Monday, November 29, 2010

THE DRESDEN PLATE QUILT




     The Dresden Plate quilt pattern was popular in the 1920-30s.  But I am told that the pattern dates back to the Civil War.  I have had the quilt pieces for years.  Great Aunt Ella  Samantha Strahl had given them to my mother, and after years on her closet shelf, mother gave them to me.  I also had them stored away for a number of years.  Thanks to a church friend who does quilting, I was able to finally have the quilt finished.  Because the final work was completed (by machine) in 2010, it is not considered an antique.  However, I am going to label it an heirloom as the blocks themselves are very old and crafted by an ancestor.  

Great Aunt Ella was born April 11,1893, and lived most of her life on the family farm (North Clayton, Wisconsin)  first with her parents, and then her bachelor brother Wilbur.  She was the younger sister of my grandfather Aaron and the aunt to my father.   She lived in Soldiers Grove in her senior years then moved into the Morrow Nursing Home in Sparta, Wisconsin where she died March 9,1990 the age of 97.  There she took up oil painting, one of which was of the log cabin where my father, Everette Ray Strahl, was born.  I now have that painting.  



I do not know the exact age of the quilt blocks, but can guess that they are from 70-80 years old.  Women of her era spent the evening doing handwork by lamplight as most farms did not have electricity until REA (Rural Electrification Assoc.) came into being.  I can imagine her sitting in a rocking chair, quilt blocks and sewing needle in hand, and stitching the small pattern pieces patiently in place.  There were no computers, televisions, or mobile libraries, maybe a battery operated radio so after the day's labors, sitting, rocking, and sewing/embroidering/mending were the women's diversions of choice.   Cast off dresses, aprons, and feed sacks were the fabrics used.  Looking at the quilt, I can't help but remember my little dresses and aprons, hand sewn by my mother in print fabrics similar to the ones below.     
    


     When I was a child, girls wore print dresses with an apron and long stockings held up by a cotton garter belt.  I don't remember my shoes, but know they would have been sensible brown ones.  I had a dress for school and a dress for every day/play wear.  We didn't need very big closets back them.  It wasn't until I was 12 years old, that pant suits became popular.  When I was a teen-ager, jeans or Levies as they were called, became my favorite every day attire.  I still wear jeans .... yes, even at my age, jeans and a sweat shirt are my favorite apparel.  We were not allowed to wear jeans or pant suits to school, however.  Skirts, sweaters, bobby socks and saddle shoes were the school approved clothing/foot wear.  For special occasions, we did have a good dress.  I remember a wine colored crepe dress that my mother made for me for a Christmas program  My sister's dress was pale blue.  Both were hand stitched.  
January 1939 ... Fern is nine and I am six.  




Saturday, November 20, 2010

THE GUENTHER-GLISSENDORF CONNECTION

    I have been neglecting the Guenther family line in favor of the one most familiar to me, mine.  But bear with me ,and I will get to each of the different family lines in due time.   Meanwhile, if you have a printer connected to your computer, you should be able to print off all the Storytimewithgrandma blogs.  That would give you a hard copy as well.   So here goes .....

I married Thomas Guenther while we were both gradate students at the University of Wisconsin-La Crosse.  I had been divorced from Samuel Donnell for a year, so the prospects of marrying again was far from my mind.  But, when someone comes along who "has always wanted a family" and was willing to take on you and your four kids, well, I wasn't going to let that one get away.  And I didn't.  Randy, at 16, wasn't too happy about it, but he did manage to show up for the wedding festivities in a nice suit and tennis shoes.  He and his brothers were working for a farmer in Holmen at the time.  His brothers were a little more receptive to the idea of a step-dad.  Tom and I were married at the Little Brown Church in the Vale in Nashua, Iowa, where his parents, Mary Francis Glissendorf and Paul Ferdinand Emil Guenther were married.  (Paul was baptized in a German Lutheran Church and therefore was given a second middle name.)  I must add that in the years, the Donnell kids now look to Tom as their dad.


