Thursday, April 19, 2018

Every now and then I have a couple of hours where I can get back to things like THE BLOG!

Last time I told you about an up-coming speaker at the Historical Society, Peter Klose, who would tell us about the abandon cemeteries in the area and about the mysterious grave of Lovel and Aurilla Beach.

It was a pretty good evening.  Unfortunately Peter's day wasn't all that charming.  He spent the day at the Vet's office with a sick cat (He runs Jungle Cat World) who had damaged the ligaments in his leg trying to do the things that the younger cats were doing! 

Been there!  Done that!  This old cat is always trying to do the things that the younger cats are doing.  AND I'm still in one piece and haven't had to go to the vet for ages!!<grin>

Anyway, he told us why we can't find some of the old abandon cemeteries - the directions given in the transcripts are wrong!  He has spent hours searching the fence lines and bush lots trying to figure out where they all are - in some cases he had success!

We found out he is a world traveller and has visited cemeteries and burial spots all over the globe and they are suffering the same neglect that our own abandon cemeteries are experiencing.  It was an interesting journey he took us on.

As to Aurilla and Lovel Beach, we found out so much about them, but we never did find out why they came to Clarke Township.  In later years one of their sons held land out in the north end of the township, but he was not the reason they came.  While living here they were, it seems, Methodists.  Thomas Ivory's old woollen mill was built nearby and the Methodists were allowed to use one room in the mill for Sabbath meetings.  Ivory also gave them permission to use a corner of his land as a burial place for the small congregation, and so that is why the Beach's were there.  Peter is of the mind to get in a "witcher" to find out if there are other graves in that spot that had no stones, or whose stones are gone.  If that fails, he might undertake the cost of GPR - Ground Penetrating Radar - to see where any other graves might be located.

Hopefully Peter will have time to put all his information together and donate it to the Historical Society for our files.  It will eventually make a great display, and may even lead to a cemetery finding project - wouldn't that be great!!!

On another note, the OGS (Ontario Genealogical Society) Conference is fast approaching on the weekend of June 1, 2 and 3.  It will be held this year at Guelph University.  I have been designing my booth and getting all my material ready for that busy weekend - hundreds of business cards, book lists, and of course, my "conference special".  This year it is not one of my books, as has been my custom.  It is a booklet from the UK Family Tree Magazine - their 2018 Genealogy Handbook.  Cost as much to ship it from Britain as the books cost!  I have a really heavy box of 100 copies for the occasion. Clarington's Home Children, and WW1 Nursing Sisters of Old Durham County, both local history books.  Even though it is a genealogy conference, I think I'll bring along my two gardening books, Companion Planting, and The Natural Gardener.  Family researchers are interested in all kinds of books, not just genealogy.  There will also be the proverbial SALE bin where everything in it is $5.
Front and foremost at Conference will be

The Marketplace at Conference is free to everyone - you do not have to pay to get in, nor be part of the conference.  So, if you like old books, new books, maps, all sorts of interesting things, please visit Guelph University that weekend and take a look (and I'm sure the vendors would like you to spend some money!)  To find out what building it is in, visit the OGS website at <www.ogs.on.ca> then click "conference".

Tuesday, April 3, 2018

April 3rd, 2018

So much for a weekly blog!  Just so much going on in this area, and of course, I have to be in the thick of it!
Much of my time is taken up with the Newcastle Village and District Historical Society.  We have a very vibrant board the last couple of years, and there's always something happening  and I just have to jump right in the middle of it!  I will give them a plug... April 10th is Speaker Night (there's another Speaker Night in October, too, but I'll tell you about that closer to the date).  This spring we will welcome Peter Klose, best known in these parts for his Jungle Cat World.  Down through the years Peter was also a member of the Abandon Cemeteries Board, and through that association became aware of a grave stone on the side of the 115 Hwy at Newcastle.  It is the grave of Lovel and Aurilla Beach, shown here in the photo.  As you can see, they were early settlers, both dying prior to official census - Lovel in 1828 and Aurilla in 1833.
No one seems to know who they were, and it has been like that for many long decades - in fact, nearly two centuries.
Peter Klose decided to find out about them, and after two years of research has come up with their story, which he will present on April 10th.
If any of my readers are close enough to attend this meeting, it is FREE (always nice to find!) and will be held in the Centennial Room at the Newcastle Community Hall (downstairs) - at the four corners of Newcastle Village (for all you out-of-towners who will be attending.)  There is free parking and we will have refreshments.

