Friday, August 30, 2013

Family Recipe Friday - Mary Jo’s Brandy Slush

Mary Jo's Brandy Slush
This recipe for Brandy Slush has many great memories for me. And….it’s really delicious!   I remember Mary Jo, my very special friend for what seems like my whole life, making this for our Christmas holidays together. Although I know she didn’t save it for only those times of the year.  In fact, it would be perfect for these hot summer days.  So, I’m sharing it for the Labor Day holiday weekend.
Nancy and MJ in Maine 1980s
We had many refreshing drinks of this together over the years.  Our friendship has meant so much in so many ways.  She is family. Even though we are thousands of miles apart now, we keep in touch and visit when we can.  We have fond memories of our “working days”  in Indianapolis, sharing the ups and downs in life and of trips and events we had together. This photo is taken in the 1980s on a fun trip we took to the northeast, sitting on the edge at Bar Harbor, Maine. 

I hope others enjoy the Brandy Slush from MJ as much as I have.

Tuesday, August 27, 2013

Making More Family History - 2013 Weber Kuhn Reunion

Last Saturday, August 24, 2013, put another page in the family history.  Our Kuhn-Weber descendants came together to reminisce and to keep the memories piling up. I believe everyone there would agree that the good times kept rolling. 
My 2013 summary and several photos are posted on our Weber Kuhn Reunion page. Click here for the update.  Thanks so much to every family member who took part. What a nice day! 
Just for fun…..here’s a photo in about 1953 of Tillie Kuhn Weber with eight of her grandchildren.  Then….fast forward to 2012 and the next photo of Tillie’s grandchildren.  Can you match those faces after almost 50 years?!

Grandma Weber with grandkids, about 1953.Weber Kuhn cousins, 2012.


For those who weren’t able to attend the reunion, I’ve posted the latest family newsletter.   here’s a link to the 2013 Weber Kuhn Tribune newsletter.

Friday, August 23, 2013

Family Recipe Friday - Aunt Ruth’s Zucchini Nut Bread

Zucchini Bread Aunt Ruth 1Zucchini Bread Aunt Ruth 2
The zucchini Zucchini is ready to chop in the food processor.are popping up all over!  Aunt Ruth recently received a giant zucchini from the garden of daughter, Anne.  She tells me that the best use of those gargantuan veggies is to make them into bread.  So, she was busy grating it and making her favorite Zucchini Bread recipe.  Ruth says this bread freezes just great.  Then she has some ready whenever she wants to bring something along for a pitch-in or serve it to the family for a holiday.
She let me snap a photo so we could have the authentic recipe to share on our Family Recipe Friday series.
Thanks so much, Aunt Ruth.  Enjoy!

Friday, August 16, 2013

Family Recipe Friday - Picallili by Dot Hurley

Picallili recipe, pg 1, Dot HurleyPicallili, Dot Hurley, p. 2

This Picallili recipe is passed along from my husband’s mother, Dorothy “Dot” Hurley, Indianapolis, Indiana.  I am so pleased to have a few of her recipes, since she was an excellent cook!  This Picallili has the kind of special touches to it that are so welcomed in the winter when you can pull a jar off the pantry shelf.
DorothyBegley
I think this photo of Dot in the 1920s is fabulous!   I didn’t get to meet her. What I’ve learned about her makes me feel we would have shared a lot and had some good times. I know she could have taught me a lot about making Picallili and pies.

Wednesday, August 14, 2013

Wordless Wednesday (Almost): Theresa Kuhn Civil War Widow’s Pension





Civil War Widow's Pension,  request for increase, 1884. 
My post for this Wordless Wednesday, Almost, is a page from the Civil War Widow’s Pension record of Theresa Kuhn, widow of Barney Kuhn, Connersville, Indiana.  There's a sad chapter of Kuhn family history in this one page dated March 10, 1884: Declaration for Increase of Pension. We learn about Barney's service, his disease and his resulting death. Then, the couple's children are listed, letting us know that two of them were living in the soldiers childrens home. These are hard times for the Kuhn family, summed up in one page.

