Monday, December 28, 2020

The passing of the year 2020

The year started like any other with Richard William Boyle turning 15 on February 9th.  Richie continued to have trouble in his Acorn Ave home and was Sent to a home in Deer Park Long Island. He was alright when he visited us about every other weekend. He started going to the BOCE School in Bellport Long Island.

          Kenneth John Boyle Junior passed his High School Junior tests therefore becoming a High School Senior at Patchogue-Medford High School in September.   Ken also passed his Driver test getting his driver’s License. He got a job at Best Buy in the Patchogue store. Ken said he wanted to move in with his Grandparents when he turned 18 in December, but his uncle John told him if he stayed with them Ken could use John’s car so it looks like he will stay in his Acorn Ave home. Ken ended the year with a Girlfriend named Madison or Matie for short.

          Kenneth John Boyle Senior Tested [ Positive for Corona virus in April staying in Quarantine for about two weeks before testing negative. Ken said most if not everyone came down with the Corona Virus. So far we were lucky for only Kenny came down with many around the world dying of the Virus.

          Michael John Boyle Usually do reenacting with his brother Kenny Sr., but not this year for all reenacting events were canceled because of the Virus Mike and Ken also had to cancel a trip that they had planned to Boston.

          Adele and I did a lot of Gardening stay out the publics way and we turned in our 1917 Chev Cruise to the Jeep Dealer then Leased a 2021 Jeep with all the bells and whistles

 


Remembering the year 1968

 

Family: When the year 1968 began Adele Grace Eiermann and I, (Richard Boyle) didn’t even know each other, even though we both worked at AIL “Airborne Instruments Laboratories”. We finally meet in April and started dating. We dated all year except for a brief time when I visited my sister and her children in Florida. I drove a 1968 Firebird and Adele drove a 1960 Chevrolet. Before the year was over we agreed to get married.

 

The World:  The Vietnam War still rages on with working class Americans sent to kill and be killed for nothing.   Anti-War protests continue as President Lyndon Johnson says he will not run for anther term as President. Vice-President Hubert Humphrey runs against Richard Nixon. Peace talks start in Paris and Nixon says he will bring us peace with “honor”.

          Martin Luther King Jr.  is shot in the Lorraine Motel in Memphis and Robert F Kennedy is shot in Los Angeles.  The Soviet Union invades Czechoslovakia; there is a Police riot at the Democratic National Convention in Chicago, Election Day. The results of the popular vote are 31,770,000 for Nixon, 43.4 percent of the total; 31,270,000 or 42.7 percent for Humphrey; 9,906,000 or 13.5 percent for Wallace; and 0.4 percent for other candidates.

Wednesday, August 26, 2020

We are all cousins in the human family

 

The thing about everyone's ancestry is it doubles every generation.  The population of the world goes down as you  go into the past especially if you're like me with  your ancestors seem to be in one area in my case the British Isles for about a thousand years according to both paper records and DNA. So we are all cousins.  

