
(Annie) was a devout Jew. As an Orthodox Jew, she found it difficult
to live on the frontier away from a synagogue. When she came to
America, she was uncomfortable until she lived in the City of the Great
Salt Lake and could attend the newly built Montefiore synagogue during the High Holy Days. Her
husband worked in Vernal and commuted by train to his home in Salt Lake
City.
Being a Helpmeet-Hannah Eastman Clegg
Hannah
was the mother of two sons. In faith she crossed the ocean with her husband, Henry Clegg and
anticipated the joyful day when she would gather with the Saints in Utah.
Unfortunately, her journey ended near Mormon Grove in Kansas where she
died of cholera. Her young son was buried in her arms.
Devotion to God-Phebe Owen Fish
Phebe was one of the founding members in the Liberty Church in Norman, Indiana.
She loved singing from the old Methodist hymnal and did until her death. She was a gardener and kept a lovely garden. She was loved and respected by her neighbors and family.
"Give people a fact and you enlighten their minds; Tell them a story and you touch their souls." --Old Jewish Hasidic Teaching
Showing posts with label Ralph Owen. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Ralph Owen. Show all posts
Sunday, January 18, 2015
Thursday, March 6, 2014
Owen Family Heirlooms: the Lamp, the Bowl, and the Quilt
heir·loom
noun \ˈer-ˌlüm\ : a valuable object that is owned by a family for many years and passed from one generation to anotherI only have a few "heirlooms" from the Owen Family. It is tangible evidence that real people I know mostly from pictures once lived. I keep most of my heirlooms in an oversized trunk I once bought at Goodwill. Some heirlooms are a bit harder to keep than others.
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| 1929 photo of the Owen Family. James in the middle with his mother, Ida, in the back. Velma, Delcie, and Harold are pictured, but Ancil is missing. |
The oil hurricane lamp was passed down through the Owen descendants. I believe it was used by the Fish family. It is easily over 100 years old. I move it from my living room when the quadcopters are being flown at Christmas! We forget that it wasn't that long ago and this was the only source of light for our ancestors. Imagine reading and studying by the light of this lamp. Maybe we'll try it out one of these days.
| Oil Lamp from the Owen-Fish family |
| Bowl that belonged to the Ralph and Ida Owen family |
Ida Ellen was my grandmother and she died when I was nine years old. She seemed a quiet woman and I really don't have many memories about her. I know she was a great cook and supported her family as a single mom working in the kitchen at a nearby college in Lincoln, Nebraska. She would often invite others to dinner.
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| Ida Ellen Fish Owen (October 16, 1885-September 12, 1961). This photo was taken at James Owen's wedding in 1948. |
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| 1957 Thanksgiving at Grandma Owen's house. Steven Owen is the baby. |
This shell and the glass bowl were among the items Delcie Owen O'Grady (Ida's daughter) gave to Diane Portnoy and I when we went to visit her Nebraska in 1993.
| Note the July 1909 written in pencil inside the shell. |
This quilt top was a crazy quilt patchwork made from clothes the Owen family no longer used. Note the wool pieces that were possibly from men's suit scraps. Maybe they were from clothing once worn by Ralph Eugene Owen. Ralph died in 1928 and as the Owen family lived through the depression. I'm sure they would "reduce, reuse, and recycle" just like we should today. Putting this quilt top together (probably in the 1930's) likely brought back memories of Ida's happy years with Ralph and her five children. It has moved with me from Redmond, WA to Vancouver, WA to Logan, UT always calling for me to repair it.
| This summer the Ida Owen granddaughters will redo the backing and restore this 1930's quilt to a better state. |
We still have lots of research to do to find out more about our OWEN lines. I feel blessed that we have the histories of three of the children (Delcie, Velma, and James). It seems that "touching" these "real" items reminds me of my heritage in a different way. They were real living, breathing people with hopes and dreams and lamps and bowls and quilts. I am grateful to know that the Owens were a God-fearing people and taught us of the Master by word and by example.
