The prompt for Week 6 is 'Favorite Photo', a prompt I have answered in previous years,and as always it is hard to choose just one photo from my collection.
Over the years I have been quite fortunate in accumulating old family
photographs from a variety of sources. Many are copies of photos held
by family members, while others have come from libraries and archives,
local history societies, distant relatives and heritage projects. While
the bulk of my collection are good digital scans I also have a number
of original photos that I have inherited. All my originals have been
scanned for future preservation and happily shared with fellow family
members. I have also detailed who, where and when in as much detail as I
can for each one - my pet hate is the anonymous photo of
nobody-knows-who included in an album of family members.
One of my favourite family photos is the one below of my father Peter
with his siblings and their father, Frank Walter Green. Dad was one of
10 children and to the best of my knowledge it is the only photo of all
10 siblings together, which makes the scanned image I have even more
precious. And yes, one of the brothers does have a beer bottle balanced
on his head! That would be Ernest, known to all as Squib, the second
eldest of the Green siblings. If there are any relatives out there who
have another photo of all 10 siblings together, I would love to hear
from you and am happy to share copies!
Another
favorite is the wedding photo of my great great grandparents James
Nicholas Clark and Pricilla Veronica Mulholland. Dating back to 1898,
it is one of the oldest photographs I have from my mother's side of the
family, and I am lucky to hold the original of this photo too.
Finally,
there is the tinted studio photograph of my mother as a child. Aged 5
years old, this photograph was taken to be sent to my mothers older
brother James, or Jimmy, in 1947. Jimmy was in the Merchant Navy at the
time, and this photo chased him around the world before being delivered
to his ship only days after he was killed in an accident in Argentina
while they were picking up a load of horses to be taken to Poland.
Jimmy is buried in Argentina, and the photo was returned to his mother
in an unopened letter included in his effects, making the photo even
more precious.