Friday, June 25, 2021

52 Ancestors: Groups - Fresno Grammar School

Several years ago I ran across this photo.

It was an abnormal size and not in great condition so I put it aside for later.  I recognized the little guy second from left in the bottom row as my grandfather, Sigmund Levy, so I knew it had to be a group of school children.  And then, of course, later never arrived and there it sat.

Sig Levy

Recently I looked at it and thought again "hey, I wonder what the occasion was".  And as I went through more things, I realized I had this.


Sadly, I only have the clipping above and don't know which newspaper it was in.  But I DO know now that my picture is that of the 1902 Fresno Grammar School graduating class.  My guess is that Sig gave the newspaper a copy of the photo and they used it in their "Remember When" article.

I looked for a little for more information about Fresno Grammar School and found some interesting photos.

Study Hall at Fresno Grammar School, c. 1900

I wonder if Sig is in there somewhere?


Fresno Grammar School, c. 1916

And look at this - a list of the 1902 Fresno Grammar School midyear graduates.

Fresno Bee, Fresno, California, 24 February 1952, page 32

Not a familiar name in the group except for one very important one.  

So I pulled out the The Owl, Commencement Number (Fresno High School yearbook) from June, 1906 to see how many of the students were still together.  Looks like quite a few - what a group!




Sadly, Sig isn't pictured since he graduated in February but I do have a photo of him from about that time - I wonder if either of the other two young men were listed above.

Sig Levy (right) rockin' the swimsuit!




Sunday, June 20, 2021

52 Ancestors: Father's Day - Dad and me

I don't think I'll ever get over feeling somewhat down and sad on Father's Day - while I have lots of memories of my dad, each passing year puts them farther back in my mind.  So, today I'll take some time to reflect on some of the little things.

Being the second child is a sad and glad - glad that I have a big sister (and a bonus glad when my brother came into our lives) but sad because I had to "share" Dad with others.  So, try as I might I've found very few pictures of just me and Dad, particularly because Dad was the photographer so getting him into the picture was rare.  But a few popped up.

Dad and Me, c. 1959-1960

While I love the photo, it sparks so many memories other than the two peeps sitting at the fireplace.  Those two glass ballerina type figures were always displayed prominently in our house.  You can only see one of the items on either side of the clock but they were there until we packed up the house in 2013.  And although the chair had moved, it was also still there in 2013.  Remember my parents never threw anything away.

The soot above the fireplace was just a bit darker after 50+ years

See the chair?  Maybe it had been recovered but it sure needed a good cleaning.

In 1957 my sister, who was 5 at the time, apparently decided she wanted to become a photographer so Dad let her have a turn behind the camera.

She didn't do a bad job!

I know there are women who aren't fortunate enough to have their dad walk them down the aisle but I was sure lucky to have mine there with me!

Boy had we changed in 17 years!

One incident that is as fresh today as it was 50+ years ago was my dad's frustration with me because I never wiped off the peanut butter knife.  For anyone who grew up with me, you know that peanut butter was my favorite, and I mean FAVORITE, food of all time.  If he told me once he told me 100 times to not just put the knife with the peanut butter into the sink but to wipe it off before I threw it in.  I was sure surprised when I didn't follow his constant order suggestion and just tossed it in.  Dad was right there to make sure, once and for all, that I never did that again when he picked up the knife and calmly wiped the leftover peanut butter on the back of my hand.  Yep, he was right - I never, ever did it again.

My dad was one of a kind and we still laugh at some of the things he said and did.  He was never shy and quickly became friends with everyone he met and was always the life of the party.  Boy, do I miss you, Dad!

To read more about my dad, you can read one of my previous Father's Days posts HERE.  




Friday, June 18, 2021

Is this thing on?

 

Photo by Teddy Mafia


Testing 1-2-3-4.  Testing 1-2-3-4.

Is this thing on?  Is the conversion to follow.it complete?  I think it is.  Hopefully, if you're seeing this via e-mail you've received it from follow.it rather than Feedburner (Who Knew?).

Please let me know if something looks strange or if it didn't work as planned.  And thanks for your patience.  Now back to your regularly scheduled program.

