Skip to main content

Featured

What I Learned by Researching Mary Jane Sheridan

  In January, I committed to in-depth research on the under-documented women in my family tree. I had hopes of researching one woman every 1-2 months. My first foray into this type of research, however, took over three months!  There were a lot of things I learned doing this research and writing Mary Jane's story. Here are some of them. Things that went right Discovering and using a wide range of resources —I enjoyed finding and using a terrific range of resources discovered while I created a locality guide for Erie County, New York, and added to my Ontario, Canada, locality guide. I have begun to gather many Cleveland and Cuyahoga County, Ohio, resources and have started a locality guide for that as well, including maps, websites, record sets, etc. Fleshing out several periods in Mary Jane's life —I feel good about the details I was able to bring to her story by researching various social history aspects of her times, such as life in the Hydraulics neighborhood of Buffa...

Summertime Memories

And now for something completely different...summertime memories.

Some of my favorite summer memories are from when we lived in Willowick after my parents got divorced. As Mom was raising us kids by herself, she went back to work after the divorce, working long factory hours in order to make enough to keep the five of us afloat. Usually she only had two weeks of vacation a year, when the factories “shut down” for those middle-of-the-summer week. (I think this was to save on electricity, and to have everyone gone at once, rather than to have people taking vacations at different times, which would slow the assembly lines down.)

 

The Blue Streak at Cedar Point. My brother Tim & I loved to ride this together!

Mom made sure that those two weeks were something to remember, as it was the only “vacation” we ever got as kids. That meant we made all kinds of excursions: We went to amusement parks like Geauga Lake, or Cedar Point in Sandusky, or Sea World. We went to Mentor Headlands Beach to swim in Lake Erie, or visited museums like the Natural History Museum or the Cleveland Aquarium, etc.

 

For the day-long trips like to the amusement park, Mom always made picnic lunches (and also to save money, of course!). We would find a picnic pavilion, put our picnic basket down, cover it with a tablecloth, and off we would go. At lunch or dinner time, we would come back to our food and eat. 


We usually had cold chicken, Mom's famous, yummy potato salad, brownies, chips, and “pop,” which is what we called all soft drinks at the time. Had a Pepsi? It was a pop. Wanted a root beer? It was a pop. Most of these foods & drinks were things we never got to eat regularly, so it made them all the more special. 


We always came home tired, sunburned, and stuffed with good food. Usually we drove home late at night, with the car windows rolled all the way down (no air conditioning in cars then!), and the wind blowing hard into the car. Sometimes we would lean on each other or slouch down in the car seats and fall asleep - we did not wear seat belts then either.


I will never forget how special my Mom made all our summer “vacations.” She created “stay-cations” before they were a thing!

 

Until next time...

 

IMAGE:

Wikipedia (https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Blue_Streak_%28Cedar_Point%29 : 7 May 2023), "Blue Streak (Cedar Point)," last updated 7 May 2023, at 19:44 (UTC).

 


Comments

  1. What a great memory to document!

    ReplyDelete
  2. Ready for summer, food and amusement parks and all. Fun post!

    ReplyDelete
    Replies
    1. It makes me want to make my Mom's potato salad! Thanks for reading.

      Delete
  3. Awe, I love this! Your mom did summer vacations and outings just the way I did with my kids; no matter how tight money was, I always strived to make them as special as possible to give them something they could remember and cherish througout their lives! P.S. That ride looks scary! ;)

    ReplyDelete
    Replies
    1. Thanks! My Mom was the master of making something out of nothing. Her lessons still come in handy!

      Delete

Post a Comment