Showing posts with label STREETER. Show all posts
Showing posts with label STREETER. Show all posts

Thursday, February 2, 2012

Easter Sunday 1958?


From Pam Streeter Wadsworth:


Dave came across this photo taken outside of the 453 Northland Ct (Rockford, MI)  house when cleaning out Byrdie's apartment. I am guessing this to be Easter Sunday, 1957.
Can you name everyone?
 
 
Here is who I have identified (names at the time of picture) :
L-R back row: Pauline & Harold Streeter
L-R middle row: Pam Streeter, Violet Armstrong, Frances Pearl Atwood, Brydie Sarkees & Fred Sarkees
L-R front row:  C. Randy Streeter, Val Streeter and (I believe) Janice Emery
 
That's Grandma Vi's camper in the back (actually in the front of the lot).  Oh the memories...   :)
 
Pam

From Mark Streeter:

This is interesting. I’m not in the picture and I can’t think of a reason why—Randy looks more like three than the two, (and JUST two), he would have been on Easter, 1957. The trailer in the background was already painted, ( Grandpa John had a white trailer painted red and white to complement the red Rambler station wagon he bought for Grandma—which I think was a ’56 or ’57 model), and he painted it sometime after he bought it. I would bet on ’58 and maybe I was out of the picture due to becoming ready for or getting changed after having been baptized at the YMCA, and yeah, I’m with you on Janice Emery. I might be wrong but that’s my shot at it. Cool picture.


From Pam Streeter Wadsworth:

I remember that baptisms happened in the morning at the YMCA before Church.  I recall the white coats that Val and I had that Easter.  It was my pride & joy.  Mark, you were probably reading a book somewhere...  It could have been 1958, but certainly, no later. Looks like we are standing where the garage is currently. I had forgotten about the sidewalk in front of the house.  Don't you love Fred's hat?  And I remember that jacket of Byrdie's and thinking how rich they were...  My guess is Grandpa John was taking the picture.  Fun.




Monday, October 24, 2011

BJ's Eulogy

This eulogy was written by Mark, her husband.  I like to think of it as a love letter ...