Wednesday, June 16, 2021

Construction Zone

 

Many of you know that blogger is discontinuing the Feedburner service at the end of the month which will require us to find a different tool so that we can share our blogs via e-mail.  I've been researching other ways to communicate and think I've settled on follow.it.  (Thanks, Wendy and Marian, for all of your help with this).  For those of you who already follow me via e-mail, your address will be input automatically so you shouldn't need to do anything else.  For those of you who follow me in some other way, if you'd like to follow me by e-mail there is a new "button" on my blog where you can input your e-mail address, prove that you're not a robot, and you should be good.

Unfortunately, there may be some hiccups along the way.  I hope this isn't the case but due to the timing of turning one on and the other off, you may receive my blog twice - if this is the case, I apologize in advance.  The Feedburner e-mail comes from Who Knew? while the new e-mail will come from follow.it.  

In other news, I am also working on putting my blog into book format.  The first two years of blogging, I used Blurb to slurp my blog into a book so I could share my blog with my mother who didn't use a computer.  What I liked about the Blurb book is that once I downloaded it into the book format, I was able to format things - add or delete spaces, size the photos, etc.  It worked well so that after every post it automatically put a page break in order to keep the photos, captions, etc. together.  Unfortunately, Blurb no longer offers blog slurping so I am looking for another way to slurp my blog so I can always have a hard copy backup.  I've explored BlogBooker, Lulu (thanks, Amy!), and Blog2Print but it seems that any revisions must be made in the actual blog rather than after it has been downloaded.  If anyone else has suggestions for what I can use to replace Blurb, I'm all ears.

I'm also working on publishing the letters my dad wrote home to his parents during his 18 months in the military.  Thanks again to Amy who has given me some pointers about self-publishing through Amazon.  I'll be adding his photos where I can so I have some work ahead of me.  Stay tuned for that.

Thanks for being a faithful reader and for your patience as I work through these things.  

Sunday, June 13, 2021

52 Ancestors: Bridge - Let's play!

My parents and both sets of grandparents loved to play bridge.  I mean, seriously LOVED it!  In fact, with how important it was in their lives and how my dad obsessively took photos, I can't believe there aren't more photos of their bridge groups.  But I did find one!


My mom, in the cute checkered dress, appears to be pregnant so this would have been 1961 when little brother was born.  I have no idea who the lady to her right is but the other couple are Bob and Joey J., our neighbors who lived next door in their first home on Cheryl Way.  Bob and Joey and my parents were life long friends and I've found several pictures of them in the slides we've scanned.  

At one point, my parents tried to teach my sister and me how to play bridge - they must have been desperate to find someone to play with them because we weren't very good.  But we tried.  And after I was married, they tried again to teach my husband and me to play with similar results.

They played in a couple of groups that would meet regularly - monthly? - and would rotate houses so everyone took a turn hosting.  When it was held at our house, my sister and I would be put to work helping with preparations - setting up the card tables and chairs, filling the little silver dishes with candy and nuts, and if they were playing contract bridge (more on that in a minute), getting the cards into the holders.  And then, of course, we helped with clean up the following day - although maybe we didn't but I like to think that we did.

Contract bridge was a game where each group of 4 played the same hands as another table.  The cards would be sorted into holders and it was our job to count the cards out (no peeking) and getting them in the holders, which looked like this.


So, one table would play the game based on these hands and then when they were finished with that game, they'd put all of the original hands back into the board and the next table would play a game with the same hands.  I don't know if there was some sort of scoring based on how each table scored but they sure seemed to have a lot of fun doing it.

After both of my grandfathers passed away, my grandmothers would play as partners in 'ladies only' bridge games.  For all I know they didn't always play as partners but I always thought it was cool that they played in the same group together.  And after my dad passed away, my mom continued to play with other groups and sometimes would play with a widower.  One night when I called her, she told me she'd had the best day ever because she was out at the country club spending the day (yes, the day) playing bridge.

It seems like bridge isn't as popular as it once was but whenever I think of bridge, I think of my parents and grandparents.

And just because I don't have many pictures in this post, I thought I'd throw in some random pictures of bridges from my collection.

Munich, from my dad's photo album from his time in Germany in 1946

Natural Bridge
From my Grandmother's scrapbook, that might be her on the left



Sunday, June 6, 2021

52 Ancestors: Military - Furstenfeldbruck

 

Gordon Levy,  Photo by Army & Navy Photographic Bureau, Baton Rouge, LA., 1945

My dad, Gordon Levy, entered into active service with the US Army on June 16, 1945.  He had just completed his first year of college at Stanford University and off he went.  He was just 19 years old.

