Another picture I found from December 1953, when my dad, Frederick Henry "Fred" Pape (1929-2017) brought my mom, Geraldine Margaret "Gerrie" Guokas Pape (1928-2019) home to meet his family in Chicago, Illinois, around the time they were engaged to be married. Here they are sitting around a table and (I assume) playing poker, since I see some poker chips on the table near my dad (is he winning?). From left are Gerrie; my aunt and godmother Delores "Lorrie" Olker Pape (1929-2005), Uncle Bob Pape's wife (although in December 1953, they too would have been just engaged); Fred; my grandfather Paul Robert Pape Sr. (1896-1970) in the background; my aunt and Dad's sister Rose Mary "Moe" Pape Dietz (1931-2007); and my uncle James "Jim" Hedger (1933-2010), husband of Dad's sister Marilyn Pape Hedger.
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Sunday, January 31, 2021
Monday, January 18, 2021
Presidential Inauguration, 1969
Fifty-two (wow!) years ago today, I left on a trip to Washington, D. C., to witness the inauguration of Richard Nixon to his first term of office. The trip was the prize in an essay contest I'd won.
Below is a picture of me, the three other winners, and our chaperone leaving from Houston on January 18, 1969. From the bottom going up, pictured are Polly Joslin, fifth grade winner from Alice, Texas; me (sixth grade winner), Jacqueline Plumber, eighth grade winner from Port Arthur, Texas; Virginia Hancock, seventh grade winner from Houston; and Marie Watkins, Virginia's English teacher at Johnston Junior High in Houston, selected as our chaperone (likely because we other three winners all attended Catholic schools).
I got to thinking about this trip with the upcoming inauguration of Joe Biden as our 46th president, and all the extra security thanks to the January 6, 2021 storming of the Capitol by Trump supporters. I do remember heightened security at this 1969 inauguration. Washington DC was full of Vietnam War protesters, and a planned visit to the Washington Monument by our group on Sunday, January 19, had to be cancelled, as the protestors were using the monument grounds as their base of operations.
After the trip, the Kroger Company (which sponsored the contest and paid for the trip) sent the winners a number of 8x10 black-and-white photos taken during our trip. Here is one of the inauguration ceremony on January 20, 1969. As you can see, we were pretty far from the Capitol, and there were policemen around. Only a limited number of invited guests were allowed on the Capitol grounds.
Here is the picture I took during the inauguration ceremony. I had an even worse view than the official Kroger photographer. There were loudspeakers, but I also remember not being able to hear what was going on, especially with crowd noise. And it was cold - the temperature at the swearing-in at noon was 35°F. It was cloudy with rain and sleet later in the day. My Texas-weight coat wasn't really warm enough, and I was wearing a dress with tights. I didn't own any pantsuits at age 11, attending a Catholic school with uniforms!
I do remember the inaugural parade. For this, we had assigned seats in the stands along the route - Stand 29, Section E, supposedly seat 14 in row 3, although I think the Kroger group, with winners from all over the country (I shared a hotel room with sixth-grade girls from Pennsylvania and Connecticut) simply filled this section randomly. We were on the top row of the stands, I think with blankets on our legs, and people standing behind us that helped keep us fairly warm.
Below is an enlargement of the picture the Kroger photographer took of the winners in the stands. I was able to find our Texas group, outlined in the yellow box below, and myself, with the yellow arrow pointing to me.
We had a really good view of the parade from the stands, and that was the best part of this whole trip. I took the picture below of the Up with People singers riding the "Forward Together" theme float in the parade on January 20, 1969.
We had a whirlwind tour of Washington in two-and-a-half days. We saw Arlington National Cemetery (the graves of John F. Kennedy and Robert Kennedy, and the changing of the guard at the Tomb of the Unknown Soldiers), the Iwo Jima Monument, the Jefferson and Lincoln Memorials, Mount Vernon, and also drove through Alexandria, Virginia, all on the first full day (January 19, 1969). We also drove down Embassy Row, saw the outside of the Shrine of the Immaculate Conception, and visited the National Air & Space Museum of the Smithsonian Institution on Inauguration Day. On our last half-day, we visited the Bureau of Printing and Engraving (very interesting!), the National Archives, and the Capitol. Besides the Washington Monument, the only other place on our itinerary that we could not see was the Federal Bureau of Investigation - perhaps due to the presence of protestors in town, but more likely because we simply did not have time. I'd like to go back to DC some day and visit all of these places again.
Sunday, January 10, 2021
Sentimental Sunday: Wolfe Siblings, After April 1963, Before April 1970
This photo is of the four children of my great-grandparents Louis Henry Wolfe (1872-1929) and Addilee Tennessee Shelton Wolfe Odom Harris (1890-1977), and their spouses. The siblings are in age order in the photo, from youngest to oldest. Each couple, from left to right, are:
- great aunt Neva Marie Wolfe Ely (1912-1995) and her her husband, Louis Walter Ely (1913-1980);
- great aunt Edith Elizabeth Wolfe Smith Murff Brown Gould Knox (1910-2006) and her then-husband Robert Lee Brown (1908-1970);
- grandmother Sara Melzina Wolfe Guokas Archibald (1907-1997) and her then-husband, my step-grandfather Wallace Franklin "Archie" Archibald (1896-1970); and
- great uncle Lloyd L. Wolfe (1906-1993) and his second wife, Georgia Noreen Turner (1911-1997).
This photo was taken sometime between April 1963, when Lloyd's first wife, my great aunt Florida Louise "Sally" Lasyone Wolfe (1911-1963) died, and April 1970, when my step-grandfather Archie died. Not sure of the location; likely somewhere in Harris County, Texas.
© Amanda Pape - 2020 - e-mail me!
Friday, January 8, 2021
Friday's Faces From the Past: Wolfe Family, Before January 1954
This photo has many descendants of my great-grandparents Louis Henry Wolfe (1872-1929) and Addilee Tennessee Shelton Wolfe Odom Harris (1890-1977). Standing from left are my grandmother Sara Melzina Wolfe Guokas Archibald (1907-1997), my great aunt Florida Louise "Sally" Lasyone Wolfe (1911-1963) and her husband, my great uncle Lloyd L. Wolfe (1906-1993), my great aunt Neva Marie Wolfe Ely (1912-1995) and her son, Louis Edward Ely (1935-2005), my great aunt Edith Elizabeth Wolfe Smith Murff Brown Gould Knox (1910-2006) and her then-husband Robert Lee Brown (1908-1970), and my step-grandfather Wallace Franklin Archibald (1896-1970).
The ladies in front are all still living. The nun is my aunt, Jo Ann (Sister Jean Marie) Guokas, and the two little girls are hers (and my mother's) first cousins, Edith Carole Ely Dillow and Barbara Ann Ely Owens, daughters of great aunt Marie and her husband Louis Walter Ely (1913-1980), who was probably taking the picture.
There is no location nor date on the picture, except for a processing stamp of 11 January 1954, so we know it was before then. I think it was probably taken during the Christmas season of 1953-54, based on the little girls' coats and new dolls, and it was probably taken somewhere in the Houston or Pasadena, Texas area.
Sunday, January 3, 2021
Sentimental Sunday: Dad, Nana, Grandpa, and Lucky, Christmastime 1951-52
My dad, Frederick Henry Pape (1929-2017), on leave from the Air Force, with his parents Elizabeth Florence Massmann Pape (1902-2000) and Paul Robert Pape Sr. (1896-1970) and the family dog Lucky, outside their home at 2093 W. Lunt Avenue, Chicago, Christmastime 1951.