Barbara Jo (BJ) Hamburg-Streeter
Barbara Jo Hamburg was born October 13, 1952, the first of five children to be born to Architect/Builder David Hayes Hamburg, and Susan Lee Jones-Hamburg, mother and homemaker of Clinton and Shelby Townships, and in time, Rochester Hills, MI. BJ, as she was to come to be known to her family and friends was followed over the next nine years by Mark, Carol, Nancy and Robert. The family loved the outdoor life of Michigan, and spent summers camping from the shores of Lake Superior to the banks of the Detroit River, accompanied by their 165 pound St. Bernard, Pretty Penny. BJ attended schools in Shelby Township and finished her high school career at Rochester High School as a graduate of the class of 1970. While still in high school she worked at the historic Yates Cider Mill and is still remembered by its owners for her attentiveness and kindness to customers. After high school she worked and attended classes at Oakland Community College and Oakland University and in 1972 spent the spring semester at Grand Valley State College in Allendale, MI. There she met Mark Streeter, a fellow student with whom she became friends and who introduced her to the Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-Day Saints. In July of 1975 she became a member of the Church and on October 18, 1975 they were married in Grand Rapids, MI. They were active members of the Michigan State University Branch of the LDS church and filled various leadership roles. In August 1979 Mark and BJ were sealed for time and eternity in the Washington D.C. temple. In 1980 Mark was accepted into a Masters Program at the Marriott Graduate School of Management at BYU.
Mark received his Masters Degree in August, 1982 and on October 4 1982 BJ gave birth to a son, Colin.  On January 19, 1984 A second child, a daughter, Gillian was born. In May, 1985 work took the family moved to Greenville, SC. They were members of the Greenville II ward and BJ worked in the Primary and Young Women’s organization and Mark served as a counselor in the bishopric. Colin had begun school and Gillian was in preschool when in Mark’s work took them to Sugar Land, the family’s present home. BJ was soon called to serve as a Relief Society Enrichment counselor and compassionate service leader, while working as a teller at a local credit union. With both children in school the BJ enjoyed an active church and community life. In 1995 BJ left her job to be a full time mother and homemaker, and to fill a calling as Young Women’s president in the newly formed Richmond TX ward in 1996. In 2000 BJ resumed her employment with Houston Federal Credit Union. In 2002 Colin and Gillian graduated from Stephen F. Austin High School, and Gillian went on to BYU to pursue a bachelor’s degree, and Colin took a job as an IT assistant at Houston Federal with Mom. In 2006 BJ began to complain of a persistent fatigue and dull backache she attributed to a bad office chair. In November when repeated doctor’s appointments and antibiotic treatments did not relieve her symptoms, BJ began to look for more specialized treatment.  BJ was diagnosed Stage IV Inflammatory Breast Cancer with metastasis to the lymph nodes and the boney portions of 4 vertebrae on February 8, 2007.  Chemo therapy, surgery, and radiation followed in the next year. Her response to treatment was called “dramatic” by her doctors and her prognosis was good.   The reprieve from intense treatment afforded BJ an opportunity to visit family in Michigan in 2008 but surgery later that year was needed to arrest a recurrence of the disease.  In April 2009 BJ was able to attend Gillian’s BYU graduation; however, upon her return another recurrence necessitated another round of chemo later that year. In June 2010 BJ prepared for a stem cell transplant that posed the best prospect of freeing her from her cancer. Complications with post transplant treatment resulted in BJ being hospitalized for six months. However, in weeks after her January 2011 release she walked unassisted, and improvements in energy and stamina increased daily.  By the summer of 2011, however, her energy began to flag and in late September doctors reported a ‘stunning’ escalation of the tumor cells population.  On Monday October 10 at 6:45 pm CDT Barbara Jo Streeter succumbed to her disease.
These are the facts of BJ’s life, accurate in every detail yet as empty of the truth of who she was as her height measurement or shoe size. BJ’s broad and deep impression on those around her over the six decades cannot be reflected in the mere chronology of the events of her life. 
Those who knew her best noted four virtues that made BJ the exceptional person she was-- things those who knew her loved about her and that people who only met her in passing, noticed.
First, BJ was compassionate and caring. If anyone was ever born compassionate it would have been BJ. As a four year old,  BJ would begin to save portions of her lunch sandwiches, cookies and other treats in a dresser drawer anticipating her grandparents’ Christmas  visit to Michigan. Then, when Grandma Dorothy arrived back home in Iowa and unpacked her suitcase to she found well wrapped but invariably crusty sandwich halves and stale cookies provided by BJ should “Grandma get hungry on her trip back to Iowa”.
Mormon Missionaries rarely leave leftovers when they come to dinner, but when they did BJ would be sure that the food was packaged up and in their hands when they left. BJ made it a point to learn what each missionary liked and to make that dish when they came for dinner. She got to where she’d make duplicate meals: one to be shared with family and their voracious guests together and an identical meal packed up to could go home with the missionaries for later in the week.
A long time neighbor came to understand BJ’s caring when she took him to his appointment for his own cancer surgery, when his elderly parents could not. For over twenty years Holidays schedules included family dinners with him as the exclusive guest, whenever his own family’s celebrations were over.
BJ was an excellent listener and had a particular gift for making you feel as if you were the only concern in her life. Her niece noted that when BJ came to Gillian’s graduation from BYU: “She found time exclusively for me!—after all, it was Gillie’s time and here she was listening to me like I was the only person in the universe”. When she excused herself from their conversation to run after her toddler, she returned to find that BJ quietly gathered up and washed her dishes for her.
BJ never needed acquaintance to engage in her caring. While standing in a restaurant line for her order she watched a young mother wrestle with her three small children as she opened her purse to pay for her meal. BJ took a bill from the change she had just received and handed it to the counter man and said “I’ve got that” and tousled the oldest child’s hair and said, “You have a nice day with your Mom!” and merely walked away smiling.
 BJ was also gracious. BJ could not stand the idea of being the cause of another’s embarrassment or see another being embarrassed or humiliated in her presence.
As a Young Women’s president BJ had a number of young women who had neither the means nor the equipment to attend the annual Girls’ camp. Two sisters who obviously wanted to attend but also didn’t want others to know their single mother could not afford the camping gear they needed, not to mention the fees to attend the camp. BJ decided to enter the girls in a “contest”: they had to compile a camp equipment list with complete with recommended models, brands and stores that stocked the items. She secured their mother’s permission to take them to local outdoor stores for “research”. She worked them hard--the girls learned a practical lesson about selecting neither the most expensive nor the cheapest, but the best for the purpose. At the next meeting, she asked the sisters to share their list of recommended equipment and sources to the rest of the girls. Later she arrived at their apartment with the gear they had identified explaining that their research had won them the gear, and their fees for girls camp. The girls have long since gone their own ways but their mother who had asked for an explanation remembered the gracious act that allowed her girls to attend well equipped and unembarrassed by an act of overt charity, and related the story.