I've written about my dad's service several times but the one piece of information that was cloudy for me was his time in Germany where he found himself at the Nuremberg War Crimes Trials.  Although I didn't know the details of how or why he found himself there, I wrote about it HERE.

A few weeks ago I wrote about being immersed in letters from 1945 and I can now report that I have completed the transcription project of all of the letters my dad wrote (or at least the ones that were saved) to his parents during his 18 months of military service.  Oh boy, do I wish my dad were here so we could talk about this - what a history lesson I've had!

His basic training began on June 16, 1945 at Keesler Field in Mississippi and he then transferred to Scott Field in Illinois a few months later.  He described his training like this:

Once in the Army, I learned that flight training, navigator school and gunnery training, were out because the war was ending, and I was going to be a cryptographer.  The school lasted one day.  That was fortunate because I did not really know what a cryptographer was.  We were slated to be in the invasion of the Empire of Japan, but the atom bomb terminated that plan, for which I was eternally grateful.  

As a result, the military took me to the Army of Occupation in Germany, barely six months after the end of hostilities, and my prior training as a journalist landed me a position on the staff of an Army newspaper - where I covered sports, war crimes trials, and put the paper to bed in a German printing shop -- Buchdrukerei -- and couldn't wait to get home -- just in time for the Big Game of 1946, which Stanford won, naturally.  And as I look back, the experience in Germany, of seeing in person the Nazi leaders on trial, of watching the Bitch of Buchenwald in testimony -- this year was a highlight of my life.

He was then transferred via New York to Furstenfeldbruck, AKA Furstey (located in Bavaria, near Munich), in January, 1946 and faithfully wrote to his parents for the year he was stationed there.  As luck (mine) would have it, he had the scrapbook gene so he also put together an album of photos - and he even labeled them!


Furstenfeldbruck from the top of Sighart's roof


A few of his letters really moved me - the thoughts of what my young Jewish father witnessed was almost too much and I will never forget his words.  I don't remember him ever talking about this, although my sister has memories of the two of them discussing it.

Furstenfeldbruck, Germany

20 April, 1946

Dearest Mom and Pop: -

During the last two days I have really been seeing Germany, in all manners, means and conventions.  But I’ve gotten a lot of good experiences out of it – some that I won’t ever forget.  Thursday we travelled some 80 miles by truck to a town called Landshut (by truck, at that) where the ball club played the 16th Infantry Regiment.  On the way we passed through Freising, where Maj. Boney is located, but it was impossible to stop, which I would have liked to do.  We won the ball game, 8-4, and spent a beautiful evening journeying back by truck. 

Yesterday was even better – the War Crimes Trials at Dachau.  We went up there (only about 12 miles) yesterday morning and stayed till 4 in the afternoon, and I must say it was the most interesting day I’ve ever spent in Europe.  The trials concerned the Camp Mauthausen Concentration Center (Austria) and some 61 men are on trial for their lives.  The tribunal consists of eight full colonels and one major general…quite a bit of brass for the ill-deserving Krauts.  I was extremely surprised at the defense the US is giving them – they have a major and several captains representing their case, and although they put little heart in the cause, I think they should be praised for making American justice work.  Prosecuting attorney for the US is a crafty, witty Lt Col Denson, who is working the case in his own manner.  Naturally the entire proceedings must be spoken in German and English, with an expert interpreter translating every German statement to English and vice versa.  Nevertheless, the trial moves on at a fairly speedy rate.

On the stand yesterday was a certain Karl Struller, 1st Sgt. Of the Hq. Co., at Mauthausen.  For seven years he said he was at the Camp and never saw a prisoner mistreated or beaten.  But the prosecution sort of tied him up in loop-holes and made him look pretty silly trying to say he walked past an iron gate for seven years and never saw a chain with a person hanging there everyday.  But he did admit that he “had heard about it.”  It only takes one day at trials such as those to see that all Germans, regardless of how they look or how peaceful they act, are just as responsible as the next one.  But the testimony you hear all day is that “they heard about such things, but that was all.”  American justice is being given to men who don’t rightly deserve it – and they can all start counting their last days now.