Friday, August 9, 2013

Family Recipe Friday - Aunt Peg’s Fried Green Tomatoes

Special Fried Green Tomatoes
Slice up your green tomatoes straight off the vine.
Beat some eggs and dip your sliced tomatoes.
Coat the slices in your favorite onion ring mix.
Fry them in a skillet of hot olive oil
Peg Stull getting ready for some yummy Fried Green Tomatoes.
Get ready to enjoy Aunt Peg’s favorite way to make Fried Green Tomatoes.  She swears this is the tastiest way she has found to make them, after many years of anticipating the Indiana tomatoes arriving on the vines.

Wednesday, August 7, 2013

Wordless Wednesday - Harry Lawrence Weber, 1887-1946

My maternal grandfather, Harry Lawrence Weber, is approximately ten years old in this photo. Today is the 126th anniversary of his birthday, 7 August 1887.  Harry L. Weber was born in Indianapolis, Indiana to Harry A. and Mary (Keen) Weber on August 7, 1887.  He was the eldest of their 12 children. 

Monday, August 5, 2013

Ladies In My Line: Elizabeth Gertrude Wilmsen Niehaus -- 1847-1895

I’m working my way back through the ladies in my ancestry, developing the story for each woman as far as my records will take me.  I am hopeful that each one of these Ladies In My Line posts brings some kind of new piece of information or a clearer focus for me. The previous stories are at the link for Ladies In My Line.   These ladies aren’t famous, or even necessarily remarkable.  They are critically important to all of us in this family though.  So, let’s talk about the second great grandmother of my daughter and all the children ofEmsdetten, Westphalia, Germany map my numerous Niehaus cousins:                
Elizabeth Gertrude Wilmsen Niehaus was born to Gerhard and Elizabeth (Kamp) Wilmsen on 16 December 1847, just before the great revolutions of 1848 that occurred in many areas in Germany, due to social upheaval and economic problems.  She was born in Hollingen, Steinfurt, Westphalia, Germany, a village on the edge of Emsdetten in northern Germany. Westphalia was a province of the Kingdom of Prussia, a member of the German Confederation at the time that Gertrude was born.  She was baptized six days after her birth in St. Pankratius Catholic Church in Emsdetten.  She was also married in this church in 1873 to Joseph Niehaus.  The map I am posting here shows the general location of Emsdetten in the the northern area of Germany. And the link below takes you to a current map with links to the hometowns of Gertrude and Joseph.
Click here to see a map online of the community where Gertrude grew up and lived until 1885.
Suffice it to say, the history of Germany is an integral part of Gertrude, her impressions and her mindset.  She must have become determined to find the way to provide new opportunities and a different everyday life for her family.  Gertrude and Joseph chose to emigrate from Germany to the United States after twelve years of marriage, bringing eight children to a somewhat uncertain situation.
I don’t have any records of siblings or parents of Gertrude’s emigrating from Westphalia.  I expect that further research will provide more details on her family in Germany.  As far as I know today, she left her parents and other family behind. Family historians tell us that her husband, Joseph, was a merchant in Emsdetten, selling the rugsGertrude Wilmsen Niehaus that he wove. They sold the business to come to the U.S.  Joseph did have one brother who made the trip before him, Bernard.   Perhaps that brother wrote back to Emsdetten encouraging Joseph and Gertrude to join him and relating the possibilities for their future in Indianapolis.  We won’t know exactly the motivations or reasoning for the family’s move. They were among many German families who emigrated to America in the 1880s. Their decision to be a part of that movement brought Gertrude's family to Indianapolis, Indiana in 1885 or 1886.   
Pulling together the family’s history is gradually giving a clearer portrait of Gertrude.  For instance, during my first ten years of family research I had no actual image of her, just my imagination. But thanks to a cousin and fellow researcher, GeorgiaLee Taylor, I'm happy to be sharing this portrait of Gertrude. It was tucked away in Minnie Niehaus Kirn's (Gertrude's youngest child) photos that were passed down in the family.  The expression on her face relays to me a kind and pleasant demeanor, with a confidence about her.  I may be reading more than is attributable to the photo.  But I’m going to say that’s my prerogative.  
I am guessing this image of Gertrude was made around the time of her marriage to Joseph in 1873, when she was 25. There are a couple of reasons for my speculation on this date. The first is that her marriage would have been a reason in itself for the portrait to be made. Her age here isn’t easy to determine, but she looks young to me. I do know that in the 1870s brides wore whatever dress they could afford, not buying one for only this one occasion. The white wedding dress wasn’t necessarily the custom in the 1870s, especially not in the middle class. Through research on 1870s clothing styles, I've learned that ruffles and pleated frills are characteristic trimmings of that era. So there's a good chance this is Gertrude's wedding attire. Lastly, I am assuming that Gertrude and Joseph didn’t have the extra funds to have a portrait made of her after the many children began accumulating.  Therefore, I think that this painting would be from the time before she was married.  I am just happy to see her now.
During the first six years of establishing a new home in Indiana she gave birth to four children, including my grandfather, John Niehaus, who was born on July 4, 1889.  One of her sons, Francis, died at four months in 1892.   Gertrude and Joseph Niehaus’s twelve children were: Gerhardt, born:1874; Anna, born: 1875; Rosa, born 1876; Mary Anna, born: 1878; Josephine, born: 1880, Bernard, born: 1881; Lena, born 1883; Joseph, born 1884; Clara, born 1887; John, born: 1889; Francis, born: 1892;  Wilhelmina, born: 1893.   Judging from the actions of her daughters and sons, some of the grit, determination and loving spirit that Gertrude seems to portray was passed to her offspring. They took care of one another during all of their lives and knew how to play and laugh when they had the time.   
Gertrude’s lifetime in Indianapolis was not nearly as long as it should have been. Unfortunately, with eleven children ranging in age from 21 to 2, Gertrude succumbed to meningitis in 1895, four months before her 48th birthday.   She had only nine years to experience their new life in America.  She was able to spend five of those years living at their family home at 567 South West Street in Indianapolis, Indiana.  Joseph setup his weaving loom in their home on West Street in order to make his living weaving rugs.  They were building the life that Gertrude must have dreamed would be good for her family.  Records indicate that most of the children lived in the Niehaus family home on West Street until they married.
Not one of Gertrude’s many grandchildren ever knew her.  I hope to bring her life to light for the family that follows.