 Another women’s leader in the ward spoke of BJ’s legacy when only last week she felt drawn for an unaccountable reason to a store next to the one she intended to visit and found herself face to face with a young woman who had been one of BJ’s charges when she was a girl. She had read of BJ’s declining condition and “just needed to talk with somebody about Sister Streeter”. She said she felt blessed to have someone come into the store who knew BJ as well. As a girl she was raised on a isolated farm far from other girls in the congregation and BJ had worked hard to overcome that distance and keep her involved with visits, cards and phone calls. This young woman now married and on her own had lost touch with much that had brought her joy when she was younger, and how memories of BJ were part of that joy. Remembering BJ’s kindness and graciousness, she said, made want to sort out her life and get back to those connections that had been so valuable in her past. .
Third, BJ lived the ideal of sister hood. Blessed with two sisters, Carol and Nancy she cherished that unique relationship sisters have with each other; Carol’s early death, also due to cancer, made her relationship with Nancy all the more precious to her. Sisterhood is a pervasive idea in the life of LDS women and BJ reveled in it. A husband in grad school often meant long hours of isolation and frequent absences for her. BJ made acquaintances among the students and other student wives that lived around her. Among those were Sharon Meisner and Kelly Stank, two girls from Mark’s home town whom BJ had come to know through his family. With Sharon she formed a special, hard to define bond that BJ came to call “Sister by Choice”.  When pressed to define this intense, intimate relationship, BJ could only explain that “months could pass by without contact, yet when we meet, we pick up exactly where we left off as if no time had passed,” and “there’s an assurance that a request made to another of us is as good as filled upon asking.” That unique take on sisterhood was distinctive with just a few women BJ knew and loved. To be sure others joined this intensely personal sorority over time, with varying levels of closeness and intimacy but four stood in the first circle for her: Sharon Meisner-Edvalson, Jane Dykema-Streeter, wife of Mark’s late brother Randy, Marianne Gibbons-Palmer, and Connie Camarda-Van Vliet. This was not to discredit the “second circle”, those many sisters who drove BJ to her many appointments throughout her treatments and fed her family in her absence and sat with her in her home during the long months of recovery and remaining weeks of her life, who labored with BJ in Relief Society, Young Women’s and Primary, but that these four were the special spirits that should they all have lived into their 90’s would remain the sisters of choice without whom each of their lives would have been diminished.
Finally, courage permeated BJ’s life. More often than not, it was the courage was that was the common place stuff of daily living.  Mark’s decision to go to grad school in business rather than becoming the English professor she had expected to be married to baffled her. But supportiveness and commitment were part of BJ’s life too and when he was accepted, BJ, who had never lived outside the state of Michigan, and her mother,  drove on ahead to Provo to find an apartment and a job while Mark packed and moved the house a few weeks later.
But BJ was acting courageously much earlier than that.  On vacation in 1977, Mark convinced BJ to make a detour in their trip to visit an ancient Indian ceremonial site atop a mountain in Wyoming. It was a wet, raw day with shreds of fog clinging to a narrow road where the ground on either side fell steeply away three hundred feet or more and populated with bawling Hereford steers that suddenly appeared out of the fog. Mark suggested that they park the car and walk up. BJ trudged the first few hundred yards and gasped at a half dozen appearances of ghostly cattle when she’d had enough and headed back to the car.  Mark soldiered on; savoring the adventure.  In 40 minutes he reached the summit, and walked about the Medicine Wheel with reverential awe. He talked with a retired couple about the significance of the site and they cordially offered him a ride down the mountain in their car. They had just cleared the summit when out of the fog, gingerly inching its way up the narrow road came BJ in their AMC Hornet with a death grip on the wheel and tears streaming down her face.  “You were gone for an hour up there!” she cried. “I was afraid that something had happened to you so I had a prayer and started up the car.”  If courage is not a state of fearlessness but the determination to act in spite of fear, BJ brimmed with it.  As long as someone she loved was at the center of that need for courage.
But the last five years of her life changed all that. But BJ sternly warned against giving into the temptation to make them some kind of monument that defined her life rather than the preceding fifty four. In a rare moment of uncharacteristic, overt assertion, BJ made it clear that any memorial of her needed to focus on her life and not the details of her illness and death. She had no wish to be defined by her disease.
BJ had lived by these values throughout her life, back when no one could have imagined the onset of the unimaginably cruel disease which she endured with such dignity and grace.  Having lived her life in such a manner, could have faced its end in any other way? She did wrestle with the anger and the “Why Me? Questions”, with which all cancer patients appear to struggle, but only briefly. The faith she embraced 36 years before is blessed with abundance of scripture, and from the Book of Mormon came a passage that was to be her talisman through the successive re-occurrences of disease and the succession of difficult and painful treatments for them.
 Wherefore, ye must press forward with a steadfastness in Christ, having a perfect brightness of hope, and a love of God and of all men. Wherefore, if ye shall press forward, feasting upon the word of Christ, and endure to the end, behold, thus saith the Father: Ye shall have eternal life.
Among the many notes and emails of condolence that Mark received in the last week was this from a friend, who had known Mark and BJ almost from the beginning of their marriage,
“…to make the distinction between BJ’s physical beauty and the beauty of her soul seems to me to be superfluous and perhaps even trivializes her.  Barbara was simply—beautiful”.  And so she is.

