Tag: <span>sepia saturday</span>

Sepia Saturday 249: Coach Rides, Old Transport, Animated Discussion, Cab Drivers

A neat theme this week  for Sepia Saturday, and after a little thinking, I decided to go with this image since it’s a bit of a peculiarity in the photo collection.  It’s mounted on heavy cardboard with a frame and is about 8″x10″ sized.  There’s a very specific date and time, but no details as to who or where!  Odd!  The back is completely blank so I haven’t posted it here.  The vehicle looks like a fire engine with a bell at the back and a tank for holding water perhaps just behind the seat.  There are also hooks on the back and sides and even a length of hose lying just above the back wheel.  By the looks of it, a building or something made of brick collapsed on top of the vehicle.

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So, I set out to various newspaper archives to see what I could find.  It was likely in central Pennsylvania, and since I have a date and a pretty specific idea of what happened, it was easy to narrow it down.  There was a fire in Johnstown, PA on 17 March 1918 that started around 3am.  An article even references the fact that, “A falling wall crushed a $12,000 triple combination truck purchased from the Lafrance concern last summer and felled three firemen who were standing nearby.  These men, however, escaped with slight injuries.”  The fire truck from the photo, based on the description of the truck, appears to be an exact match to the one from the video below.

The truck, before being crushed by a brick wall,  was a 1917 LaFrance triple combination (pump, chemical, hose).  So, now we have the where, what, and when, but the why and who are still a mystery.  I haven’t been able to find any clear connection to anyone in Johnstown at that time – none of the fire fighters involved, from what I can find, were related, nor were any names of known family friends.  If I happen to sort out the puzzle, I’ll be sure to post that here, but in the meantime, there’s a good article below about the fire and the nearly million dollars of damage caused.


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Sepia Saturday 248 – The Little Guy, Package from Home, Magazine Covers

This week was a tough one.  The prompt image  for this week’s Sepia Saturday is nothing at all like what I have in my collection of family photos, and I’ve really been trying to both stay on theme and use only family photos.  It’s helped me a lot to further explore the collection of photos and bring me to some new discoveries, identifications, and even a few connections I might have otherwise missed in terms of genealogy and family history.  While this set isn’t of a family member, and it’s a bit of a stretch on the theme, the young boy in the photos was clearly close to my great grandmother, Olga (Powis) Kitko  and great grandmother, Jessie (Battin) Powis.  Hey, he’s a little guy in a uniform, I’m going to make it work!

Luther Boyd Wagner was born 8 Jan 1916 in Coalport, Clearfield County, Pennsylvania, the second child of Boyd Robinson Wagner and Mary Elizabeth Harris who you may remember from a previous Sepia Saturday post.  I was going back through photos to find an image for this prompt, when I realized that the boy in the sailor suit (right, about 1921)  matched a young boy in another photo that had names listed on the back (left, Luther &  Merle Wagner, about 1917)!  I did some quick hunting to find out if Luther Wagner was still around and unfortunately found that he had passed away 27 Nov 1999 in Hollidaysburg, Blair County, PA.  Still, his family clearly had a strong connection to mine and it’s interesting to see how long they kept in contact, as children were born, grew up, etc.  It’s easy to forget, when doing genealogical research, that the folks who shaped the lives of our ancestors weren’t always blood related, and sometimes ties to friends and neighbors were stronger  than the connection to family an ocean away.

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Sepia Saturday 247: Motorbikes, pillions, uniforms, couriers, turban, tents (again), towels

I had only one lonely motorbike in my collection of family photos, but no person on it and no real story about it, so I decided to go with uniforms for this week’s Sepia Saturday.  The uniform is that of my grandfather, John Rachocki.  He served in the Air Force from 21 July 1941 through 13 Dec 1945 as a driver, acheiving the grade of Sergeant.  Back then, the Air Force was still part of the Army and was the “Army Air Force.”  He served for only 1 year and 18 days abroad, involved in the Rhineland  campaign.  I don’t know much about his service, but we have a few photos of him in uniform at various places during his service in the Air Force.  I was only four when he passed away, so I have very few memories of him but am told he was a gentle giant (at 5’11”) who only spoke when he had something to say.  Upon returning after service in the Air Force, he worked as a coal miner in Pennsylvania until he retired, living out his life in the house that he built.

