May 16, 2024
“These
were their settlements. And they kept good family records.”[1]
Don’t
forget to look for the title which is embedded in the chronicle.
“Under the Grass and Trees”
FAMILY ALBUM
Some of you know Chip Brock, husband
of Jean Fogg Brock of the Charles R Holmes line. Their friend, Elizabeth, took
this photo of Chip. He is sitting in the Dune Shack that he is a caretaker of, located
in the Cape Cod National Seashore. Used with permission. To me, this photo is
just about perfect. He’s not too old, not too young. The view outside the
window is lovely. The newspaper, the glasses beside it – what else do you see
that intrigues you? What I don’t see is a cup of coffee! Jean, I’d put this on
the wall if I were you.
I did not see the aurora borealis myself, but I saw lots of photos in my
Facebook scroll. I remember, as a young girl, my father waking me up in the
late evening and taking me outside. The sky looked something like this; lit up
with northern lights. Annmarie Holmes took this photo from her dooryard in
Berkely, MA, at 3 AM Saturday morning.
Aurora Borealis
GRATITUDE
Should you wish a copy, I now make it
available to you on pdf. It’s very costly to print and mail one book now. This
was my rough draft.
MY GENEALOGY GOALS
- Chronicle
several times, and publish on Thursday morning.
- Keep
writing my next article for Generations, which is about the will of
Daniel Holmes.
- Spend
a bit of time on Moore family research: “Three Peas in a Moore Pod.”
- In
the evening, after chores are done, edit the Charles and Phoebe family
genealogy.
- Index
old newspapers for NBGS. On hold.
- Index
Riverbank Visitors for NBGS. Put old newspapers on hold while I do this.
I finished my past-president position of my branch of the genealogy society and gave my final report, at least for that position. I also retired from the program committee. Then I had a thought, and this morning contacted the village of Salisbury to see if I can find a speaker for September. Some habits die hard. (So far, no reply.)
1924 to 1928
Those
are the years that our great or great-great grandparents spent renewing
relationships that had somehow fallen by the wayside but with organization,
letter writing, and challenging travel – by hook or by crook – they managed to
come together again. They reacquainted and rediscovered their family ties. And
then, one by one, they died, and many of those ties died with them.
2024 to 2028
I’m
all hepped up after hearing our speaker at the genealogy meeting give a
presentation on LIDAR. I have a better idea of what it is, and how it applies
to our past. I’ve been studying the farm ever since. Thanks, Joseph, (my nephew)
for your interest. There are lots of dips and valleys, some of which I
recognize from my past or Mum’s stories, and some of which I don’t recognize,
like the rectangular dip in the back. What I see under the grass and trees
makes some sense to me now. I sent off an email to our speaker, asking him a
couple of questions. Hopefully, he will answer. (He did.) Byron
Holmes sent a link to learn about LIDAR, and I intend to look into that
three-hour course.
https://coast.noaa.gov/digitalc.../training/intro-lidar.html
Underground at the Farm
Buildings outlined in red, starting on
the left:
Left center, above the
first Rte. 890 box – the Waldow Farms barn.
Within the blue lines
(the only Holmes land left in our family) on the left is the little house,
which Floyd built for his parents, Charles R and Phoebe Holmes, when he
returned home from England after WWI. They did not outline the farmhouse, but
it was to the right and back a bit.
Above the blue lines:
an abandoned eyesore of an old trailer. Above that, another trailer, not quite
so ugly but not pretty.
The three red
buildings beside the blue box are the Blakeney (now Wynes) farm.
The red rectangle on
the bottom right is the church. The cemetery is to the left of it.
The borders of lots 6 to 8, all of
which Daniel Holmes purchased from the original land grantees, went back (north)
in acres of one hundred lots each (lot 6 was 113 acres). They went back in
rectangles to what you see as the Baseline Road. I think they may have started (west)
at the bottom left corner of the blue box, and extended perhaps (east) to about
the final Rte. 890 sign. Some of them probably extended (south) to about the
Salt Springs Brook. The x marks the approximate spot of the D. Holmes Saw Mill which
appears on the Walling Map of 1861.
The owners. Daniel purchased all three
lots, and sold them to his children.
·
Lot six, he sold to Abner Jones, husband of his daughter,
Hattie. Abner Jones sold it to Elias Kinnear, husband of Daniel’s daughter,
Bessie. Elias sold it to Daniel’s son, Charles R Holmes. It borders what is now
the Graves Settlement Crossroad.
·
Lot seven, he sold to Charles R Holmes. Daniel must have
sold about 15 acres of it. Charles sold it to Samuel Burnett, who sold it to
Walter Mitton. More investigation needed, as we know it as Blakeney property
until recently.
·
Lot eight, he sold to James H Holmes. James sold his lot to
Rev. David Bleakney.
When the Holmes family
reunited in 1926, they dined within the little blue area, probably as a picnic
in the front yard, and had their photograph taken along the front, which
bordered the road, Route 890.
AN EXCERPT FROM MUM’S MEMOIRS
Noon
hours were sometimes hard. One boy – “Pee Wee” was a real bully of course there
was no teacher there so he had a hay day then. One day he took his comb &
twisted it up in my hair. What a mess & it had to be out before the teacher
came back, another day he put me in a big high waste basket & I couldn’t
get out. I did have help that time. Billy Wilson upset the basket & I
climbed out. One
winter Monday Dad was driving Edna Frances & a neighbor in the truck out to
school. The roads were icey & very slippery, it was raining, when we came
over the top of the hill the truck kept going to the side of the road, the ones
in back jumped out but when the truck tipped over it came against the bushes on
its side. My suitcase was in the back. I had been knitting striped mittens – it
came open & my balls of yarn went down the hill. We finally got out Edna
& I got the yarn, we were very late for school as we had quite a long walk.
FAMILY HISTORY LESSON
Here is the map in
LIDAR shaded relief. Click to enlarge. On the left is Waldow Farms (not our property, but good
neighbours). In the centre, within the blue lines, is the current Holmes
family-owned property. The red box, on the bottom right, is the church. The x
marks the approximate location of the D. Holmes Saw Mill which appears on the
Walling Map of 1861/62.
Credit is due to the
Province of New Brunswick for sharing these maps. You can see them yourself at http://www.snb.ca/geonb1/e/index-e.asp
It is a learning process, but start by clicking on the link below the
blue circle. In the box on the top right, type in 02296649.
Help,
cousins. I could be wrong about some of these. Photo below is same thing above
ground.
- Unknown. Maybe
the church and cemetery that became our wood shed. Have messaged our
speaker about this. “Probably,” he said.
- Unknown.
- (Or 4 and 5). The
farm house.
- Part of the farm
house?
- Pigpen.
- The paddock.
- The horse barn.
- The barn –
cattle, chicken coop, place for tractor, hay.
- Maybe part of the barn.
- Unknown.
- The granary.
- Unknown. I think that’s about where the fox pens were, but they shouldn’t show up. Outhouses?
This ends
week twenty of our centennial virtual celebration.