Genealogy Wise

The Genealogy & Family History Social Network

Emily Doolin Aulicino

Writing Your Childhood Memories and Family Stories

Information

Writing Your Childhood Memories and Family Stories

Everyone would love to find old letters, a diary or journal from a distant relative. Some have been so fortunate. Have you written yours for your descendants? Post your memories; share your slice of life. It helps everyone recall their stories.

Website: http://writingyourmemories.blogspot.com/
Members: 64
Latest Activity: Oct 8, 2011

"Memoing" My Memories booklet

This booklet is for sale and has over 130 prompts. Not your average one or two line prompts. It is designed to have you start writing as soon as you finish reading a topic. Email me if you wish a sample page or two. I can only send them snail mail.

Discussion Forum

Emily Doolin Aulicino

Writer's Block 6 Replies

Started by Emily Doolin Aulicino. Last reply by Katie Heitert Wilkinson Oct 15, 2009.

Emily Doolin Aulicino

Proofreading 6 Replies

Started by Emily Doolin Aulicino. Last reply by Karen Rhodes Aug 18, 2009.

Emily Doolin Aulicino

Editing 2 Replies

Started by Emily Doolin Aulicino. Last reply by Karen Rhodes Aug 18, 2009.

Comment Wall

Comment

You need to be a member of Writing Your Childhood Memories and Family Stories to add comments!

Emily Doolin Aulicino Comment by Emily Doolin Aulicino on March 18, 2011 at 4:47pm

What wonderful ideas all of you have shared!  Thank you so much.  I see that no messages have been posted for quite some time....Perhaps we need to invite others that you know and continue sharing your experiences.

 

Thank you all....

Emily

Slægtens Historie Comment by Slægtens Historie on March 6, 2011 at 6:17am

Researching the history of your family provide numerous details of your unique ancestry and cultural heritage.

I know from experience that your particular family history will be an invaluable and treasured gift you can pass on to your children and children`s children.

My web

Ursula Ann Martin Comment by Ursula Ann Martin on August 20, 2009 at 2:13pm
Hi Barb,

Thanks for the tip, it sounds good. I'm am trying to write my own little book of our family history. Not got very far yet, maybe the book you mentioned will set me up on the right track. I'll check it out, thanks for that.

Ursula
Ursula Ann Martin Comment by Ursula Ann Martin on August 20, 2009 at 2:12pm
Hi Karen,

No there is also no death notice or obituary in the local newspaper. It's almost of if she was wiped out of existence...shame.

Ursula
Karen Rhodes Comment by Karen Rhodes on August 19, 2009 at 7:17pm
Oh, my. I guess you are the record of this, if none of your other relatives will relate their memories of it. Sometimes a written journal or diary entry or letter is all that does remain of an event. Record it, I guess, is all you can do, to the best of your memory. Is there at least an obituary or death notice from the newspaper?
.

I can imagine that wasn't pleasant.
Ursula Ann Martin Comment by Ursula Ann Martin on August 19, 2009 at 2:40pm
Hi Karen,

We had the cremation service one day and the next my brother collected the ashes (in a plastic pot of all things!) The immediate family gathered together and drove to the Quantock Hills (In Somerset UK) and her ashed were rather unceremoniously scattered (I'd say dumped) amongst the heather. The plastic pot was thrown in the bin.....

......not a nice experience and there is no record of this.....

Ursula
Karen Rhodes Comment by Karen Rhodes on August 18, 2009 at 9:26pm
Ursula, you might not know the exact resting place of your mother's ashes, but where was the ceremony held? Who handled the arrangements? A funeral home or cemetery? My father died in 1954, a former Naval aviator, and he and two buddies had agreed that they would each be cremated and scattered from a Navy plane. His was handled by a cemetery in Glendale, California. I went down there when I was out to California visiting relatives, and the sexton showed me the record.

My father's "final resting place" is pretty much most of Los Angeles County!
Ursula Ann Martin Comment by Ursula Ann Martin on August 17, 2009 at 4:02pm
What a great group! Good idea.

I was talking to my children about this. They asked me what I would like to do when I die (?????) whether I would prefer to be buried or cremated. Going on my own experiences (not of dying of course) of my mother being cremated and her ashes scattered over a nature reserve....got me thinking. There is no record of this.....as far as anyone knows we could have eaten her ashes on toast!

How on earth in 200 years time can a future decendant of ours ever find her? I know there is the death record but there is NOTHING to say where her final resting place is. Only the immediate living family know where she was laid to rest....

I've started writing a family history book. Hopefully in 200 years it will be available to our future decendants....

Ursula
Abigail Grunst Comment by Abigail Grunst on August 2, 2009 at 8:14pm
What a neat topic! I've been wanting to do this for some time but never get around to it. Maybe this will give me the inspiration I need. Look forward to reading all of your ideas.
Shanna Beauvais-Riley Comment by Shanna Beauvais-Riley on July 27, 2009 at 7:02am
My grandfather - a wonderful, charismatic, charming old gentleman - would regale us with family stories. A year before he passed (which was recently, on June 5th just past), I had audio taped him telling these same stories he had used to make us laugh throughout the years. These .mp3 files are invaluable to me now and I hope to use them to keep the stories going strong in the family by telling them to my niece (now 3) and the only child (yet) in the family. I also plan to write them down and share them; they should never die and by keeping them alive, I also keep a piece of the man I considered more a father than a grandfather forever.
 

Members (64)

Emily Doolin Aulicino Karen Rhodes Katie Heitert Wilkinson Ruth Liz Pidgeon Ginger R Smith Terri O'Connell Lorraine Sonnenberg Future Archivist Michael Edward Belcher Sarah Moore Slægtens Historie Stephen Burton Mary V Johnson Beverly Simpson Kim Mills MCKENNA Kimberly Kimberly Paul Judith Abbott Lahr Lorna Halnan Felicia Addison Kim Eisman Darlene Ford Euna Beavers Ellen M (Procopio) Kramer Wendi Beck Ursula Ann Martin Ellyn Weber-Bynum JB Peterson
 
 
 

Members

  • Anna Hopkins-Arnold
  • Carma Sue Samples Cathey
  • Carol Lee Wittneben
  • andrea parrish
  • Kathryn Hammond
  • Gary Inglish
  • Jill Jones
  • Nikki Nicole
  • David L. Taylor
  • Amy
  • Sharry Jones
  • Guida M. Jackson
  • Donald DeZarn
  • Daniel M. Ream
  • Christine M. Worthington

Badge

Loading…

© 2012   Created by Nat Ins for Genealogical Studies.

Badges  |  Report an Issue  |  Terms of Service