Tuesday, March 4, 2014
Early Life of James A. Owen
The Early Life of
James A. Owen (Birth to age 12)
This week I re-read James A. Owen’s personal history written
in May 1976 while he lived in Leeds, UT.
(Maxine Owen was away caring for me
and my first born, Allison Lauree in Provo, UT.) As I re-read this history I
thought it would be good to share portions of his 16-page document with the
family.
Ralph Eugene Owen, Jim’s father, died when he was only a
seven and a half year old boy. James was
the youngest of five children (ages 7 to 18) when Ida Ellen Owen became a
single mom in 1928.
Jim loved his widowed mother and had a special relationship
with his “Angel Mother”. “My mother (Ida Ellen Fish Owen) often spoke of her own father
(Isaac Fish) saying, 'We were not the richest people in Brown County (Indiana) but we
were known as the most honest.'"
Ida Fish Owen would never even say the word “lie” as it was
a vulgar, dirty word. She would never
even tell a white lie for a joke on someone.
James wrote of his mother: “When she’d feel that I was joking or kidding
and telling a falsehood for fun, she’d just say to me, ‘James, you’re
storying!’”
James was born in Dorans, Illinois (“a small, lightly wide
place in the road with only a small store”) on Feb. 7, 1921. His father (Ralph Eugene Owen) was a teacher
and a dairy farmer. Ralph and Ida had
moved to Dorans to work for a wealthy farmer named Farrah and lived there for 3
years before moving to Humboldt, Illinois.
Ralph was a lay minister at the Humboldt United Methodist Church. He would preach the sermon 2-3
times a month while the circuit-riding minster would be there on alternating
Sundays or maybe just one week in four. Jim writes of his father, “He was a man of strong moral conviction with a
strong testimony of the reality of God.”
(It appears this same United Methodist Church is still used today and is located at 419
Jefferson St., Humboldt, Illinois.)
Humboldt was a small town with about 300 people “centered on
the school and the church.” The Owen
family “lived in a nice house on a
corner of a city block with a wooden fence in front and lots of shrubs around
it.” They were across the street from
the four main lines of (railroad) tracks going to Chicago (about 165 miles to
the north). James loved watching the
trains.
Nearby was the Carpenter’s drug store that “had a large
wooden Indian Chief as a cigar advertisement.
Oh, he always scared me.”
“My dad (Ralph E. Owen) always said that no one should ever
be turned away from our door hungry. We
had many so-called 'bums' because of the railroad. They would ride the empty freight cars. When Dad was home, the bums were invited in
to our (kitchen) table to eat. When Dad was not home, Mom was instructed not to
let anyone in and to keep the door locked at night. If 'bums' came during the day and the family
was home, then Mom often fed them in the breezeway off of the kitchen.” (James was told this story by his older sisters
as he was too young to remember.)
When he was a small boy of four years, the Owen family came
home from church one Sunday and Ida tried to put James down for an afternoon nap. It was a very hot day, so he sat down by the
upstairs window. His mom had warned him
about leaning back on the screen. “I
should have listened to Mom,” he thought as he fell the fourteen feet into a
bush below. James lived to tell the
story but a piece of glass cut his scalp and he was frightened. He wrote, “This started a series of events in
my life that showed me that if I would listen and try, then God would place a
protective shield around me to protect and extend my life so that the purpose
of mortality might be fulfilled.”
When he was five years old, the family was transferred to Lincoln, Nebraska. The town of Humboldt gave them going away parties and there were many sad goodbyes as they joked that the Owen family was moving to the “Wild West”. Ralph’s youngest sister, Ina, was especially sad to see her brother leave town.
On the way to Nebraska, the family would stop at tourist
cabins. It took 2-3 days and was about a
500 mile trip on very 1926 rough roads.
