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Showing posts with the label Clarksville Pa.

Blanche L. Shipley Phillians was born 110 years ago today!

  Blanche Louise Shipley Phillians was born 110 years ago today in West Brownsville, Pa.  She was one of three daughters born to Howard Francis and Annabelle Ferguson Shipley. She married George Harry Phillians on June 11, 1938, in Hagerstown, Md. and on March 17, 1945, she gave birth to my mother, Roberta Lee, their only child. She died on December 11, 1997, the day before her 86th birthday.  Rumor has it she was the life of the party when she was younger and living in the booming town of Brownsville, Pa. She worked as a store clerk, rolled her own cigarettes, and baked a pretty good loaf of bread. She was a mix of superstition and anxiety and although obsessive compulsive disorder (OCD) wasn’t a term back then, I’m sure she had it. In her adult years she worried and worried and then, for good measure, she worried some more. Blanche Louise Shipley &  her friend Ruth Ann She absolutely adored my grandfather and spent her whole life making sure he was happy and we...

Remembering Ruth & Forest Vance Ross on their 84th Wedding Anniversary

Forest Vance & Ruth Elaine Brown Ross with their sons  Forrest Wayne and Kenneth Isaac Ross Eighty-four years ago today, on April 28, 1937, my Grandparents Forest Vance Ross and Ruth Elaine Brown traveled 90 miles from Clarksville, Pa. to Cumberland, Md., to get married. They were young and in love and I’m sure it was a lovely day for a drive! Ruth’s sister Margaret and Vance’s friend Mike Barnek went along to serve as witnesses.  Elopement must have been the thing to do back then, and apparently it was easier to get married in Maryland than in Pennsylvania. Twenty-six years later my parents went to Lavale, Md. to tie the knot. My maternal grandparents George and Blanche Shipley Phillians drove a little further east on their wedding day and said their vows in Hagerstown, Md.  My grandmother told me a sweet story about how my grandfather wanted to name my aunt April when she was born. Grandma didn’t care for the name, so she dismissed the suggestion and they chose the ...

Beth-Center High School Graduation Project Video by Ruth Elaine Brown Ross - 2014

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=lfwtC7Flj18&feature=em-upload_owner This video features my paternal Grandmother Ruth Elaine Brown Ross of Clarksville, Pa. It was created with the help of my aunt Janet Ross and cousin Shannon Ross Davis. It’s a treasure that I’m so happy to have and I’m posting it here where it will be safe, waiting for me to add more information. I’m also including the link to the story that appeared in the Washington Observer-Reporter. https://observer-reporter.com/news/localnews/former-clarksville-grandmother-fulfills-dream/article_3a0126f0-431c-5a29-948a-08636bc92460.html Here’s the link to the WTAE story about her graduation! https://www.wtae.com/article/dropout-no-more-92-year-old-graduate-fulfills-her-longtime-dream/7466467 My paternal ancestral line to Ruth Brown Ross: 1) Randi Lee Ross 2) Forrest Wayne Ross 3) Ruth Elaine Brown by Randi Ross Marodi - randileeross@gmail.com

Our Family Story: A bumpy start with Great-Grandma Ross

“You are the nosiest person I have ever met.” Those were the words of my Great Grandmother Ross in 1979. She was 94 and apparently didn’t like the question I just asked. I wasn’t nosy, I was just a 13-year-old kid who had been gifted a blue and gold trimmed book titled Our Family Story. It was a workbook to help you build a family tree. It included tips to start the process and the main suggestion was this: interview your older relatives. So, that’s what I planned to do. I decided to start with Great-Grandma Ross, my oldest relative. Lelia Levine Sanders Ross of Scenery Hill, Pa. had recently moved in with my grandparents: her son Forest Vance Ross and daughter-in-law Ruth Brown Ross. Vance and Ruth lived in Clarksville in Greene County, Pa. and I lived on the other side of town. I already spent a lot of time at their house, so this gave me the opportunity to get to know my great-grandmother. One day I grabbed my new family tree book, a notebook with a list of questions, and...