                                                                                               
                                  Frederick Glissendorf   1860


Hannah, Caleb, Noah, Gregory, and Grant are descended from Frederick Glissendorf, born August 2, 1838, in Germany, and Carl Gunther also born in Germany.  Frederick Glissendorf married Anna Mannerman who was born January 24, 1846.  They had seven children, one of whom was George Franklin Glissendorf, born August 28, 1889.  I am going to assume that Anna as well as her children were also born in Germany.  The gist of this is that The Guenthers and Glissendorfs were German as would be their descendants.  (That is until I got into the mix with my added French and English ancestry) 


                                         
                        Anna Mannerman and Frederick Glissensdorf   1867




 Another interesting tidbit is that our name was spelled and pronounced as gun ther.  Why it was changed is unknown, but it would become Guenther with William, Guenther, pronounced gen (rhyme with hen) ther.   George Franklin married Alba Milligan who was born March 29, 1883.   They had four children of whom Mary Francis Glissendorf, mother of Thomas Guenther, was one.  She married Paul Ferdinand Emil Guenther.  Mary Francis was always known as Fran, and was born August 24, 1908.

           Carl Gunther's blacksmith shop ... Carl is in the center  1885

The first Guenther came to this country from G(r)ansedorf, West Prussia, Germany in 1873, and settled in the Hokah-Houston, Minnesota area.
Carl Gunther (with 2 dots above the u) was born Mar 21, 1844 and at the age of 29, migrated to this country in 1873.  Carl was a blacksmith/wheelwright by trade and was affiliated with the Lutheran Church.  He had three wives, the first of whom was Augustine (Justine) Fleischauer.  They were married November 1869, most likely in Germany as he did migrate until 4 years later.  She died in 1881.  They had four children of whom Willliam Guenther was one.  (William is Thomas Guenther's grandfather and Gregory and Grant's great-grandfather.)   William was born in G(r)ansedorf, West Prussia, Germany on February 8, 1870, and was three years old when his parents brought him to America.  William married Ida Panton in1894.  They had six children of whom Paul Ferdninad Emil was one.  Carl's second wife was Fredericka Helm married to 1886.   They had two children.  Augusta Schwadter, his third wife, married to 1904, but had no children.  To end this part of the story ... Carl Gunther died in 1929.

                                  Carl Guenther  1927,       Died 1929

Summary ... the Guenther line can be traced back to Carl Gunther who migrated from Germany in 1873.

Monday, November 15, 2010

THE BEGINNING-- THE RIDDIOUGHS

     It has been a while since I wrote on this blog, so if I have repeated myself ... bear with me.  I am going to start at the very beginning of the Riddiough family tree.  Riddiough was my mother's maiden name, and of course would be a descendant of the Riddiough line.

    The Riddioughs originated in France with the name being spelled Riddioux.  They were Roman Catholics, but migrated to England because of religious pressures.  (I have no further information on that.)
The first Riddiough of note was William 1 who kept a crossroad inn or country roadhouse in Yorkshire County, England.  He also had a couple of cottages, and for some reason, he willed all of his property to his grandchildren (which would have been William 3).  His only child, William 2 married Grace DeMain, born in Liverpool, England.  They migrated to America in 1853.  Three of their sons were born in England, and the fourth son was born in the United States.  The third son, William 3 born in Iron Bridge, England in 1849, was just four years old when his parents migrated.  He married the red headed Electa Richmond.  It was her third and last marriage.  William and Electa Riddiough had six children of whom, my grandfather, Thomas William was the oldest son.  They were my mother's grandparents.

     It appears that at this point in our family history that our family had both French and English blood running through their veins.  It also appears that William 3 and Electa were well off materially.  They farmed for many years, then moved to Fennimore, Wisconsin, where he operated a hardware store and then later retired.  (I remember that when William 3 returned to England to collect his inheritance, that he was denied it.  He was not allowed to take the money out of England.)

     In the picture, my mother, Gladys, is the little girl with the big bow in her hair, second from the left end of the first row.  Her mother, Marie, is seated next to William Riddiough 3, first row, right.  Her father, William Thomas, is standing behind Marie.  Electa is the older lady in the first row.