On the long trip, James remembers being in a large city getting
groceries. He was across the street from
his family and ran to catch up with them. “This was a busy street with much
traffic and streetcar tracks down the middle of the street. Not heeding the traffic…I darted for the
safety of (my family). I made it across
the traffic lane…only then to have that ever-present guardian angel again
provide that invisible but real shield of protection around me. I tripped on the streetcar tracks and went
sprawling face down…a speeding car missed me by a few inches. The next thing I recall was being in the
bosom of my lovely Angel Mother (Ida Fish Owen) assuring me that all was well.”
The next two years in Lincoln, Nebraska were happy
ones. Their new home was in College
View, a suburb of Lincoln where a Seventh-day Adventist College (now Union
College) is located. The home was located at 368 L Street and had two
bedrooms, an unfinished upstairs and a full basement.
On Sunday mornings Jim would run and jump in bed with his
parents and his dad would read the Sunday funnies to him. Then they would go to Sunday School and
church. Afterwards, Sunday dinners were
always extra nice (silverware, goblets, desserts) and often with company. Ralph especially enjoyed loved corn on the
cob.
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| James Owen in Kindergarten |
When attending church, if any of the five children were unruly,
Ralph would simply raise his eyebrows and the kids would straighten up. One Easter Sunday, Jim was to recite the 23rd
Psalm. He was six years old. “Boy, I knew it was going to be a big day in
my life. Sunday morning I awakened and
didn’t feel well. I went down to see Mom
and Dad and they said my face was swollen.
Mumps.”
When Jim was a second grader he missed two weeks of school
with the “croup”. “The Doctor said my
tonsils should come out, so out they came.
It was great as I got to be put in Mom’s special “guest room” and had
visitors.” His Sunday School teacher came and gave him a movie ticket.
“As a group, she was going to take the class to the great silent picture
“King of Kings” and I was sick, so she came over and gave me a special card and
some money on a ticket that I might go to it later. So I told my friends and they dubbed me “Mrs.
Gregg’s Little Angel. Just thought you
would all like to know of that incontestable historical fact.”
In those days, people left their cars in the driveways, keys
and all. One day six-year old James and his
neighbor friend got in the Model T to make believe they were driving all over
the world. Then they pretended to be
“stuck” and the neighbor boy got out and was “pushing”. Jim turned on the key, pushed in the clutch
and his friend really pushed. Jim
started down the incline without any knowledge of how to stop the car. He then took his foot off the clutch and the
car started! The car (guided by Jim’s
“Guardian Angel”) steered into a cinder pile about 30-40 feet down the road and
the 18 horsepower engine stopped.
Luckily, there was no damage to the car.
The new Model T was Ralph’s pride and joy. Little James knew he was in trouble. He streaked straight to his bed and hid under
the covers awaiting discovery and then punishment. When Ralph returned home, Jim's brothers and
sisters let their parents know what had happened.
Ralph said, “Where’s James?” “In
bed, hiding”. Jim wrote: “I remember his quick steps up those stairs
as I awaited the decision of the earthly Judge.
Apparently when he saw that little scared six-year old sobbing his heart
out for fear of what might have happened, my Dad, was just like my Heavenly Dad
who knew the price had already been paid and he put his strong arm around me
and held me close and I sighed and cried with joy for my “two Dad’s understood
and forgave me.”
James remembers: “My Dad bought my brother (Harold) and me
cowboy and Indian suits which we enjoyed.
He had a picture of us that he carried in his wallet to show people his
two sons that he loved so much. I
remember often running and chasing with my brother. I felt I could run as fast as the wind because
I could outrun my older brother.”
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| James and Harold in their cowboy costumes. |
James remembers attending Kindergarten in the College View
High School Building. He loved playing
in the gymnasium when it was bad weather outside.
