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message 12051:
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Jane
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Mar 23, 2015 04:34PM

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Mind you, it's very interesting to watch Richard III being conveyed with respect and brought to a reburial place.


No shame in that Jane. The significance of the siege of Carlisle is more in what happened afterwards. Although Robert Bruce's Scots outnumbered the English defenders by about 20:1, it was largely the English commander Andrew Harclay's use of his archers that kept the Scots out. It only lasted ten days before the Scots retreated, defeated by bad weather as much as anything else.
Harclay went on to develop new ideas on how to use archers on the battlefield. Between the siege in 1315 and the battle of Crecy in 1346 the English army went through some pretty massive changes in both how they fought and how they recruited and paid their soldiers. Many of those changes were initiated by Andrew Harclay.

No shame in that Jane. The significance of the siege of Carlisle is more in what happ..."
Thank you for the information Jerry. I never would have known that. :D

I keep logged in all day, been away an hour, came back and had to log in.
They did this before ages ago. It annoys me!



*hugs big big*

My sincere condolences - May he rest in peace.
It sounds like there is quite a story there. I hope you can find out.





So sorry, Gretchen. I went through almost the same experience last July with my Dad. He was also a WWII vet who did not talk about his experiences during the war. All I know is he trained to be a Navy pilot but when they didn't have enough planes my father never flew. If he had I might not be here. Daddy was also diagnosed with lung cancer and refused treatment. He was 89. I miss him everyday and he was the greatest man I ever knew. I was blessed to be his daughter. Remember the greatness of your grandpa's character and pass that on, especially to the young men and boys of today and tomorrow. The men of "the greatest generation" truly were great

To put it lightly as possible: losing loved ones sucks.

What a lovely memory to have Allie. I've lost my father also and every year a bunch of us go his page on FB and start sharing memories. He was Coach, he was always the parent that took us around the neighborhood to 'roll' classmates during slumber parties. We did Chinese fire drills in the middle of major city streets and piled 9 to 13 ten year olds into a convertible Austin-Healy and cruised the neighborhood. Laughter makes a great memory maker.
Gretchen - My Pops ...my step-father..was in the Korean War. He's a decorated military army veteran and I don't know a thing about it. He doesn't like to talk about it or to be asked anything about that time in his life. Maybe your Grandpa felt the same way. Perhaps finding out about his experiences and chronicling them for the family would be a way to honor his memory in a personal way. Again..mucho hugs.

I'm sorry to hear of your loss. As the others have already said, please don't beat yourself up about not asking about his wartime experiences.
Will be thinking of you and your family this weekend. Type away as we'd love to share your story.

It's never too late Gretchen to start recording those details, even from the stuff you know, for your children. What seems mundane now, may be exceptional when they read it in years to come.




It was questions like these that got me started working on a genealogy for my family. I realized that the people who could answer any of these questions and tell these stories were slowly passing away. For some of the information it was already a little too late, but I want to gather what I can now that I know how quickly it all goes. I also started doing some research online and am finding just a treasure trove of information. I love finding the stories that I didn't know about.

The other day on my walk the temp fell to 55 and I was cold! I had to put on a sweat shirt for the walk/jog:)
On the loss of the elder generation, before my mother passed, we sat down a got her talking about her life and video taped it. We have about 16 hrs of her talking. We are also doing the same thing with my father - before his memory completely fades.


It alerted and snowed in the Mid-South yesterday! No accumulation. We have been having spring weather for a month, then this little northerner comes through. It was humid and cold which does not feel good!

The other day on my walk the temp fell to 55 and I was cold! I had to put on a sweat shirt for the walk..."
My grandmother has boxes and boxes full of slides. Once upon a time my job was to run the projector while she would comment on the slides. These "sessions" would be recorded on an old VHS camcorder. For the life of me (and several of my aunts), the VHS tapes cannot be found. My grandmother and her sister were very good about recording things. I have a genealogy book from my grandmother's side of the family along with a diary my grandmother kept. I realize I'll never know the whole story of my family. My biological dad was adopted and never wanted to find his parents. It's nice to know parts of stories but it would be wonderful to know so much more.

Able to check in every now and then on my Tablet.
Hoping to get my laptop in to get fixed this week or next week.
Tootles,
Terri

No kidding! Even though they were not farmers, in the 30's/40's it seems everyone kept pigs and chickens - Mom's stories about the fall butchering, when the men had had a bit too much wine were hilarious :)

A slideshow of Richard III's reburial
http://www.nationalreview.com/slidesh...
MODs if you think it should go in a different thread - please feel free to move it



I love the Peanuts. But what Minnesotan doesn't?



Mr. Gretchen is responsible for the reading of books. She probably could read most of them by herself but she's at an age where she still enjoys being read to. I might be biased, but she's pretty smart. Her last report card was rather brag worthy :) The twinkers, for all their struggles, are pretty smart little monkeys too.



One of my mother's most common sayings while we were growing up was "Know what I mean, not what I say".


same here, in fact still does
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