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The Life From The Roots blog topics have changed several times since I began this blog in 2009. I initially wrote only about the family history I had been working on for 20 years. Years later, I was into visiting gardens, historical homes, churches, libraries that had genealogical collections, historical societies, war memorials, and travel/tourism places. I also enjoy posting autographs and photos of famous people I've met or have seen.

Along with my New England roots, other areas include New York, New Jersey, Michigan, Illinois, Wisconsin, and the Eastern Townships of Quebec, Canada.

Please check out the labels on the right side for topics (please note, they need work). Below the labels and pageviews is a listing of my top nine posts, according to Google. Four of them pertain to Lowell, MA. These posts change often because they are based on what people are reading.
Showing posts with label Photos. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Photos. Show all posts

Saturday, January 22, 2022

The New Concord River Greenway Walking Trail on Centennial Island, photos taken January 2020, 2022.


The Lawrence Street parking lot for the trail, is next to the Lowell Cemetery. There are about 6-7 parking spaces, so if full, I would suggest you park in the cemetery and take the short walk to the trail. From the above bridge on Lawrence St. I took the photo below showing Centennial Island and the split of the Concord River.


I'm showing a summer photo with a December one because the winter is often the best time to take pictures because you see more, although not as  pretty.
Wamesit Falls Overlook.

The back of Waterhead Apartments, former home of the West End Gym.
As I crossed the new bridge below, I took a photo of the rapids.

When you come off the bridge on the walk, you will be at the far end of this parking lot for residents and visitors. You are also able to park here to start the trail to Lawrence Street or Rogers Street. You enter here from Lawrence Street, and will go over a car bridge.




From, the bridge, on the opposite side, I noticed a trail, and walked a short bit, it was time for me to leave after I took this picture.


I came back another day to walk this porton. The rapids were wild.

Nice looking trail, I thought.
I ran into a couple of people.


The trail takes you behind the Centennial Island Apartments.

I bet this will be lovely in the spring.
The jogger was enjoying the trail. The bridge ahead is on Rogers Street. I didn't go all the way, because of frozen hands.

In the following week, the trail was too icy for me, so I drove to the Rogers Street area and parked, then walked around to give you an idea of the end of this trail. Merrill Street, off of Lawrence St. is a very short, curvy oneway street that will bring you to this park.
The Jollene Dubner Park, at the corner of Rogers Street and Marshall Street. The park is small and offers no parking, except for a few on-street spaces.

Views from the Rogers Street bridge of the Concord River and trail.
A man with a dog who was interested in me.

The above and below photos so part of inside the Park and part of the trail.

Note: I would love to learn the original names of the two mills and what they made. Anybody know?
Nice youtube video showing part of the trail and where the two new bridges would be installed. It was made last year. https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=RH7ltnOER8Q

The Lowell Parks and Conservation Trust has an informative website, it was very useful in learning about this project. The map above and the video both came from this site. HTTPS://LOWELLLANDTRUST.ORG/CONCORD-RIVER-GREENWAY-2/

Thursday, August 5, 2021

First and Third Cousins Sharing Their Old Family Albums, and Look What I Got!

My first Poole cousin shared many of the photos with me in 2021.

In December 2001, I received an email from a rather young researcher inquiring if I was related to a particular member of his Poole family. David found me through a Rootsweb Gedcom and provided quite a bit of information about his line. We emailed back and forth several times and he reluctantly shared some photos of his line, which I am showing at the end of this post. It wasn't his album and the owner wasn't keen on his sharing. David and I are third cousins once removed. When family trees online came into our lives, I often thought about these pictures, but always kept them private. We didn't correspond again until I wrote him recently, fortunately, he had the same address and email.

In the past few months, I have been talking genealogy with my two first cousins, one living in Illinois and the other in Colorado. I met the Illinois cousin when she was about three in 1953 at our grandfather's house. Several years ago, she and her husband photographed a large family album, with about 100 small pictures all glued on! Each page was sent to me, but it was put aside until now since I did no genealogy last year. I knew it would be a big project because I couldn't read some writing and it was difficult cropping individual photos out of groups of 4 or more tiny pictures.

This year through a discussion with my two cousin sisters, I learned they were going to get together and plan to talk about their genealogy. Since I am a first cousin, with a lot of information, and they have the album, I told them I would send quite a bit of information to them before they meet. They don't use a database like my RootsWeb. I'm not sure either about FamilySearch.org or the other genealogy companies, I won't name them.

I realize these albums and the story will mean little to anybody else, but it is important to me to share what I have and what they have, and our relationship with each other. The lineage chart was done in order to figure out their relationships for this post. I wish more writers would do lineage charts to help readers follow their complicated family stories.

William Frederick Poole and his wife Fanny (Frances) Gleason. I can't tell which of the two photos of him is the oldest. I think he is younger than the below picture. He is one of my most famous ancestors. I've written a lot about him, but here is Wikipedia's information.

There are many photos of William, see my post The Aging of My Great-Grandfather. Now I have a few additional photos to add.

Clarence Frederick Poole was my grandfather. His wife was Marjory, her name and ancestry aren't shown, because I didn't want anything about my father shown. I have photos of two grandparents (Clarence and Marjory), two greats (Charles Clarence Poole and Anna Poole), four great-grandparents (Charles, Mary, William, and Frances), and two great-great-grandmothers (Eliza Cutler Poole and Elizabeth Wilder Poole).


I believe the oldest photo is of Eliza Cutler Poole, dau. of Manassah Cutler (Wikipedia article) who was born on 4 July 1779 and died on 22 April 1854. Mother of Charles Henry Poole.
Mary Abbie / Abby Daniels Poole (wife of Charles Henry Poole) Born 5 Feb. 1825. Below, she is with her granddaughter, Frances.

Nurse Frances and the Flu was a popular blog post of mine, it might be of interest to you.


I'm not sure if we ever met, but I was lucky to inherit my great aunt's dining room table when my mother died in 1990. Dorothy died in 1965 in Florida. Her death was noted in my diary which I still have.


Charles Henry Poole went to West Point. He married Mary Abbie Daniels, her father was Stephen Daniels of Salem, MA. (There are six direct lines of Stephen Daniels in her line.) He was a civil engineer and surveyed San Diego, Roxbury, MA, and Long Island, MA. Also wrote the 250+ page manuscript of the Poole family located at the New England Historic Genealogy Society, and I copied it, and then a friend transcribed it for my blog.


Charles Clarence Poole married Annie Poole, they were my great-grandparents. He was a patent lawyer.

Annie Poole and Charles Clarence Poole, perhaps before they married. At least some names were clearly written with dates in this album.

My Great-grandmother, Annie Poole married Charles Clarence Poole in 1884.

Clarence Frederick Poole, my grandfather. He was a patent attorney like his father, Charles Clarence.

I feel this is a sweet page. The pictures at the upper right show of my grandmother Marjory Adams Poole holding my father in 1919. I have the original photo, so apparently, copies were made. The photo below was enlarged so you could read why these pictures were taken.


Below are photos from the second album. I selected just a few to show.

The Family of William Frederick Poole, his wife Fanny, daughters, Alice and Anna (their husbands), son William Frederick and grandchildren.

Elizabeth Wilder, mother of William F. Poole
Born 1801 in Keene, New Hampshire
Died January 1859 in So. Danvers, Massachusetts

Two photos of Alice Poole, born in 1855. She was a sister of Annie.