Showing posts with label sepia saturday. Show all posts
Showing posts with label sepia saturday. Show all posts

Oct 14, 2023

Sepia Saturday ~ Portraits

 



You are not country if you can't put your rocking chairs out in the field and pose for a family portrait. This is my great grandparents Earnest Luther and Harriet Cox Barrett, (sitting) with three of their children (from left Nona, Mark and Lela)  Lela is my grandmother.  


Carrying it one step further, bring out your dining chairs and pose in front of your barn, with your family cow photo bombing the portrait.  This is my half second great aunt (Emmer Jean Vann Ashley)with her husband (John Ashley) , and  four of her children. 
(Mama looks tired) 

Children: Otto (1903), James (1905), Flora (1908), 
Myrtle (1909), Zula Bea (1914), Lois (1919), & Earl (1922)

Portrait made after all  her children were born and some grown.  You may can tell the book that is being held is a family bible.  Same barn, same field. Notice Emmer's dress and Johns suspenders.  Same..probably her very best dress. 

John & Emma possibly on their anniversary. 

These are my people, and contrary to every belief that there is a king, queen, or Indian princess in every lineage, mine were and are just pure, hard working country folk.  I could not be prouder. 

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(I'm just a little off topic, instead of double, I did family)



Aug 5, 2023

Sepia Saturday ~ Sunday School

 


I was a brownie and a girl scout..I have not heard of the Camp Fire Girls, 
I'm also Baptist, so we never had this kind of group in Sunday School. 
Is this familiar to any of you? 

Time frame was probably mid-1920's





Autographed & scribbled on by my first cousin (twice removed) 
Eula Fitzhugh (1911-1995)
I would guess she was writing down true loves, 
but Lonnie was her first cousin and 
I have not found the other boys yet. 
She married none of them.  


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Jun 3, 2023

Sepia Saturday ~ Read All About It

 


This is a photo from the mid 1800's of a young man standing beside a plate holder for a printing press. The location would be Richmond, Arkansas.   It's not too far off from the theme this Saturday, seeing how both a printing press and a typewriter need ink to strike the words and tell the story. 



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Mar 6, 2021

Sepia Saturday ~ Twos

 


I'm still going through family boxes, and I came across this photo.  Of course, like many others, there are no names on the back...nor dates.  I gather from the rolled up jeans the time is probably the 1950's.  I have photos with my mom and dad both styling like that.  I zoomed in to the coca cola sign to see if I could trace it to a time frame.  I never could find the exact ad, but again, think it is probably the 1950's.

 Since this photo was in an envelope full of obit clippings and Sutton photos, I think the two men are probably related to me, but I'll never know.  

Isn't it sad that so many of these unnamed photos are just lost over the years because no one bothered to label them?  In all my years of ancestor hunting I cannot tell you how many times I have heard this same story.  "My aunt left me all these photos, but none were labeled."  These are the ones that end up in a museum, or in flea markets.  

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