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Sepia Saturday 246: Children, tents, fences, fields, poppies, smocks, sailor-suits

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Well, I couldn’t resist posting these two for this week’s Sepia Saturday.  When I saw the prompt photo, these two immediately came to mind, mostly because they match the prompt photo so well!  I’ve pasted what’s written on the back of the photo at the bottom of the image because it’s fun to see the handwriting, especially from other countries.  I think the photos are probably from about 1930 +- 5 years and are from my husband’s Dutch family, likely taken somewhere in northern Holland.

Left Photo: We have, Left to Right, Ellechien Dijkemna, Geertje Bouwman, and Willemina Dijkema.  “Elly” and “Mien” were sisters of my husband’s paternal grandmother, Hilje Dijkema.  Geertje is probably a family friend of some sort – I haven’t been able to connect her to the tree yet.  I have to imagine that Hilje took the photo since she’s in the next photo.

Right Photo: Left to Right are Ellechien Dijkema and Hilje Dijkema.  Different dog in this photo!

The set looks like a nice afternoon out somewhere.  I can’t tell if they’re actualy camping or just using the tent for shade.  Either way, it makes for a charming set of photos for this week’s theme, showing that the three sisters spent lots of time together as young girls.

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Sepia Saturday 245: Drinking, sharing, posing, lurking

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When the prompt for this week came up, my mind almost immediately went to this photo.  Five young men standing outside a fair that apparently runs September 11-14th and may be a circus from the Barnum & Bailey sign in the background.  The young man in the light colored hat, second from the right (including the lurker in the background by the door), I believe is my great grand uncle Harry Oscar Frederick “Fritz” Powis (b. 1 May 1903, Blain City, Clearfield, PA; d. 22 Jun 1972, Philipsburg, Centre, PA).  The man standing to the left of Fritz, I think is either George Riley or Floyd Shank.  I have another photo with two men in uniform, one of whom looks an awful lot like the gentleman in uniform here, but I don’t know who is who in the other photo!  I hit two of the themes this week between posing and lurking, and how about the tie on the man on the far left!  As far as a year for the photo, I’d guess somewhere around 1919 or so.  I’m not sure at all who the other two young boys are or the man in the tie.  Still, it’s a neat photo, even if it’s a bit faded and worn!

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Sepia Saturday 244: Itinerant Entertainers, Hurdy Gurdy Man, Unusual Pets, Monkeying Around

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Two photos to fit the theme, even if a rabbit isn’t really that unusual of a pet.  I didn’t have any photos of itinerant entertainers, so these two will have to suffice for this week!

On The Left:  My grandpa, Leon Kitko (b. 20 Mar 1933, PA, died 18 Jun 2011, Clearfield, PA), holding a rabbit.  It’s a rare photo of him with a beard – he kept his face clean shaven nearly all of his life except for a brief period around 1954 where he shows up in a few photos with a beard.  A rabbit really isn’t an unusual pet, but among the many photos of their pets, this is the only one that isn’t a cat or dog!  I never heard stories about a rabbit from grandpa, but it’s clear he had one at some point!

On The Right:  My grandma (step-grandma.. Leon’s second wife, not my biological grandmother, but I always knew her as grandma), Romayne (Greenaway) Kitko (b. 30 May 1936, PA, d. 7 Jan 2013, Clearfield, PA).  She was quite the musician her whole life from piano to organ and even the accordion!  This is a scan from a negative, so I don’t know when exactly this was taken, but I’d assume sometime in the 1950s.  She’s sitting at the back of her childhood home at the well, perfectly posed and coiffed, playing on the accordian.

