hollydolly
SF VIP
- Location
- London England
LOL..well don't you mistake me for your grandma either... I was born and raised in Scotland...A thick Scottish accent.
LOL..well don't you mistake me for your grandma either... I was born and raised in Scotland...A thick Scottish accent.
Both my maternal and paternal Grannies' had the same first name, so as the first girl, I was given it as a middle name...i never knew my grandmothers. They both were deceased when I was born. The first letters of both my first and middle names is the same as their first names. I have several photos of each of them.
My paternal grandmother had a heart condition since birth and was not considered "good marriage material" in her small Eastern European town. So she wound up marrying her first cousin, a quiet and shy man. She was known to be a fabulous baker, and lived to be in her eighties!
Mom's mom died relatively young at 52. She was a sweet and gentle woman who was very devoted to family and took in boarders (my grandpa's many relatives) as they came to America from the old country.
My Mom made us continue to visit them so my Dad wouldn't be hurt more.Now I am a grandmother of 3 precious grandchildren.They are my world and I love them more than anything in the world.They are my hearts.It's sad your parents put you through that. But the up-side is that you got to know your grandmother for who she was. Plus, you learned how not to "Grandma".
What a wonderful family! Thanks for posting!View attachment 175681
View attachment 175683
My 2 Grandsons and their Girlfriends and my Precious Granddaughter.
This reminds me of the only thing I have from my Mom's Dad. It is also a newspaper clipping that was put in when he was 85yrs old and missing.I don't have anything which belonged to my granny, sadly...however I do have a newspaper clipping with her picture and news item which she was in about 1980, not long before she died..
The media were doing a piece on the price of coal.. and wanted to take an average pensioner who might be struggling with the cost of keeping warm... so they wrapped her up in a shawl and made her look like the little old white haired woman that we as a family almost didn't recognise in the article ..but she felt she needed to do it on behalf of all pensioners..