For a Descendant List of Gertrude's parents, CLICK HERE.


Saturday, August 3, 2013

Niehaus Family Reunion -- September 15, 2013


It’s time again for our annual Niehaus Family Reunion!  The date for this year’s gathering is a few weeks later than has been the custom. Niehaus Reunion Invite The requests came in to try holding it later to avoid the high temps that we experienced in 2012.  Thanks to Rosie Walters again for her super planning.  Hope to see lots of family on September 15.

In case anyone reading this out in the Internet world isn’t sure who this particular Niehaus Reunion is all about, here are a few of the surnames we claim within our clan: Donahue, Kirn, Lark, Hoskinson, Niehaus, Sapp, Stull, and, of course, many more marriage extensions of these names.
For more information on our family, click here.

If you have any question about the reunion, let me know in the comment section below. I will gladly get the answers for you.

Friday, August 2, 2013

Family Recipe Friday - Chicken Stroganoff from Cousin Nancy

 
Chicken Stroganoff
Weber cousins with Grandma.1-1/2 lbs. chicken (frozen is ok)
1 envelope of Lipton onion soup mix
1-16 oz. container sour cream
1 can cream of mushroom soup
 
Grease/pam a crockpot - mix the last three ingredients together
and pour over the chicken.
Cook in the crockpot for about 7-8 hours.
Serve over rice or noodles.
 

I am ready to make this one right now!   My cousin, Nancy Weber Gholson, shared this favorite of hers. It’s one of those recipes that’s so simple, but so good you can taste it when you’re reading it.

In this photo Nancy is the darling little girl holding on to the table.  I am sitting on Grandma Weber’s lap and cousin Barb Weber is on the right. The estimated year is 1952.

Thanks for contributing the Chicken Stroganoff recipe, Nancy!