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Nathaniel Winslow Gravesite – location correction

Nathaniel Winslow, husband of Elizabeth Williams (daughter of Sobriety Bunker), was age 74 in the 1850 Census, listed as living in household of son Stephen Winslow, along with wife “Betsey” at age 63. Nathaniel died in 1852, and was buried on a small hill in Letter E township (originally called Letter E Plantation), Franklin County, Maine.

Dan Earl, who visited the gravesite in 2005, provided this photograph and approximate location: Nathaniel’s grave is located Twp. Letter E, near Madrid, Franklin County, Maine. Access is via a private paper company dirt road 6.6 miles off Route 4 (south of Smalls Falls), then down an old brush grown dirt road about 100 yards, thence 20 yards to the north.

Last Friday (June 13, 2008) Manuela and I traveled to Farmington, Maine, and met up with Pete and Priscilla Ross, who graciously drove us up into Letter E and shared Franklin County history with us.  We were able to verify the coordinates of the gravesite, which is much overgrown just in the last few years. The timber company that owns the land has marked off the “cemetery” with pink and blue tree ribbons to prevent cutting in this small area.

GPS coordinates are as follows: 44° 50’18.54″ N, 70° 31′ 51.97″ W. The area is approximately 1675 feet above sea level. This an update giving a more exact location of the gravesite.

There are two other graves, Nathaniel’s grandson Stephen F. Winslow and Joel W. Bryant.  Priscilla Ross says she has been unable to find any link between the Bryant family and the Winslows.

To see photos of the area, please visit: http://albums.phanfare.com/3459565/2149078

This posting was originally made on March 19, 2006, and updated on June 24, 2008.

Posted in Bunker Family History, Detling Family History, Older Posts, Personal.

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Greencity albums publicly accessible

My online photo management site has changed policies and once again is allowing access to my photo albums through the following:

http://albums.phanfare.com/greencity

The change restores a feature of Phanfare that was changed when version 2.0 was released.

Posted in Digital Photography, Older Posts.

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Get Pennsylvania vital records online

Recently, many states have helped in the cause of genealogical research by making their vital records available online.  I received an e-mail earlier today about an effort to have Pennsylvania records more accessible:

Here is the link to the website about the grassroots effort to get older Pennsylvania state death certificates available online like they have started to do in other states: http://users.rcn.com/timarg/PaHR-Access.htm . I hope you will join in on this effort and if you would pass this information onto anyone you know who is into Pennsylvania genealogy and history including out of state residents. I’m sure you can appreciate just how helpful such a database would be in doing research.

Tim Gruber

Posted in Genealogy Web Sites, Older Posts.

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Booknotes

In the past few days, I posted two mini-reviews of recent additions to my library. I’ve added a blog category for booknotes, and from time to time will post comments on recent books I’ve read.  For those who’ve known me for years, you’ll see my reading interests are still eclectic–or as good friend Roy McCray says–haphazard.

Posted in Booknotes, Older Posts.

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Basic Brown (2008)

Former San Francisco Mayor and California Assembly Speaker Willie Brown has written an unusually frank memoir of his life in politics, which is a must read for anyone who would attempt to understand California politics in the latter decades of the 20th century. Willie Brown was amazing!

For several years, while working at the Association of Bay Area Governments, the regional planning agency for the San Francisco Bay Area, I was responsible for coordinating its legislative program. We tried for years to establish a permanent, statutorily created regional planning body for the region. We came so close, within a vote in the State Senate, and that bill would have been signed by then Governor Ronald Reagan.

But after that failure, and then another one the following year, ABAG’s political leadership was on to other things, implementation of a regional environmental management plan, the first of its kind in the country. And that leads me to my story. ABAG’s Executive Director Revan Tranter suggested that Eugene Leong (then manager of its environmental management programs and later Executive Director) and I meet with ABAG’s lobbyist Robert Beckus and then Assembly Speaker Leo McCarthy about a bill to authorize annual inspections of motor vehicles to meet emission standards. ABAG was sponsoring a bill then opposed by the State Air Resources Board to carry out Federal requirements. Beckus set up the meeting, but McCarthy cancelled attendance at the last minute, and sent Brown, then Majority Floor Leader in the Assembly, in his stead. “What do you want, Beck?” he asked Beckus as he entered the room. Beckus introduced Leong and I, and we proceed to outline the provisions of our bill, and what we wanted.

Brown promised us his support, and the meeting ended in about 10 minutes. “The average attention span of a legislator is about 30 seconds,” Bob Beckus (one of the most brutally honest and successful lobbyists in California political history) used to say, telling us to write our briefing notes on the back of a business card. “But Willie…he’s not your average legislator.”

I was reminded of that a few weeks later because I had to go to a meeting in a prominent San Francisco hotel. I was running late, and decided to take the stairs two flights rather than wait for an elevator. While rounding the corner at the top of the first flight, I practically collided headlong with none other than Assemblyman Willie Brown. I said, “excuse me” and he replied “how are you doing, Doug?”

When politicians call you by your first name…you know they are going places. Of course, Willie was elected speaker in 1980 and set a record for tenure in that job at 14 and a half years. California’s term limits, as long as they last, will keep his record intact.

