Friday, February 23, 2018

Electra Smith's water pitcher

Electra's water pitcher
The 52 Ancestors theme this week is “heirloom” so I’d like to tell you about a water pitcher that was given to me in the late 1990s by my mother-in-law, Mary Athya Murphy. Mary held on tightly to her belongings so it was a surprise when she gave it to me. I had been researching her Smith family, which she had said would be impossible to figure out because they had such a common name. Fortunately, her ancestor named her first three children with “E” names—Electra, Erastus, and Eunice. This made it very easy to research this family! After I’d spent a year or so working on this line, I began to feel like I knew the Smith family. I’m sure many of you feel the same way about the ancestors you spend so much time researching.

Mary kept Electra’s water pitcher on top of the organ in their living room. At the time, it was filled with cattails and other dried flowers. On one visit to their house, I shared with Mary my feelings about the Smith family and told her I’d love to have Electra’s water pitcher if she was ever ready to give it up. It didn’t happen immediately, but one day as we were saying our goodbyes, she gave it to me. I promised Mary I’d take good care of it for her.

Electra Smith Jack
This water pitcher originally belonged to Electra B. Smith, Mary’s grand aunt. Electra, the daughter of John Thompson Smith and Jane Gordon, was born in Armstrong County, Pennsylvania (probably Apollo) on February 11, 1841. Electra and her husband Daniel Jack (a Civil War veteran) spent their last years living in the home of George Athya and his wife Bertha (Smith) Athya, Mary’s parents. Daniel died in the house on December 10, 1925 before Mary’s birth in 1929. Electra continued to live with George and Bertha in the house until her death on April 22, 1932. I assume that Bertha kept the pitcher after Electra’s death. Although Electra helped raised her sister’s six children, she never had children of her own. Since Electra was living with Bertha, one assumes they were close so it makes sense that Bertha would take possession of the water pitcher at that point. Bertha was living with Mary in Virginia when she died in April 22, 1979 (and I just realized as I’m writing this that both Electra and Bertha died on the same day, April 22!) so the pitcher became Bertha’s at that time. Mary kept the pitcher from 1979 until the late 1990s when she gave it to me.

Electra married Daniel Jack, the widow of her sister Eunice, in Apollo on February 20, 1896. This tells me the pitcher is at least 122 years old since the last name on the side is her maiden name “Smith,” not her married name “Jack.”

The white glazed pitcher is in good condition. It has grape leaves on both sides and underneath the spout. There is gold stenciling on the handle, around the mouth, bottom, and on the leaves.


The name “Electa Smith” is also stenciled on the front. The height of the pitcher is 9 inches at the spout and 10 and a quarter inches at the handle. The base is 4 and a half inches and the bowl about 8 inches.


The stenciling shows some wear on the handle and spout but otherwise is in good condition.


The marking on the bottom is “AF” followed by a period. There is the number 2 underneath the AF. The “A” and “F” share the same line.


Electra’s water pitcher sits on the dresser in my bedroom so I see it every day. I often find myself reflecting on what life would have been like for Electra in the late 19th, early 20th centuries.

I plan to keep my promise to Mary and take care of this Smith family heirloom.

Electra holding my mother-in-law Mary Athya, ca. 1930

Friday, February 16, 2018

Warner’s Skyline Drive-In Theater

Ralph Murphy, Projectionist at the Skyline Drive-in
The 52 Ancestors theme this week is “valentine.” When I saw that, I immediately thought “I got nothing!” I dug around my trees, looked through some photos, and racked my brain for a good valentine story, but still came up with nothing. I’m sure there are love stories in my tree but I haven’t found them yet. Maybe it’s because Valentine’s Day has never really meant anything to me so my mind is fighting it. So, like last week, I’m cheating again and instead will share a group of photos we have of a drive-in located in West Virginia. Who knows, maybe these photos will remind someone of a Valentine’s Day evening they spent at a drive-in with a special person years ago.

Warner’s Skyline Drive-In Theater
In 2012, my husband Charlie, his Dad Earl, and I visited his Aunt Jean Murphy in Bridgeport, Harrison County, West Virginia. Before we left, Aunt Jean gave Charlie 15 boxes of slides taken by her husband (and Charlie’s uncle) Ralph Murphy. There were thousands of slides in the collection, spanning the years 1947 to 1984. Many were scenic shots from their travels across the United States, some were family members, and others were friends and co-workers. I wanted to convert the slides to digital images but there were so many the task was overwhelming. I converted a few here and there and then abandoned the boxes for several years. I finally bit the bullet in August 2015 and made it my yearly genealogy project during a summer “staycation.” I spent the full week inserting three slides into a tray, pushing the tray into the slide scanner, and pressing a button. It was that easy, but time consuming. Since I completed the project, I’ve spent hours looking at the photos and they’ve brought great joy into my life. I’ve been able to identify many of the family members in the images, but many remain a mystery. I hope to remedy that someday by posting the images on the Internet. Hopefully someone will find and recognize these unknown people. Now, about the drive-in.

Warner’s Skyline Drive-in Theater was located on U.S. 19 in Clarksburg, Harrison County, West Virginia. According to Drive-Ins.com, it opened on June 29, 1948. The original owner was Charles Warner, thus its name. The first movie to hit the big screen was Come and Get It, a 1936 film that featured Walter Brennan. The capacity for cars was 400 spaces. According to an obituary I found for Evelyn Caputo, her husband, Samuel Caputo, purchased the drive-in in 1955. The obituary also noted “When the drive-in was destroyed by a severe storm in 1960, material salvaged from the screen was used to construct Sam’s Market on Rt. 19 S.” Mr. Caputo apparently rebuilt the drive-in and remained the owner until it closed in 1985. On a website for the WI Newsletter, Barbara Ann Paugh Patton posted a photo of the drive-in road sign on a page marked Trivia Picture. Many people who knew what it was wrote comments on the page. Kay Corathers Connor wrote the “drive-in was built on an old strip mine and the owners lived in a nice house up on the hill beside the theatre area.” Jay Sharp wrote “As you start down the hill you can see a small lake on the right-hand side.” You’ll see evidence of that lake in two of the photos in Uncle Ralph’s collection. And one person, Bill Losh, even mentions Uncle Ralph stating “Their projectionist at that time was my neighbor, Ralph Murphy.”

These photos are part of Uncle Ralph’s slide collection.

Ralph was there from the beginning, documenting construction
 







The driveway to the drive-in
 

Skyline ticket booth
Unknown projectionist
Unknown projectionist
Skyline refreshment center
Unknown workers inside the Skyline refreshment center
Unknown workers inside the Skyline refreshment center
Unknown workers inside the Skyline refreshment center
Skyline refreshment center
 




Ralph's wife Jean Murphy and an unknown woman
Jean Murphy
  



Ralph Murphy
 















First three young women are unknown; Jean Murphy

The lake mentioned by Jay Sharp
The lake mentioned by Jay Sharp
  







References
1. Drive-Ins.com, Skyline Drive-In Theater - Facts & Highlights; http://drive-ins.com/theater/wvtskyl/skyline-drive-in-theater-clarksburg-wv#.Wmz9kExFyhx
2. Obituary for Evelyn Caputo, Davis-Weaver Funeral Home, August 2015; http://davisweaverfuneralhome.com/book-of-memories/2233329/Caputo-Evelyn/obituary.php
3. The WI Newsletter, Trivia Picture, no. 91, March 2007; http://wihs59.tripod.com/news/news0703/news0703.html.