Thursday, October 13, 2011

BJ Streeter




From Mark Streeter...
"The girl of my dreams has become the girl of my dreams, again."
--Gordon Bitner Hinckley on the passing of his wife.

And so it is with me; BJ got her release from her mortal mission Monday, October 10, 2011 at about 6:45PM CDT. With her customary quiet and subtlty, she took her leave with no noise, no fanfare and no soul cry--just so quietly that competent medical people took better than a half hour to determine that she no longer had a pulse. And for the long warfare she waged with her disease, it seemed to me that it was only the justice of heaven to leave this way for what she had already endured with courage and graciousness.

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BJ's Obituary:

BJ Streeter

Born: October 13, 1952
Died: October 10, 2011
Services: The service for BJ will be Monday at 11:00 A.M. at The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter Day Saints, 2780 Leonard, NE, Grand Rapids, MI with Bishop Michael Robinaugh, officiating.
Visitation: Family and friends may greet BJ’s family on Sunday from 5-8 P.M. at the funeral home.
BJ (Barbara Jo) Streeter, age 58, of Sugar Land, TX, passed away at her residence on Monday, October 10, 2011. She graduated from Rochester High School in 1970 and then earned her AB degree from Oakland Community College. BJ worked as a Funds Manager for Houston Federal Credit Union. She was an active member and youth and women’s leader of the Richmond (TX) Second Ward of the Church of Jesus Christ of Latter Day Saints. BJ is survived by her loving husband, Mark Streeter; children, Colin Streeter, Houston, TX and Gillian Streeter, Sugar Land, TX ; mother, Mrs. Susan Hamburg, of Rochester Hills; brother, Mark and Mary Beth Hamburg, Morrow ,OH ; sister, Nancy and Robert Einheuser, Leonard, MI; brother, Robert and Anna Hamburg, Lebanon OR; aunt, Byrdie Sarkees, Grand Rapids; and nieces and nephews. She was preceded in death by her father, David Hamburg, brother, Patrick, and sister, Carol Beth Vanderventer. The service for BJ will be Monday at 11:00 A.M. at The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter Day Saints, 2780 Leonard, NE, Grand Rapids, MI with Bishop Michael Robinaugh, officiating. Interment will be in Rockford Cemetery. Family and friends may greet BJ’s family on Sunday from 5-8 P.M. at the funeral home.

