Jump to content
  • Welcome!

    Register and log in easily with Twitter or Google accounts!

    Or simply create a new Huddle account. 

    Members receive fewer ads , access our dark theme, and the ability to join the discussion!

     

Old photos of your heritage


Zod

Recommended Posts

Ran across an elementary school picture of my Granfather's class. It struck me how far the family has come in what is relatively short amount of time. He grew up literally dirt poor, notice not all the kids have shoes. Descendent of Irish immigrants, he worked in the coal mines, built his own house with his own hands, raised 5 kids with the help of a small farm in the summer.

 

post-3-0-04824200-1375544231_thumb.jpg

 

 

It really is important to look back at these things from time to time and realize compared to my grand dad, I ain't poo.

Link to comment
Share on other sites

Here is my great-great-grandfather in the early 1900s:

3861955715_f032cc7cdd_z.jpg?zz=1

 

 

He was an immigrant from Poland who made a living as a coal miner before getting started in Detroit auto.  And we've been in Detroit auto since the 1890s, including my cousin who is a GM design intern. My great grandfather designed the original corvette and came up with the idea for standardized body types.

Link to comment
Share on other sites

i need to find the WW1 photo of my great grand dad on my mom's side. came back from that war and bought some land and farmed it and raised cattle till he died in his early 90's.

 

every summer we would go to his and other surrounding relatives houses and pick all we could from the garden. especially after my grand paw passed because he had a tremendous garden that kept us fed.

 

for Christmas, my great grand dad and my great uncle as a gift, would give each family tons of meat and pork that would last at least till the spring.

 

they didn't call it green or organic back then. they just did it.

Link to comment
Share on other sites

I don't even know if there are photos around here anywhere. My mother's side is all French Canadian and they were dead poor, but my grandfather, who never learned to read or write, ended up building up a machine shop where they build machines for factories, and sold it off at a young age for millions. Now he's getting up there in age on a nice open property on the Connecticut river with a few boatyards and boat sales companies he owns.

 

On the other side, my family is all old tobacco, for 4 generations or something. My father was born in Zimbabwe and lived all over the world, from South America to Southeast Asia to all over Europe. Eventually settled here, still works with tobacco, etc etc.

 

It's all a pretty cool story on both sides when told in full, but I'm sure every American has an interesting story back in their lineage, since we obviously all originated from elsewhere. 

Link to comment
Share on other sites

Ran across an elementary school picture of my Granfather's class. It struck me how far the family has come in what is relatively short amount of time. He grew up literally dirt poor, notice not all the kids have shoes. Descendent of Irish immigrants, he worked in the coal mines, built his own house with his own hands, raised 5 kids with the help of a small farm in the summer.

 

attachicon.gifEPSON001.jpg

 

 

It really is important to look back at these things from time to time and realize compared to my grand dad, I ain't poo.

Notice the same bowl haircut on all the little girls. Man, a far cry from all the kids having cell phones and stuff. We are truly 100 times better off as far as "stuff" goes and the standard of living. You certainly have a correct view on these folks. Many of my extended family photos tell the same story. My dad was one of 10 kids and tells some incredible stories of food and shelter.

Link to comment
Share on other sites

i

Ran across an elementary school picture of my Granfather's class. It struck me how far the family has come in what is relatively short amount of time. He grew up literally dirt poor, notice not all the kids have shoes. Descendent of Irish immigrants, he worked in the coal mines, built his own house with his own hands, raised 5 kids with the help of a small farm in the summer.

 

attachicon.gifEPSON001.jpg

 

 

It really is important to look back at these things from time to time and realize compared to my grand dad, I ain't poo.

I don't have any photos but sounds like we came from similar backgrounds. Family was from WV. grandfather was 1 of 13 children. Grew up on a small farm in the middle of nowhere. He worked coal mines for a short while before working on the railroad and finally retiring from a metal alloy fabrication company. Dirt poor.8th grade education.

 

 

 

My dad decided that wasn't the life he wanted for himself or his future children so he and my mom moved to Charlotte.

 

 

 

I researched my family history a bit a month ago and was able to trace it back to 1543. My family first immigrated here sometime between 1650 and 1670.

Link to comment
Share on other sites

Don't have too many to be honest.

 

Both grandfathers grew up dirt poor.  One side had 11 kids the other 8 or 9....I can't remember.

 

Both went into the army and went to war.  Neither graduated high school.  (fathers side finished his HS up a while back in his late 70's)

 

They worked and saved like crazy to provide a better way of life for their kids, and I'm happy that I got to meet both of them in my life.  Mothers side died when I was in 4th grade, fathers side is still kicking, living on the sound and fishing almost every day.

 

Link to comment
Share on other sites

Archived

This topic is now archived and is closed to further replies.


  • PMH4OWPW7JD2TDGWZKTOYL2T3E.jpg

  • Topics

  • Posts

    • I've really only begun to pay attention this week being that training camp is looming, so I was personally caught off guard by the fact that Nic Scourton remains unsigned. That's not necessarily bad news, but it's not necessarily good news either. Apparently it's a thing with this year's draft class. "Of the 32 players selected in the second-round, 30 remained unsigned and the clock is ticking. "Already we've seen one second-round pick hold out from the start of training camp with that player being Los Angeles Chargers' wide receiver Tre Harris. Harris did not report with the rest of the Chargers' rookies on Saturday due to his contract situation, a issue that could impact nearly every other team in the league. "For the Panthers, defensive end Nic Scourton is the player to watch for when rookies start showing back up to the team facilities next week. "The 51st overall pick is one of the 30 second-rounders who has yet to sign their rookie contract and the reason why is due to the other two that have actually signed. "Cleveland Browns' linebacker Carson Schwesinger and Houston Texans' wide receiver Jayden Higgins each signed fully guaranteed contracts as the first and second players drafted in the second-round. Prior to this year, second-round picks never received a fully guaranteed deal, only players selected in the first-round." https://atozsports.com/nfl/carolina-panthers-news/panthers-nic-scourton-contract-second-round-pick-training-camp-hold-out-tre-harris/ So, I suppose we'll see what's what pretty soon. It's definitely something to monitor.
    • overwhelming majority of kids in travel ball aren't getting scholarships though because most teams are rec caliber (and not watched by scouts)    and parents/leagues sort of helped create this system and narrative IMO where travel ball is now oversaturated and most of it is simply expensive rec ball.  is travel beneficial for some athletes to get more exposure? Sure. The ones travel actually existed for.   I still think travel has expanded entirely too broad at this stage......where they will now have 5 teams per year in your backyard area pending they can get parents to write those checks.   Ain't no scout ever laying eyes on 90%+ of the kids in travel ball at this stage of where it has morphed into.     
    • Im really curious to see how the defense is going to look once its playing with some leads.
×
×
  • Create New...