|
The Spiker Gazette |
|
Oxford, WV
Volume 1
Issue 2
July 7, 2007 |
| |
|
|
|
|
|
By Bobbi Spiker Conley
I loved listening
to my father’s stories about his childhood. Some tales were
amusing. Some were unbelievable. But all of them were
entertaining to me. Things were so different "way back then".
Likewise, my daughter enjoyed hearing my own stories about the way
things were "way back when" I was a little girl.
Now we want to hear about YOUR personal history. Here’s a fun and
easy way we can explore how our opinions, our lifestyles and even our
world have changed through the generations.
For example, what was your source of transportation to school?
My daughter rode an air conditioned bus for ten miles. My own
bus ride to school took over an hour. One-way. There weren’t
always enough seats available, so some of us had to stand in the
aisle. And we couldn’t even imagine the luxury of air
conditioning. My father never had a seat at all. He WALKED
to school. Several miles. In three feet of snow.
Uphill – both ways! You get the idea.
Just for Fun, let's take a sneak peek into the lives of our extended
family. Visit
our FORUM and click on the topic titled “History Questionnaire”.
|
|
Submitted by
Melanie Spiker Fouse
Dean Spiker,
Cathy Gregis and Melanie Fouse went "grave hunting" last weekend.
The group went to 16 different cemeteries in two days recording the
locations of family graves and taking rubbings and digital photographs
of the tombstones.
Melanie said, "(We) captured pictures
and tombstone transcriptions of 126 headstones, some with 'double
occupancy' on them, belonging to Spikers and Zinns and their extended
families. These will be copied into my cemetery software over the next
few months and added to the (family tree) website soon after that.
"We spoke to all them and asked if they
knew us.
"We even took a tombstone rubbing of
John Zinn's headstone; he was born in 1778 and died in 1848.
"At the family cemetery for Vada and Manley Zinn, we met the wife of
Manley Zinn (grandson of Manley and Vada).
"Here is a picture of the
tombstone rubbing Cathy and I did of John Zinn. We
first did the old tombstone as it won't last.
(continued at right) |
|
(continued
from left)
"We also
did the back of the new stone that Uncle Brad and others had erected
in front of the old stone.
"The tree depicted in the
picture has an 'F' at the bottom for Family. Then a 'B' on one side of
the tree for the boys, and a 'G' on the other side for the girls.
Notice one branch on the boys side divides into two for the twins. The
transcription reads 'MEMORAL of JOHN ZINN CENIOR. BORND IN THE
YEAR 1778. DIED IN THE YEAR 1848 age 70 y. (Words
misspelled are exact to stone) John and Ruth (Gandy) Zinn.'"
 
(Click on thumbnails above to view full-size images.)
Click here for more photos of the
churches & cemeteries they visited. |
Announcements
(Submitted
by Melinda Chambers) Chris Chambers and his wife, Renee, had a
baby girl on June 13th, 2007. Grandmother Melinda Chambers told us,
"Her name is Ella Brooke, and she's quite a cutie. The next week
Renee went in the hospital with a serious kidney infection--her
temperature went to over 104, but she's back home and recouping."
(Submitted by Cathy Gregis) Keri Gregis and family recently
moved into their new home in Oxford, WV. As if they weren't busy
enough unpacking all those boxes, they found time to celebrate with family
and friends by hosting TWO parties, a housewarming on June 30 and a Fourth
of July party.
(Submitted by Bobbi Conley) Haley Conley's writings have been
published in the Mangrove Review, the student-edited literary and
arts magazine for Florida Gulf Coast University which showcases the work
of FGCU students, faculty, staff, administrators, alumni and members of
the community. Encouraged by her professors, Haley submitted three
pieces of fiction prose. After reviewing all submissions, the
magazine editors selected only SEVEN works of art to appear in the
Mangrove Review. ALL of Haley's stories were selected for
publication!!! (Yes, of the seven selected, three of them were
Haley's.)
Recently published, the inside cover of the magazine offered another
pleasant surprise which read, "Faculty judges for the Mangrove Review
Awards determine the most accomplished works produced by current FGCU
students that appear in Mangrove Review. The Mangrove
Review Award goes to Haley Conley for her fiction."
Congratulations Haley! We are so proud of you.
|