Short and sweet this week!  It was nice to be able to include different photos from this set of grandparents who have both passed away.  Having memories like this and photos from their younger years really helps keep the memory alive and I’m so glad I have a chance to share them with Sepia Saturday as well!

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Sepia Saturday 243: Running away, Escaping the Crowds, Beaches, Steam Train, Aquarium

When I saw the prompt photo for this week’s Sepia Saturday, my mind immediately went to an old postcard in the collection because it had a very similar feel to it, even if the man in my photo isn’t running away.  I’ve posted the front and back of the postcard which has a stamp, but no cancellation or message on the back of the postcard.  I have to imagine that someone meant to send it, but never quite got around to it.  The stamp is dated to 1954, which helps date the postcard as well.  With a town name like, “Coalport,” in Pennsylvania, you can be sure that the main industry was coal.  The majority of my family that comes from that area were coal miners.  I posted another old photo of family members who were coal miners here, if you’re interested.  Awful jobs, terrible conditions, and perhaps at times, they wanted to run away from it all.  As far as the orientation of the photo, on the far left side of the photo, about dead center horizontally, there’s a church.  The church is the one in the Google Street View just below the postcard.  I know I’ve driven down that street before when out visiting family, so I’ll have to see if I can go back out and set up a photo similar to the postcard and do some comparison!

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Sepia Saturday 242: Fans, Faces, National Costumes, Hidden Meanings

I really love it when a Sepia Saturday prompt really makes me think or leads me to a new discovery.  In this case, it’s definitely a new discovery and the prompt helped me link up a few pieces of an old puzzle.  In the trunk of photos from Grandpa’s house, there was a large-ish photo (about 8×10) of a native tribe’s band.  I couldn’t for the life of me figure out why my great-great grandmother would’ve had such a large photo of a band like this, and left the mystery behind since there were SO many more to work on.  Here enters this week’s prompt where I nail two categories, National Costumes and Hidden Meanings.  Below is a photo of the Ogonomowok (or Oconomowok, spelling is different from the drum to the banner) tribe band.  It’s the only photo in my collection that really fit, so I figured I’d go with it, even if it was  a mystery.  I started zooming in on the faces, and poked around the newspaper archive to see what came up for the band.  There’s an article from June 14, 1917 in the Altoona Tribune in Pennsylvania stating that the tribe band participated in a parade ending the Great Council of the “Improved Order of Red Men.”  Great grand uncle Alfred Herbert Powis (b. 28 Oct 1892 in Blain City, Clearfield, PA; d. 6 Jul 1926, Clearfield, PA), affectionately referred to as “Herb,” was in a number of bands throughout his life, and the trunk had a bunch  of photos of him posing with his trumpet.  Looking closer at the photos, it looks like the man standing up, 5th in from the left, is Herb!  I’ve added another photo in for comparison’s sake to see if you agree or not.  In the other photo, he’s very clearly identified with an “X” over his head.  The second image is dated as, “Herbert, 1918, overseas,” so it seems that  these two were taken within a year or so of eachother.

As far as Hidden Meanings, Herb was 100% British, the first son born in America of two parents from England, so I was stumped as to why he was in a Native American costume.  The band members do have different colored costumes, so I wondered if perhaps people with Native American heritage were in the darker uniforms, and ordinary band members were in the lighter uniforms, or if the band was just for fun and had little to do with the tribe other than the namesake.  The Wikipedia article linked above though, clued me in that the organization was a fraternal society established to promote Liberty and defy the tyrrany of the English Crown, using rituals and regalia modeled after Native American tribes.  In fact, Wikipedia goes on to point out, the organization was Whites Only until 1974!  So, the “National Costume” is a “Hidden Meaning” in and of itself.  Turns out the photo was absolutely nothing that I assumed it to be at first glance.  I won’t get into how I feel about an organization of white men using Native American dress and terms to form a fraternal order – that’s something for another post.

In closing, I want to thank Sepia Saturday for challenging me to explore these old family photos and bringing about new discoveries!

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Click either image to view the news clipping full size

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