Tuesday, November 2, 2010

Small Town News, Rockford, MI


from Larry Isberg:
More on the eye surgery story.  Ruth suffered from a detached retina and was referred to a surgeon in St. Louis from treatment.  As it was described to me the doctor 'spot welded' the retina back in place.  The surgery was new and and they were concerned about possible injury to the eye afterwards so the recovery period in the  hospital was several weeks.  Then she had an eye patch for a period.
Lila Streeter Isberg traveled with Ruth to St. Louis and stayed with her until she returned home.  The surgery was a sucess as Ruth had no additional vision problems afterwards (that I know of).  She still had to wear glasses.
Today I think the "spot weld" was done by laser and that she may have been an early patient in the development of that process which now is done quite routinely.
McMillan Hospital is now part of Barnes Hospital in St. Louis.  It is still a leading hospital in the midwest. In my days when I sold surgical instruments I called on Barnes Hospital. 

Monday, October 18, 2010

William Huckleberry Family

from Pam:  Here is a family picture of the Wm Huckleberrys and 2 sisters that need to be baptized by 2 sisters. Grandma wrote their names on the picture, Vera & Minnie. There is also a note regarding the family and other relatives, Elizabeth Boyle & Sarah Quick (notice the name of the place Sarah was born). In 1800, Sarah married Phillip Huckleberry and had a son named Jacob who married Susannah Boyle, who had a sister name Elizabeth -interesting?  





from Nikki:  On Saturday, October 16, 2010 in the LDS Palmyra New York Temple, both Minnie A. Huckleberry (b. July 1899 in MI) and Vera Huckleberry (2 July 1908 in Montcalm, MI) were baptized by proxy.  My daughters Jillie and Reagan were able to do that for them as well as the following family members:
Sarah Quick b. about 1780 in Quick's Run, Fayette, VA
Elizabeth Boyle b. 1800, daughter of John Boyle and Rosanna McLean
Mary Matilda Nutter b. in MI
Mary J. Spencer b. 1840 in Canada, daughter of Samuel Spencer and Elizabeth Ward
Charisse Spencer b. 1853 in Canada, daughter of Samuel Spencer and Elizabeth Ward
Lula E Cornell b. Aug 1886 in MI, daughter of Thaddeus Cornell and Esther Brown
Ellen b. 15 Jan 1824
Melissa Youngs b. 3 December 1825 in Otsego, NY
Elizabeth Lillie b. Michigan daughter of Silver Lillie and Amanda Clemans
Elizabeth Ward b. 1820 in Canada
Sarah Streeter b. 1831 in MA, daughter of Erastus Streeter and Sara Gilligan
Emma Streeter b 1850 in MA, daughter of Erastus Streeter and Sara Gilligan





Monday, October 4, 2010

Woodman Lodge Drill Team



I don't have a date or a purpose for this group, but there is Alger in the front (name underneath).  I will have to find out more about this group.
Pam

Monday, September 20, 2010

Mary Ann Dunn Carpenter

(This is a long post, but well worth reading to get to know her!)

 "Aunt Mary" passed away last night at 106 years old. She was my grandfather, Harold Streeter's aunt.  Here is some info I have on her life...  She is amazing- and a loyal Detriot Tigers fan!

1925 Walter and Mary Carpenter

Let's have a cheer for Rockford High School's class of '22

Published: Thursday, June 25, 2009 The Grand Rapids Press
She's not sure she remembers all the words to the fight song, and rather than dressing up in orange and black, she plans to simply wear "whatever slacks are clean."  But no one's going to insist on high protocol from Mary Carpenter when she attends Rockford High School's "Golden R" reunion Saturday.  When you're 105 years old, you get to make your own way.