Friday, May 1, 2020

Hard Working Germans in America

The crossing was often life-threatening
Before the 2500-person emigration center opened in Bremerhaven in 1850, those wishing to leave, are often accommodated in barns or attics (lofts?) when the ships are occupied or not ready for departure. "There is a pig economy here, of which no one has an idea!" , wrote an examination board in 1847. The rush was also high in the French and English ports. The trip to Le Havre has the advantage, that the port is closer to the Atlantic, so that the risk of getting stuck in the North Sea or the English Channel for days or weeks is lower even in bad weather. The English ports also remain very important. Some emigrants receive prepaid tickets from their relatives in America, which are then valid, for example, for the boat trip from Liverpool.
During the first half of the 19th century, the crossing to New York took an average of 45 days. A two-masted brig ( 2mastige Brig) or three-masted barque ( 3-mastige Bark) can carry up to 250 passengers, most of whom spend their time on the intermediate decks, where the intended sleeping space is narrow: Usually, four adult travelers are estimated to be no more than 1.80 by 1.80 meters . In 1847, the American Congress imposed a limit on the number of passengers on emigrant ships – this has the result that people, which wants to leave, were stuck in the European port cities. After 1850, sailing ships were gradually replaced by steamships: with the new ships, the journey time could be reduced up to eight days, it was less dependent on the weather, and the number of passengers could be increased to up to 800. The trip with the sailing ships remains attractive until the 1870s, because it only costs half.
The crossing is often life-threatening: during it´s third passage from Hamburg to New York in September 1858, the Hapag steam sailing ship “Austria” with 538 passengers on board caught fire from improperly handling tar while smoking the decks and sank in front of the Newfoundland Bank - only 89 people survived the catastrophe. The “Leibnitz” sailing ship, operated by the Hamburg shipping company Sloman, with around 550 travelers on board, reached it´s destination on January 21, 1868 after a 70-day journey, but had to complain about a hundred cholera victims. An additional deck had been installed under the intermediate deck to accommodate more passengers. Commissioner Friedrich Kapp, appointed by the New York Immigration Service, describes it as a "complete plague cave".
In New York, all arriving immigrants were smuggled through the landing depot in Castle Garden on the southern tip of Manhattan from 1855. From 1892 onwards, Ellis Island, located in the estuary of the Hudson River in front of Manhattan, became a central gathering point for immigrants: Ellis Island is not only larger than Castle Garden, but also better suited due to its island location.
The immigrants then move from New York further inland. While the typical settlement area of ​​German immigrants was concentrated in Pennsylvania, Maryland and New York, around the middle of the century it shifted to the German Triangle, between Milwaukee (Wisconsin), St. Louis (Missouri) and Cincinnati (Ohio). German-style residential quarters develop there, with their own churches, associations, schools and theaters. The settlers can continue to expand to the west, because they push the Indians back and force them to cede large prairie areas. In the decades following the civil war, thousands of Germans were lured by state agencies, churches, railroad companies and business people, with the information to Kansas, Nebraska, Dakota and Oregon that they could buy cheaply undeveloped land there.
America differs from the familiar in many ways for the newcomers. In their letters to their relatives in their German homeland, they describe the climatic differences, the higher standard of living, they tell of exotic fruits and the high meat consumption.
Many have to deal with differences in mentality. Franz Löher complains in The German Emigrants of the Educated Estates in North America (1853) : "The hot business urge, the incessant bustle of the market becomes obnoxious, the naked, raw selfishness in politics, the grandiose hypocrisy in religious life emerges, one feels that Unpleasant and strictly uniform and one-sided of the American character, one notices the lack of deeper intellectual life, the rarity of true education in all external polishing. " Some feel exploited by the Americans. Still others complain of a lack of decency and a sense of justice: Some Germans are outraged that it is possible in America, for people arrested for criminal offenses, to be released on payment of a deposit.

The emigrants find themselves in an ethnically and linguistically unusual heterogeneous society. They are often frightened by the neglect of black people, that they see when they arrive in the American port cities. When emigrants describe their encounters with Indians, they reflect clichés and at the same time their efforts to understand and sympathize. Hermann B. Scharmann, who was hit by the gold rush in 1849 and traveled with his wife and children from New York to the west coast, met a large group of Sioux in Wyoming. "Her sight was grotesque, her appearance and her costume wonderful," he writes. He smokes with the chief, it is a peaceful encounter in which ( according to Scharmann) "the savages" in any case do not seem as bad to him "as many civilized people". But there is also a dark side: in the city of New Ulm, founded in 1854 in Minnesota by German settlers, a bloody massacre of Indians occurs after the initially peaceful coexistence, when the numerically superior Sioux try to conquer the city.

How great is the German influence on American culture?