On another note, I have been kept busy with helping design an upcoming event with A Gift of Art, the local art gallery/studio at Newcastle.  We have obtained a grant to present a program we are calling "The Living Stories Project".  This will be a joint creative venture between seniors and youth to bring stories, memories and experiences to life through the use of multi-media, so says the brochure I designed for the event.  I will be conducting a memoire writing class for eight weeks, helping young and old alike to put to paper, or voice recording, their memories of times gone by; their memories of the people they've met along the way; and of course their memories of immigrating here from a far away place and what they experienced at that time, and what they felt at that time.  These stories and memories will be taken and plays or improv presented, and hopefully some video's made.  If anyone wishes to have their memories put down on paper into a booklet and published, that too is a possibility.  This will be a year-long undertaking with Phase 1 - the memoire writing to begin this month, April 17th.  If you are interested, please call The Gift of Art.

In between these two endeavours, I'm entering a competition being hosted by Mary Maxim, the yarn folks at Paris, Ontario.  There are four classes but I'm entering only one - for some reason there just isn't time to do enough crocheting to enter all four!! -   I am making a crocheted afghan - The City of Ottawa Tartan.  It is a lovely beige tartan with a bit of brown, a bit of white, a bit of blue and a bit of red - here's the woven version, but of course, my crocheted version is just a little different....  I can't show you what my version looks like - it's not done yet.  I'll photograph it and show you what it's like in a week or two.

One last undertaking - a new book!  Yep!  I considered retirement...but only for a brief moment.  Over the years, each time I have written something other than a history book, I've put it away in the proverbial writers' bottom drawer and that is where quite a collection of work has lived for some long time now.  And so, after much deliberation, I am taking these works out of the bottom drawer, dusting them off, and compiling them into a book I'm calling "Longs and Shorts".

I don't mind tooting my own horn here, but as I transcribe these stories into a manuscript, I have decided that I am a good writer - or at least I was when these were all written.  I have amazed myself, actually.  I never knew I was that talented!  But this is my own opinion.  I guess I will have to await the opinion of others.  Not long now, though.  I'm transcribing the last story, but it's the looonnnggg one and I'm not half way through it.  I can hardly wait to see what happens in it!

I took out my trusty lap-top the other evening - yes, I took a whole evening away from my crochet work - and put a few hours into my novel - re-wrote the first 28 pages - hopefully I will be able to get back to it one of these days - it's been on again, off again with this thing since 2014.  It'll happen, it'll happen, believe me, but not anytime soon me thinks!  I dream about the characters every night - can't get them out of my mind - but that's a good thing - as long as they are embedded there I will be able to finish the book - as soon as I lose sight of them I'm doomed.

Ok!  ok!  One last item.... this coming weekend is the Annual Spring Home and Garden Show here in Clarington, being held at the Garnet Rickard Centre.  I will have a booth there, so any of you who are close enough, please come on over and stop at my booth.  I will be speaking there three times this weekend - Friday at 5 p.m. Companion Planting; Saturday at noon The Natural Gardener; and Sunday at 3 p.m. Companion Planting again.

I'm done, now until next time.  Please follow me on facebook or twitter, and visit my website:
http://lm-jassociates.webs.com.   I will shortly have a new website and my own domain at www.sherleetooze.com  but there's nothing on it yet.  Keep checking it - the web designer tells me it's going to be a really WOW website - I will just have to wait and see, won't I?