Not only is Mary the oldest resident in her retirement community, she is one of the oldest men or women in this area going to their high school get-togethers. 
And she will get noticed. "When you're 50 or so, nobody cares much what you're saying," says Gene Berry, RHS Class of '54, who is helping to organize the event. "But double that and ... people pay attention.
"She's a neat ol' gal."
Mary got her diploma in 1922 as Mary Dunn, in an era marked by flappers, gin joints and, in May of that year, groundbreaking on something known as Yankee Stadium.
Do the math, and it has been 87 years since she wore a mortarboard and tassel. She will join more than 460 others for lunch at noon Saturday, all out of RHS for at least 50 years and thereby members of "The Golden R."
"It's like a family picnic," says Berry, emphasizing the group also collects funds to award a $1,000 scholarship. This year's recipient is Alicia Dickinson, Class of 2009.
Graduated 87 years ago: Mary Carpenter, who is 105, plans to attend Saturday's "Golden R" reunion.
Where Rockford typically has classes of 600 or more in recent years, Mary graduated with just 4 boys and 13 other girls. And, unlike seniors of today who spend a king's ransom on graduation pics, Mary doesn't remember posing for any solo shots.
But she does remember.
She is spry and lucid for someone born in March 1904, and she vividly recalls life on her family's 80-acre farm in Courtland Township, where she did just about everything but milk cows.
"I tried it a little bit and, when my father saw me, he said, 'OK, I think that's enough of that.' Of course, there weren't machines then."
She and Walter married and had three boys and a girl, all of whom survive. She is proud of them, but doesn't dote. When I asked if any were naughty, she answered, "You ever see one that wasn't?"
She has been living since age 101 at Bishop Hills Elder Care Community east of downtown Rockford, where she works crossword puzzles, takes in programs sponsored by the building and devotes TV time to the news and her beloved Detroit Tigers.
Well, maybe "beloved" is a reach. "I do like 'em, even though they don't know how to hit some days."
She has not driven for years and misses "being able to go where I want to go and when I want to go," but admits "the more I see some people drive these days, I figure I'm lucky."
Mary is not interested in setting records for longevity but is thankful for her good health. Outside of arthritis and using a walker, she has no major issues.
She is thankful, too, for her grown children and grandchildren who come to visit, though Julie Shupe, the facility's director of nursing, chuckles in recalling that, sometimes, Mary will stick her head out after they've left and joke, "They think they have to check up on me."
She appreciates her high school education and encourages kids today to finish, too. She is aware, though, that, for most, it's not the same sort of passport it was eight decades ago. "So much more that they can get," she says of college and trade school opportunities.
If she has any complaints about the current system, it's that "now, I think they have too many sports in the schools. Of course, it keeps them busy, and they have to have something to do. But too much time out of school. Back then, it didn't interfere with our learning," which she remembers included Latin for all.
She has no secret formula for a long life, but figures "lots of fruits and vegetables" didn't hurt. And she never followed the road to perdition with alcohol or tobacco.
Growing up immersed in a life of hard work served her well. "Farming was a tough life, but we didn't mind the work." She appreciates modern conveniences, stopping short of saying that she misses everything about the good ol' days.
In her early days, they lit their way with lamps and relied on a windmill for power. Before their first auto, they got around on foot or via horse and buggy.
"Sometimes, I don't think these days everything is all so good. Of course, I'd hate to go back to the way we used to live.
"I like electricity."

************************************************

Carpenter remembers past with great fondness

Valerie Clarke

Tuesday, February 16, 2010 The Rockford Independent
Among the most venerable of Rockford's population is Mary Dunn Carpenter. She has experienced 105 years of Rockford history and, as with many senior citizens, remembers the distant past better than what happened yesterday. 

Now a resident at Bishop Hills Elder Care Community, she will celebrate her 106th birthday next month.

Carpenter is a piece of the sturdy Courtland Township fabric of farmers. Born in 1904, she was the youngest of five children of George and Jennie Dunn. She grew up on the road now called Tefft. 

"I used to tag along with my dad on the farm," Carpenter said. "When I was little he showed me how to milk a cow, but I took too long and the cow dried up. He said I had to wait until I was bigger to help with the milking." 