In the summer of 1928, Jim’s parents were going to celebrate
their 20th wedding anniversary by taking a vacation trip together in western
Nebraska. The kids were to stay home
with a babysitter, Mrs. Livengood. “I
believe my brother Harold and I put on our cowboy suits to please Dad as he
liked them so well. I still remember
standing on the front porch steps. I was
sad and despondent. I don’t know how or
why, all I knew was that I’d never see my Dad alive again. It was my most unforgettable farewell. (While they were gone) I was listless and didn’t play with much
enthusiasm. (I was) just a sad little fellow in need of his Mom and his Dad.”
“On the night of the
15th of July (1928), Mom called and said Dad was in the hospital,
sick with pneumonia. The trip was to be
a combination of business and pleasure and Dad had been trout fishing, which he
loved to do and did only infrequently because of the pressure of the job. He had gotten wet and chilled and in a couple
of days he was in the hospital.”
“Then the call came
that Dad was worse. Then the call came...that day that Dad was gone.
Everybody was so kind to our family.
Mom finally got home. I think she
accompanied the body on the train. She
was just broken and never got over it.”
“The funeral was
simple and nice at the Community Church in College View. I remember where I was sitting in the
church. They said that Dad was always a
friend to everyone, (that) there were no strangers (to my dad).
Even the vicious dogs were Dad’s friends. He would just walk up and pet them. Then I remember going to the cemetery.”
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| Lincoln Memorial Cemetery in Lincoln, Nebraska. |
Following the death of their provider, the family moved to University Place, a Methodist Community built around
Nebraska Wesleyan University. Their
house was conveniently one block from the campus.
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| James, his mother Ida, and sister Delcie outside of their home in Lincoln, Nebraska |
Their home had four bedrooms and a bath upstairs. Two bedrooms, front room, dining room and kitchen on the main floor and a 2/3rd basement with a two car garage.
“There was a chicken
house for poultry and produce and two nice trees in the yard. Mother had decided to run a rooming and
boarding house. We kept girls, but a few
male students also. That was the first
year, then she gave it up and went to work cooking at the (Nebraska) Wesleyan college
cafeteria. She left early in the morning
for her job at the cafeteria, but was home between 2:00 and 4:00 o’clock and
then went back and worked until seven.
It sure helped to have her home after school. Many nights when we were youmg, my brother
(Harold) and I would go up to the campus to walk home with her or meet her part way.”
Jim writes
about his memories in each of his school years, Kindergarten through 8th
grade. “Our school was a great cross section: college professor’s kids 1/3 of the class,
2/3 from the “home for Dependent Children (orphanage) and the last 1/3 were
normal kids like me.”
In 4th Grade he remembers, “We did self
testing drills in arithmetic. One could
work, to a degree, at one’s own speed. In
music, I may have been lacking, but in math I was on the other end of the spectrum.”
During his 4th
grade year he also notes: “I enjoyed the
first of the month fire drills, which gave us the opportunity to get away from
class for 30 minutes. Each Christmas
after practice in our individual (class)rooms and just before being dismissed for
vacation, we would all gather on the stair landings of the hall and sing
Christmas carols.”
While in 6th
grade he “fooled around a lot with crystal sets and had a good one. I could get two stations KRAB and KFOR. I had in my room many electrical odds and
ends and was always building something.”
“During my 7th
and 8th grades, my interest in athletics grew immensely. I was always the captain or leader and
either the best or knew the best in most sports. We had fine coaches. I remember the meticulous hours spent in gym
class and after school with Coach Wyient teaching us the fundamentals of
passing, shooting, zone defense, etc.” Later Jim would become the a basketball star because of good training in his early years.
Jim’s early childhood
was traumatic with the loss of his father, but the care and love of older
siblings made his life easier. As his
mom was a single parent, Jim really did try his best to be obedient and
attentive in order to make her life easier.
James A. Owen wrote that the reason he recorded his happy memories was so that “my children and other posterity might know of God’s gracious love toward one of His humble and grateful children.”
James A. Owen wrote that the reason he recorded his happy memories was so that “my children and other posterity might know of God’s gracious love toward one of His humble and grateful children.”
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