It only takes looking inside of ourselves to find the passion
and courage to follow our dreams. Whatever that passion is in
each of us, it gives us a uniqueness and satisfaction that so
many are searching in their lives. Have you found that passion
or talent in yourself that makes you unique from all others?
I was talking (Emailing) with a friend the other day and
mentioned, "Sometimes I forget what all I've collected over the
past few years until someone reminds me -- Like you! Lately, I have
had this passion and hunger for history. Something I never had while
I was young and going to school. If you will recall, back in your
school days -- history class was always taught by the Coaches. Now...If
they would have hired a Genealogist to teach history, maybe my grades
and interest in the subject would have been better than average."
Another passion of mine is organizing my grandmother's photographs
and penny postcard collection on CD's and putting them on my web
pages or in some sort of book form. That is what has me so engrossed
lately. Grandma Constance Estella Warwick McGill had thousands
of penny postcards. Some are even engraved in leather.
BIG QUESTION: Does anyone out there know anything about
leather postcards? When and Where they were produced? I would
love to hear from you. What do they call those who collect postcards?
Some of the postcards that I have scanned are Oklahoma scenes from
around the early 1900s. I have only barely touched the surface of them
all, but eventually I will get through them. Meanwhile...I would like
to share a few of them here with you. I have incorporated a lot of them
into my "Okie Legacies" web
site. I have also linked some more counties at my "Okie Legacies Site"
-- So you might want to go check out Alfalfa, Blaine, Carter, Garfield,
Logan, Major, Muskogee, Oklahoma and Woods.
I also acquired a booklet of an early postcard view of Alva,
Oklahoma called "Glimpses of the Past" compiled in 1987, by the
Alva Centennial Commission. It was printed in black and white
and is a collection of some great old postcard pictures of Alva,
Oklahoma in the early 1900s.
Did you know that Alva had an "Alva Post Card Company" located
at 321 College Avenue, ca. 1908? It was established in 1908 under
the management of W. M. Gilmore as a wholesale-retail operation.
It was located two doors north of the Alva Security Bank Building
which occupied the corner where the Central National Bank now
stands. This company printed a large number of postcard views
of Alva and the surrounding area.
In September, 1906 William Jennings Bryan was stumping through the
state of Oklahoma for the Democrat nomination for President and for
the approval of the 1907 State Constitution. Anyway, you can check it
out at woods/woods1.html.
I have put up a present day photo of Alfalfa
County Court House at the following web site -- According
to a friend, "The Commissioners of Alfalfa County have plans to
do some renovations to the court house and some landscaping to
the grounds around it."
I would love to hear from some of you Alfalfa County Alumni out
there to fill me in on some history and legacies of that fair
county just east of Woods in the northwest part of Oklahoma. It
is always great hearing from someone who can shed some light on
my McGill ancestor's past.
I lady I met on the Woods
County Query Forum the other day, passed the following information
along to me about my Grandpa Bill that owned McGill
Bros. Furniture store with his brother, Jim. You can read more
about Will and Jim's Furniture Store at this web site . I really
love hearing stories from others outside the family. If you remember
anything, write me a letter or email me. I'm in the Alva Phone book.
Anyway, back to the lady! She tells me, "Mother did tell me.....She
said that McGill's would deliver a radio to your home to let you
try for a week, free of charge. Then if you wished to buy it you
could. I thought to myself, those McGill brothers were smart men.
I bet they had very few radios returned and they must have sold
a lot that way!"
For all you Oklahoma Paris cousins out there the Paris Family Reunion
September 12, 1999 was cancelled due to problems with the community
building in Chester, Oklahoma. Are there any younger Paris Cousins out
there interested in keeping this Paris Reunion alive to spread the knowledge
of our Ancestors? Maybe together we can do something -- Like rejuvenate
the Paris Reunion. It's a shame to let it die out. There is so much
history to learn from the elders of this Paris Tribe.