Thursday, May 29, 2008

Leaving for Ohio Tomorrow!


Tomorrow Guillaume and I leave for Ohio to attend my Grandma's memorial. I'm glad to finally get the chance to celebrate her life and say my final goodbyes. It still doesn't feel real that she's gone.  

There has been so much time to prepare, but it doesn't feel like enough time. My colleague Amber asked me today what my grandmother was like. I found myself talking about how youthful she was. How she bowled until she was about 90 and played golf until she was 85. I remember visiting at Thanksgiving and playing the piano with grandpa. We would make a trip to the mall on Black Friday and she would buy me something for my birthday. She had many friends both young and old. She managed to live on her own in Ohio many years after my grandfather's death. It was pretty amazing. 

I know this weekend is going to be hard for me, but it will also be nice to remember her with my family.  She is pictured above way before I knew her. I think it was taken sometime in the 1960s. Maybe when she went to pick up my mom at college. I'm not sure.

Monday, May 26, 2008

The Shirreffs Sisters in the 60s


Don't tell my mom, but I borrowed one of her photo albums. It's got a very 60s looking cover and is filled with excellent photos of grandma, grandpa, their house on Western Reserve Road, some pictures of her first students in Miami and more. I'll pick out some of the best ones and post them here. Shown here is Carole and Susan sometime in the 60s I'm guessing. I think it might have been taken at their house on Western Reserve Road.

CORRECTION -- Aunt Carole let me know that this didn't happen at their house on Western Reserve Road. It was probably taken at a restaurant.

Friday, May 23, 2008

The Newest Addition to the Shirreffs Family

From Danny Shirreffs:

Jameson Harry Alexander Shirreffs was born on the 8th May and weighed in at 6 lb. 9 oz.  Gill and Jameson are both doing fantastically well and we are both delighted!

Stay tuned for photos!

Wednesday, May 14, 2008

Go Austin High School!


More from Ron Offen:

Tom was a swimming star at Austin High School in Chicago. All three siblings, Stan, Tom, and my mother Ellen went to Austin—as did I. On the swimming team with Tom was a lad named Johnny Wisemuller (not sure of spelling) who later because a movie star portraying Tarzan in several Tarzan films.

Above are some newspaper clippings relating to Tom and Stan's athletics.

'Plus Fours' in Scotland


More from Ron Offen:

The "pouffy pants" you noted Tom was wearing in one photo were called "plus fours," and were actually knickers (See photo at the right). They were all the rage in the 1920s.  They were, as you assumed, often worn for golfing. what a natty pair they were!


Tuesday, May 13, 2008

October 1972


Here is a photo of my great grandmother, my grandparents and my mom in October of 1972.

CORRECTION: Aunt Carole told me that the guy all the way to the left isn't my great-grandfather. He is just someone who lived at the same nursing home as my great-grandmother.

Wednesday, May 7, 2008

Help Me Identify These People


Here is another photo from the Scotland photo album of my grandfather's that I cannot identify. My grandfather is the only guy in the picture. I recognise the woman on the lower left, I know I've seen a photo of her before. If anyone knows who these people are, let me know! 


Tuesday, May 6, 2008

Ron Offen Shares Stories About Andy and Alex Shirreffs


Here's are some stories about Andrew Shirreffs (Andy) and Alex Shirreffs (pictured below in uniform) submitted by writer Ron Offen. Ron is pictured at the right.

Andrew, who lived in Chicago and once taught some kind of trade (perhaps lithography) at the Washburne Trade School in that city, was a very funny man and an incorrigible jokester.  I remember that my mother (nee Ellen Shiirreffs), dad and my two paternal grandparents went to Uncle Andrew and Aunt Beatrice's home for dinner on a Sunday. My paternal grandmother (Elsie Offen) had almost no sense of humor although she was a sweet and loving woman.   

At one point during the dinner Uncle Andy said to my grandmother Offen, who had just complemented Aunt Beatrice on the meal, "Yes it was a good meal, Mrs. Offen, but you should taste my specialty. It’s my stewed prunes and liver dish. I mix them into a kind of goulash. Absolutely delicious!" 

 To which my grandmother responded, "Yes, it does sound very good." Im sure she wondered why the rest of us were smirking and suppressing guffaws. 

Uncle Alex was quite different, although a bit of a rake, I assume, during his early life. After all, he was in the Merchant Marines in his youth.  I believe he worked for a Dutch oil company and I only met him a few times.  He had come to the United States with his illegitimate daughter, Nessie Shirreffs (herself a very interesting character).  

Aside from meeting both of them at Uncle Andy's at the dinner described above, we met them a few other times while they were in Chicago. Uncle Alex was a serious and earnest man who lived in Aruba as some kind of administrator for an oil company.  He may have been an engineer, but I'm not sure on this.  In any case he appeared very bright and dignified to my eleven-year-old eyes.  He offered to send me stamps for my stamp collection when he returned to his island home.  And to my surprise, he did just that.  In fact we corresponded for about a year. I can't, however, remember any of the contents or subject matter of the letters.  

Nessie Shirreffs (after the visit to Chicago) went back to Scotland, where she had lived up to that time. At the time I met her she was in her twenties, I believe.  She was supported by Uncle Alex for most of her early life but may have been supporting herself at this time (about 1941).  Later, after Uncle Alex retired she and her father went to live in Sunnyvale (I think) California. Then, after Uncle Alex died, she went back to Aberdeen, Scotland.  I met her there in the mid-1980's.

Stay tuned for more stories from Ron!