Letter to Grandkids: Reverse the Engines

On October 26, 2018 on the advice of my friend Allan Service, I published my first blog on https://wordpress.com/block-editor/post/braidwoodguy.com/16. Since that time, 80 blog articles have been published and promulgated via Facebook, LinkedIn, and Twitter with viewers coming from many countries. The primary focus of these articles has been, and continues to be, on our 14 … Continue reading Letter to Grandkids: Reverse the Engines

Letter to Grandkids #4: A Learning Time

Dear kids: There are very few times in our lives that will literally change you as a human being. There are the usual anticipated events: graduation, spouse selection, new jobs, children, etc. But other events, unexpected and traumatic, come along with perhaps even more impact. I think about three assassinations: John F. Kennedy, Martin Luther … Continue reading Letter to Grandkids #4: A Learning Time

Letters to Grandkids #3: Other Racial Incidents in the 1960s

Dear kids: The last two letters about racism during my college days were focused on events off the basketball court and away from the Lewis campus. I am reasonably sure that racial bias was at Lewis, but it never was obvious to me.  I haven’t said much about racial discrimination in sports because my roommate, … Continue reading Letters to Grandkids #3: Other Racial Incidents in the 1960s

Letter to the Grandkids #2: Racism in College Years

Lewis Basketball 1958-59 This is the second of a series of letters to my grandkids. I try to convey my reactions and emotions to the world that I was encountering as I grew older, and why, at age 79, I have these convictions. I share these letters with the public with the hope that other … Continue reading Letter to the Grandkids #2: Racism in College Years

Letters to the Grandkids # 1: Intro to Racism

This is the first of a series of letters to my grandkids. I will try to convey my reactions and emotions to the world that I was encountering as I grew older, and why, at age 79, I have these convictions. I share these letters with the public with the hope that other grandparents consider … Continue reading Letters to the Grandkids # 1: Intro to Racism

My Great Grandfather, Blacksmith in the Civil War

C.C. Augustus Ginter II (b. 9/28/1837 – d. 9/19/1892) Growing up in the 1940s and 1950s, I don’t remember my mother or her siblings talking about the Ginter family history or the fact that their grandfather had served in the Civil War. Mom’s parents, Oscar and Minnie (Becker) Ginter, were virtually unknown to me. Minnie … Continue reading My Great Grandfather, Blacksmith in the Civil War

“Keep on writing, Dad, before you lose your marbles.”

“You might have put it a little differently, son, but I get your drift.” My mother, Adele Ginter Kennedy, her siblings, and classmates circa 1925 playing marbles.. It’s a good analogy because I played “mibs” when I was in St. Rose grade school. My bag included about 20 or so glass marbles that included a … Continue reading “Keep on writing, Dad, before you lose your marbles.”

“We are related to the Van Duynes?”

“Yes, son, .... and to the Hermes, the Shuttens, the Klovers, the Holmans, and many more here in Wilmington.”  "No individual death among human beings is important. Someone who dies leaves his work behind and that does not entirely die. It never dies as long as humanity exists." Isaac Asimov St. Rose Church, view from … Continue reading “We are related to the Van Duynes?”

Life: A Dash Between Dates?

“The dash between dates holds the essence and spirit of the deceased. It doesn't take long for memories to fade. Precisely why every family needs a historian to capture and relate stories of each member.” Sharon Mosier, Educator* It was my last visit in the hospital before Dad had surgery for throat cancer, a result … Continue reading Life: A Dash Between Dates?

Party Labels: We Never Cared

"However [political parties] may now and then answer popular ends, they are likely in the course of time and things, to become potent engines, by which cunning, ambitious, and unprincipled men will be enabled to subvert the power of the people and to usurp for themselves the reins of government, destroying afterwards the very engines … Continue reading Party Labels: We Never Cared