How great is the German influence on American culture?
We know more about the immigrants who have made it in the New World: The list of successful German-American entrepreneurs is long. The brewery is almost entirely in German hands. Anheuser-Busch, Pabst, Schlitz and Blatz are legendary, to name only the largest companies. Prussian-born Charles (Karl) Krug experiments with grape varieties and is the first to press wine in Napa Valley, California. The Palatinate Friedrich Weyerhäuser buys forest areas and is soon considered the wood magnate of the West. Württemberg's Henry Müller (Miller) becomes the cattle king of the West. Johann Jacob Bausch, an optician, and his financial partner Henry C. Lomb founded a manufactory for monocle in Rochester, New York in 1853: Bausch & Lomb.
German-Jewish business people are often, if not only, to be found in the clothing industry and in the textile trade and lay the roots for department stores such as Macy's and Saks Fifth Avenue. The piano maker Heinrich Engelhard Steinweg, who was born in Wolfshagen in Lower Saxony, is legendary and calls himself Henry E. Steinway in the New World. At the same time, a small elite of Jewish merchants is forming in the financial sector. Bank J. & W. Seligman & Co. plays a crucial role in the financing of important railway lines. A new start in America is particularly tempting for Jews because in Germany the matriculation laws stand in the way of a free choice of profession and place of residence.
Many German engineers are also lucky in the United States. This includes the bridge builder Johann August Roebling. However, he did not see the completion of his most famous building, the New York Brooklyn Bridge. He suffers a serious accident during surveying work and succumbs to his injuries shortly afterwards. Roebling's eldest son, Washington, who takes over the construction management, also brings the bridge bad luck: after diving, he suffers from decompression sickness and has to hand over the tasks to his wife Emily Warren, who is reserved to be the first to cross the bridge on May 24, 1883.
From the American perspective, the Germans appeared as a large group connected by their language. The situation was more complicated for the Germans themselves. We can easily imagine the communication problems between Swabians and North Germans, who might not even speak High German. Unlike the Irish, the entire social spectrum is represented by Germans, from large landowners to agricultural workers. There are also religious differences. Protestants and Catholics can be neighbors, but avoid each other in everyday life. Apart from the negative attitude to prohibition, to the total ban on alcohol, there are hardly any concerns for which all Germans speak with one voice. In the context of a bill for the Illinois Parliament in 1883, the Chicago Workers' newspaper criticized: "The whole election dispute turned once again to the tiresome beer and Schnapps question. And for this poor interest, Germanism appeared unanimously, the same Germanism that cannot agree on higher, more important, more ideal interests. "
How can we assess the German influence on American culture as a whole? An answer to this question was difficult for contemporaries. There are German-Americans who hold political offices, such as the legendary Carl Schurz or Adolph Sutro (1830–1898), who has been mayor of San Francisco for two years, but there are repeated criticisms that political visibility does not correspond to their numerical presence. On the other hand, Albert Bernhardt Faust, who works at Cornell University, compiles a whole catalog of important people in the book “ Das Deutschtum in den Vereinigten Staaten in seiner Bedeutung für die amerikanische Kultur (1909) he says: "German culture has shaken the young American giant out of dull self-consciousness and has awakened a soul in him,  that resonates with the senses and feelings of all mankind. " The historian Frederick J. Turner, who has become known for his concept of the frontier,  ascribes it to the Germans "that they imparted German consistency, persistence and tenacity to the American tribal type and society,  who happily complement the nervous, erratic energy of the native American ".
Of course it is pure speculation to suspect such a "mentality transfer". Beyond that there is only a look at numbers: in 1870 there were forty million people in the United States; more than six million of them were Germans. Immigration decreased to the same extent that Germany began to prosper after the founding of the Reich in 1871. Especially in the last two decades of the 19th century, the numbers declined sharply. Most New Americans now come from Eastern Europe. Germany has meanwhile turned from an emigration country to an immigration country - for the Poles, for example, who come to the Ruhr area by the hundreds.
Bernd Brunner, born in 1964, lives in Berlin as a freelance writer

Friday, February 7, 2020

Hugh Wallace Boyle Sr. January 1906 to March 1982

Grave of Hugh Wallace Boyle Sr. This Grave can only be seen on the internet and in Heaven. His ashes were put into the Ground in a RC Church yard in Bradenton Florida with a small plaque of one of the churches walls. Grave markers are a waste of  good land, since few people visit them for long, but remembering them on the internet on sites like Ancestry.com or Grave sites more people now and in the future will be able to see what they were like when they were alive.


Thursday, January 2, 2020

The Life of Ann Wallace. By her Grandson Richard Boyle


I didn’t know either of my Grandmothers as they lived on the other side of the pond. I pieced together the story of Ann Wallace from what my father told me about his mother plus from sources I got from Ancestry.com and Scotlandspeople.gov.uk. I think I got most of the highlights correct. 
Ann Wallace born on the 21st if March in the year 1879 the ninth child of Twelve Children to Mary McTeiney and James Wallace in the small village of Carluke in Lanarkshire in the country of Scotland. She lived with her family having fun playing with her brothers and sisters. The family moved to Combusnethan Wishaw where she went to school.
After school she went to work in a factory that made nails making money to help support the Wallace family. One Sunday her day off she met and fell in love with Hugh Boyle my Grandfather. They started a relationship right there in Wishaw Scotland with my Grandfather working as a Boiler maker which I figure must have been in nearby Glasgow maybe in the shipyards.
What with love blooming at the dawn of a new century Hugh decided to go to Boston in America figuring that it being a port so must have jobs for Boiler makers. So, in 1901 Hugh traveled to Boston and a year later sent for Ann who arrived in Boston in April of 1902 and they were married on the 8th day of October 1902 in Boston Massachusetts.  
My Dad said that the family moved around a lot he even remembers moving to Utica NY and since my Aunt Mary Angus Boyle was born in Providence RI on the 24th of April in the year 1904, we know they moved to there around 1904. The family must have moved back to Boston after that for my Dad was born in Boston on the 24th day of January in the year 1906 and My Aunt Sarah Veronica Boyle was also born in Boston on the 4th day of April in the year 1912. So they were on the road a lot while they were in America it must have been hard on Ann Wallace and she must have been getting feed up with my Grandfather Hugh.
A person posing for a photo

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