She said her family did everything by hand - washing the clothes, tending the garden, canning and feeding the animals.

"There was no electricity where we lived until I was in high school," she said. "Farmers didn't have cars. We came into Rockford by horse and buggy to get feed for the cattle and groceries."

The children in Courtland Township attended Shank School. Smiling at her memories, Carpenter can still look at photos of the children she went to school with and rattle off their names as if it were yesterday. The one-room school went through the eighth grade and had an outhouse, a pot-bellied stove in the middle and no running water. 

"We had to run over to the neighbor's farm to get water from their pump," Carpenter said. 

Rockford High School followed and Carpenter was a proud 1922 graduate from what she calls "the old high school." After the school burned down, the "new high school" was built. 

The "new" one she refers to is the school on North Main Street, which now houses the administrative offices and Rockford Community Education.

She married Walter Carpenter after working a few years at Wolverine Shoe Factory and the couple bought their first home in Rockf
ord's New Addition, a section of town built for factory workers. Mary Carpenter continued to work at the factory until she had her first child. Four children were born to the couple, Gerald, Jack, JoAnn and Jim. 

The family moved around to different homes and owned a farm on Shaner Road where they worked for many years together. 

Carpenter proudly stated her address has always been in Rockford.

*********************************************************


Found in the Rockford Squire April 1, 2010

by CLIFF AND NANCY HILL

Mary Carpenter received so many cards in celebration of her 106th birthday, she has yet to find the time to open and read them all. The cards were an outpouring of love and best wishes from the Rockford community and her Rockford United Methodist Church family.

Mary Carpenter receives hundreds of birthday cards in celebration of her 106th birthday on March 25.
Best of all, an anonymous good Samaritan dropped off an autographed Tiger baseball to the Bishop Hills Elder Care Community office, where Mary resides. Mary, the oldest-known living Tiger fan, couldn’t have been happier.
Mary asked us to thank all of the many well-wishers who sent cards and flowers. Squire readers are the best!


****************************************************
This is a MUST SEE VIDEO!        

This link is a local TV interview with her in April 2010.  Not only do you get to see how wonderful she is, but there's some good family history info there too!


Sunday, September 19, 2010

Violet Janey Atwood Williams Armstrong

I found some interesting pictures of Grandma Vi
 (b 11 Aug 1908, d 14 Jun 1976) 



This "picture" is a copy of a picture taken of her around 1924-1925.



The picture of her with the baby (Pauline) was taken May 1926, Violet was 17.






On the back of this picture, Mom (Pauline) writes "Taken the day she met Mary Lou Jontz" (the daughter she had to give up at birth).



The last picture is of Violet and her 2nd husband, John Daniel Armstrong (b 12 Sep 1911, d 5 Apr 1974)  They were married 29 May 1942 in Toledo, Lucas, Ohio.  They did not have any children.  John was not married previously. There is no date on the picture.
~Pam

Randy and Jane Streeter's Wedding



Craig (Randy) Randolph Streeter and Jane Dykema
 20 Sep 1997


Left to Right:
Mitch Myckowiak, Tamara (Tami) Leigh Streeter Myckowiak (with Michael Myckowiak), Catie Streeter Cooley (holding the hand of Alex Myckowiak), Mark Richard Allen Streeter, Pauline Violet Williams Streeter, Emily Streeter HImstreet, Randy Streeter, Jane Dykstra Streeter, Abigail Streeter Mix, Greg Garrick, Nicole (Nikki) Noel Wadsworth Garrick (holding Jillienne Garrick), Chris Armstrong, Pam Armstrong (holding Adam? Armstrong), Craig Randolph Streeter II, Pamela Ruth Streeter Wadsworth, David Cecil Wadsworth, Harold Rex Streeter

Monday, September 13, 2010

Alger Streeter

Alger Streeter early family pictures
Newspaper clipping about Alger's death and obituary.












Note from Pam Wadsworth: 
Harold is born 1926 and Carl (the youngest at the time) was born 1914. I think there is a casual picture of all of them together.  Carl looks like Alger the most.  The more I see old pictures of distant relations, I realize we look like the Dunns, not the Streeters.