Basic Brown is a more than a personal memoir. Though you’ll find details about his life, it is filled with lessons those who aspire to be successful elected officials could learn if they haven’t already. Willie tells how he learned as a member of the Assembly budget committee from Randolph Collier, Republican turned Democrat who was known as the Silver Fox of the Siskiyous (Collier had brilliant white hair) and the Father of the California Freeway System as chair of the Senate Transportation Committee, how to horse-trade and do favors for others; and how he learned to recover from political exile (he had lost a race for the Speakership to Leo McCarthy, who had banished him to the smallest office in the capitol, then some time later asked him to help police the Assembly for potential corruption). He tells how he learned the basic lesson in surviving as a leader: to serve the members. In his years as San Francisco Mayor, it was the lesson he applied, meaning  that to be successful meant serving the people; he liked to call himself “the people’s mayor.”

To think that FBI tried to “get Willie,” read the chapter on how he forced Assemblyman Lou Papan (himself a former FBI agent) to vote against a bill he’d been talked into carrying for a lobbyist in bed with the FBI. In the end, it was only Republican Assemblyman Patrick Nolan who served time in federal prison–convicted of taking illegal campaign contributions in an FBI sting operation Nolan himself had suggested to the FBI.

The book has great stories, explicit language (he referred to one unnamed legislator as “a dreadful little guy” and then in a rare slip gave the unnamed legislator’s residence using the wrong county), and good advice.

Willie L. Brown, Jr., Basic Brown (New York: Simon & Schuster, 2008).

Posted in Booknotes, Community Musings, Older Posts.

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Palestine Peace Not Apartheid (2007 paper)

Recently, former President Jimmy Carter has been criticized by politicians and pundits for his direct communications with Palestinians and others in his long-standing commitment to bring about peace in the Middle East–specifically between Israel and Palestine.

Most Americans have a very limited view of the issues–disagreeing in fact with most Israelis about what could be done in that region to bring about stability. I would encourage anyone who hasn’t to read Jimmy Carter’s book, first published in 2006 but with an afterword in 2007 when the paperback edition came out.

I wrote this book to cover two subjects that are rarely openly talked about in America: the terrible plight of the Palestinians and the need for a balanced [emphasis mine] discussion of how Israel and her neighbors can find peace and live together with mutual respect.

It means America must be willing to continue its commitment to the security of Israel–but at the same time be willing to engage those whose policies we don’t always agree with. There is no question America is threatened by Islamic extremism and an unprecedented hostility to it in the Islamic world–linked directly in President Carter’s view to the continuing bloodshed between Israelis and Palestinians.

President Carter points out that a baby born during the first Arab-Israeli conflict will be 50 years old in 2008. That child has seen enough bloodshed. Americans need to do more than let their elected politicians stand on past rhetoric or misguided statements of the facts. In 1979 President Carter noted that people support a settlement of the questions in conflict between Israel and Palestine. “Political leaders are the obstacle to peace.” If not now, then when?

Jimmy Carter, Palestine Peace Not Apartheid (New York: Simon & Schuster, 2006-2007)

Posted in Booknotes, Older Posts.

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Roblee photographs

As you know, we had posted photographs taken by many individuals of various Roblee gravesites. As previously mentioned, my photography site hosting company has recently undertaken a major upgrading of its hosting services, and one change is necessary for individuals to view any of the photo albums I’ve shared.

From now on, it will be necessary to log-in to the site. You can sign up for the Roblee researchers group (which will give you access to all related photo albums) by creating a user account at:

http://www.phanfare.com/group/1382667

Creating a log-in and password using the link above will give you access to all Roblee-related photo albums created to date, plus any in the future.

Alternatively, for those who might like to see any of my photo albums, you will need to send me an individual e-mail (to doug.detling@gmail.com) and I will invite you to the “friends” category rather than the more narrowly defined Roblee group. You will have to confirm your participation to have access to these.

Posted in Detling Family History, Digital Photography, Older Posts, Roblee Researchers.

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ABAGers photographs

We have previously posted photographs of the ABAGers reunion, mini-reunion, and Marci Loss’ retirement party on my photo sharing site at phanfare.com. The hosting company has recently undertaken a major upgrading of its hosting services, and one change is necessary for individuals to view any of the photo albums I’ve shared. From now on, it will be necessary to log-in to the site. You can sign up for the ABAGers group (which will give you access to all posted ABAGers’ photo albums) by creating a user account at:

http://www.phanfare.com/group/1382915

Creating a log-in and password using the link above will give you access to all ABAGers photo albums created to date, plus any in the future.

Alternatively, for those who might like to see any of my photo albums, you will need to send me an individual e-mail (to doug.detling@gmail.com) and I will invite you to the “friends” category rather than the more narrowly defined ABAGers group. You will have to confirm your participation to have access to these.

Posted in Digital Photography, Older Posts, Personal.

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Bunker photographs

As you know, we had posted photographs of the BFA reunion in Olympia, Washington, and plan to do the same for the Portland, Maine reunion in June. The hosting company has recently undertaken a major upgrading of its hosting services, and one change is necessary for individuals to view any of the photo albums I’ve shared.

From now on, it will be necessary to log-in to the site. You can sign up for the BFA group (which will give you access to all related photo albums) by creating a user account at:

http://www.phanfare.com/group/1383530

Creating a log-in and password using the link above will give you access to all BFA photo albums created to date, plus any in the future.

Alternatively, for those who might like to see any of my photo albums, you will need to send me an individual e-mail (to doug.detling@gmail.com) and I will invite you to the “friends” category rather than the more narrowly defined BFA group. You will have to confirm your participation to have access to these.

Posted in Bunker Family History, Digital Photography, Older Posts.

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Greencity Photo Site on Phanfare

Phanfare, the hosting site for my photography, has recently upgraded the site, and it is necessary to create a login and password to view my posted photographs at albums.phanfare.com/greencity.

This login will allow the user access to any of my photo albums.

Posted in Digital Photography, Older Posts, Web Site News.

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