Alonzo Franklin Parish and Ida Lavisa Pettingill Family Blog

To all Family Members:
Share your pictures and stories about our ancestors by sending them via email to: brenda.bailey.1@hotmail. They will be posted on the family blog and available for all of our family to enjoy.

Heritage Album

HERITAGE ALBUM
Black and white photos aged with time now cover the pages before you. These pictures are a reminder of a moment in time and give us a past to hold onto.

The harders of times our loved ones endured as they steadily paved the way. Gratitude and respect they have earned and their legacy of love we can never repay.

Each photo has a story of personal happiness, heartaches, blood and sweat. But for their individual journeys and their legacies to live, the sacrifices we must not forget.

Hold onto the history stored within these precious pages and allow these stories to live. For these memories of trial and triumph are the most priceless treasure that one can give. By Wendy Silva

Old Photographs by Ernest Jack Sharpe

OLD PHOTOGRAPHS by Ernest Jack Sharpe
A box of faded photographs I opened yesterday, And instantly my memories were carried far away

To many friends and places, from years so long ago, As I sorted through those photographs of folks I used to know.

There were some of family members that are no longer here, and photographs of sweethearts I once thought very dear.

Thoughts swiftly raced and tumbled on things that are no more, As I daydreamed over photographs and happy days of yore.

ANCESTORS

ANCESTORS

If you could see your Ancestors All standing in a row, Would you be proud of them, or not, or don't you really know?

Some strange discoveries are made in climbing family trees. And some of them, you know do not particularly please.

If you could see your Ancestors all standing in a row, These might be some of them perhaps, You wouldn't care to know.

But here's another question which requires a different view, If you could meet your Ancestors, Would they be proud of you?

Sunday, March 3, 2013

Ida Parish's Sewing Maching



Picture of Grandma Parish's Sewing Machine shared by Pam Parish (Ruby) daughter of Theral and Dorthy Parish



Here is a picture of grandma parish's sewing machine.  It has been on display at the Daughters of the Utah Pioneers and then my daughter Laurel used it at a young women's program.  On the machine are some of grandmas old wooden spools that came in the old jar when I got the machine. The dress sitting on the machine was a doll dress she made me when I was 8-years old. It has been repaired but I still treasure it. The attachment tin box on the machine also came in the drawers. The crocheted square luncheon cloth she also did but I'm not sure when.   I remember it on a drop leaf table she had in her living room at the farm on 27th after they had sold the ranch in Elba and moved to Burley.  I was about 5-years old when i first noticed the cloth.  The old iron sitting on the ironing board was hers.  I don't have the cord to it, but I was given a little electric iron when I was 6 and I keep it in my laundry room along with grandma's. 

The dress belonged to Gail Storm who was a star in South Pacific stage version.  I have a girlfriend in California and her grandfather was a tailor and use to do a lot of clothing for the stars. She gave it to me as a gift as I really liked Gail Storm.   She recently passed away in 2011 at 86 years old.   She was a good actress and mother of four children, a family type person.  She was so tiny.