Friday, July 29, 2011

Baseball

Baseball, on many levels, has always been a part of our lives. Dad's father, Ray Morgan, Sr., played on a semi-pro team until he broke his leg sliding into home plate. He never played with us, but his bat from his playing days was too heavy for us to lift. This picture of him and his in-laws was taken in 1928. It's as close as I've found to him and a bat.

The other picture is from 1951 as you can tell it was taken a long time ago. The fence hasn't been built and neither have the neighboring homes. As you can tell it was before I knew what to do with a baseball. There is probably some discussion as to whether I ever did learn.







This is a home movie that Mom and Dad took in June 1947 when they visited St. Louis. It's hard to see, but somewhere in the video is Jackie Robinson. They had traveled first to the Ozarks and then onto St. Louis in a car borrowed from Roy. In St. Louis they went to the Cardinals-Dodgers game, a golf tournament and the zoo. If this game's the one played on June 15, about two months after Robinson's debut, the Cardinals won 11-3. Robinson, who at that point played first, got two hits and scored a run. There is clearly a lot of scoring.

Now for the corrections of the above post. The golf tournament was the 1947 US open which was won by Lew Worsham in a playoff with Sam Snead. Also the baseball game was the Saturday afternoon game which the Cards won 5-3, but Robinson did score. I thought Saturday was a double-header and I knew Mom didn't like double-headers, but it was actually an afternoon game and an evening game. Now I've seen the tickets and the letter from the Cards telling them about their choices for the game - an afternoon game at 1:30 or a night game at 8:30. There's a second letter that says their tickets for the game will be available at the press gate under Dad's name anytime after 12:30. Mom didn't keep score so the scorecard is not filled out except for some writing by Dad which is hard to read. I remember her always keeping score, but that may not have happened until Steve started Little League.

Thursday, July 21, 2011

Ray & Mary Get Married - July 21, 1946



To honor Mom and Dad's 65th Wedding anniversary I've taken a few scenes from the DVD that Sally made from the early home movies. Somehow I've not included the sound.

To my four siblings and me this was a fortuitous day and also for their grandchildren and great grandchildren.

I won't attempt to describe them because to know them or have known them one knows that they are indescribable.

So copy the following link and you can enjoy a short version of the wedding. In the video she starts to toss her bouquet, but Ray has a direction. But they work it out and the flowers are tossed. It seems to have been a system they perfected over the years.

Here's to Mom and Dad. Thanks.

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=4HBTr7OcBqg

Sunday, July 17, 2011

The Sharpes Come to Kansas - Continued


This photograph has always confused me because the people in the picture are identified as Rebekah and William Sharpe and their children, Betsy, William, George and another name I can't make out. The only problem with that is that Betsy who is identified as the little girl is older than George. She and William are almost 10 years older than George. How does this relate to their immigration to America?

My thought is that it's a photograph taken right before they left England for America. That would make it a picture taken circa 1869. The children then would be George who would have been 9 in 1869 and James who would have been 8 in that year. I would guess the other children are Ada born in 1868 and Maude born in 1869. Why the five older children are not in the picture, I can't answer.

To be continued. . . .

Sunday, July 10, 2011

The Sharpes Come to Kansas

Among the family papers collected by Laura and provided to me by Cindy is the following narrative of the Sharpes' journey to Parkerville in Morris County Kansas. I've tried to verify that they lived in this pub at Mareham-le-Fen, but I haven't been able to do that through census records in England. But there are other pieces of information that do support it. Laura and Dorothy Leib traveled to this pub as their grandmother's home place. Since Laura had kept all the family memorabilia and is the daughter of Lily, Edward and Betsy's oldest child, I'm assuming she's right. More evidence comes from James Homer Sharpe and his wife, Avis who wrote about their trip to Mareham-le-fen in 1964. James is the son of Betsy's brother James who was 9 when the family immigrated. The photo of the pub is from James Homer's trip in 1964. The following is the link to the pub's current web page. http://www.diningpubs.co.uk/pub_details.asp?id=495




A Methodist minister, Rev. Wake form England, came to Kansas and sent back to his friends, the William Sharpes.in New Bolingbrook, England, a can full of Kansas rich black soil. He told them of an ideal opportunity of getting land to homestead, for men with large families and not much of an opportunity to advance there.
We know they had friends who wished them “God Speed.” We have a bible from one “To Mr. and Mrs. Sharpe on their leaving England with best wishes of their sincere friend, John Tattersall, New Bolingbrook, April 11, 1870. He was an ancestor who lived in the Tattersall Palace place, where the Sharpe children played around the moat.
In April 1870 they were packed and ready to start on the long journey via ship to New York City in the USA with their children.

We traveled to Marehem-le-fen in 2009 and took the two color photographs in this article. The one is the Tattersall castle and the other is the moat. The moat seemed to have seen better days in that there was not much indication of water in it at present. We were unable to get into the castle because it was closed for an event, but the servers setting up waved to us across the moat.

The Sharpes, William and Rebekah and their ten children, would have set off from Mareham-le-fen to cross from the east side of England to the west to sail from Liverpool. It's not a great number of miles from east to west England, at least compared to their journey from New York to Kansas, but it couldn't have been simple. In 1870 the children would have ranged in age from 19 or so down to perhaps twins who were less than a year old. I'm trying to determine the ship they would have sailed on to America, but haven't pinned it down yet.

To be continued.