During the noon hour we looked at the “points of interest” of the Dachau Camp, which are all located in an area of about an acre where the Germans committed their scientific murder of upwards of 300,000 people.  You should see it, that’s all there is to it.  The crematory looks like a simple little place of business, inside are seven brick ovens where people met their final fate.  But that wasn’t their first visit.  Once they went inside the brick wall, they never left it…but sometimes they were tortured in that little wooded area for weeks at a time.  On one side of the building are three roomy gas chambers – the prisoners were told to go in and take a shower.  They never breathed fresh air again.  Offset from the building a little was a number of dog kennels where prisoners were sent as the victims of the hungry mongrels, who slowly chewed them to bits.  In the basement, with a convenient slide for bodies from the first floor, they stacked the bodies – just like stacking fire wood.  Still visible on some of the walls are fingernail marks where half-dead bodies tried to claw.  Over on the other side of the yard is a little hill where prisoners were ordered to kneel before shot in the back of the head.  One of the oddities is that the Germans even thought of wooden gratings over a small trench, so that manpower wouldn’t be wasted cleaning up the blood.  Yes, they were fine supermen – and we still fall for their line.

Just told you these few things so that you would know that the Germans committed all those atrocities you heard about.  I can verify them – although I didn’t see the bodies, I saw the equipment – that was enough to convince me.  I received the camera package and the two rolls of film – thanx a lot.  All for now,

Love, Gord

PS – Here are my accumulated savings.  Invest it as you see fit, Pop.  I’ll be able to go to college on my own before long.

DPs living in sided freight cars near Dachau Camp
 

I always laugh when he changes the name of Furstenfeldbruck to something else - in the letter below he changes it to Furstandthirdbase.

Furstenfeldbruck, Germany

1 May, 1946

Dearest Mom and Pop: -

Well, we’re back from our excursion around Germany – and much more seasoned than before.  We did a lot of travelling in those three days – to Nurnberg, then down to Regensburg and back to Furstandthirdbase.  The ball club lost their first game, 6-5, to the 26th Infantry, tied at 2-2 in a second game called because of rain, and beat the famous First Division yesterday, 4-3.  So, we got a share of victories out of the deal.

Naturally the high point of the trip was visiting the Nurnberg War Crimes Trials, which all the players did, but it was something I never expected to see when I saw those first newsreels last November…I never had any idea that I would be in that exact courtroom seeing those exact scenes.  We got in around 10 AM Monday and only stayed about two hours, but it was worth it.  There aren’t too many spectators, and you have to get a pocketful of passes before they let you in.  But we saw it all – Hermann Goergin sitting in his first row seat, Hess, Ribbentrop, Jodl, Rosenberg, Doenitz, Raeder, - and our own famous personages, Justice Jackson and Francis Biddle. 

The entire proceedings are heard over earphones, in any of four different languages, for the benefit of Russians, French, German and English personnel both as spectators and as active participants.  There is very little delay that way, and you hear the interpretation right with the speaking.  The court room itself is not nearly so large as pictures suggest – in fact it is surprisingly small.  And I would venture to say that some 200 people are inside the railing participating – a great number of recorders, defense counsels, prosecuting assistants etc.  They give out a type of program with all the info to all spectators, which I shall send to you with some pictures I got through the press men – they should be invaluable. 

On the stand the other day was Julius Streicher, famed, notorious Jew-baiter, who denied, quite naturally, that he had ever given orders to exterminate Jews, smash their windows or burn their synagogues.  He blamed it all on Hitler, and that he only carried out the Fuhrer’s orders – silly, but he claimed as much.  He treated all the Jews very fairly except when Hitler ordered him to do otherwise.  It is all the same story – blame it on the guy who is dead or say you just “heard about such things.”  It not only was exempletory [sic] at Dachau, where they are trying the small cogs, but also at Nurnberg, where they are listening to the big “wheels” themselves.  It is the only defense they have, but I doubt if that will stop the ropes from tightening – they should all see the gallows.

The stadium where we played ball was formerly Hitler’s famed pageant place – seating way over 200,000 people.  You’ve seen pictures of the giant marble stands with the high podium where Hitler used to reel off his lectures.  Instead of the swastika, the place is decorated with the big red, white and blue A of the Third Army now.  And appropriate enough in one corner is the beautiful ball park, a tribute to America’s ability to change something very bad into something very good.  The marble pillars are a fitting background for the great American pastime – it’s sort of an oddity.

On our arrival back at the home base, we find that Gen. McNarney’s orders are being carried out to prevent a GI from having any spare time…it’s all the Regular Army now.  6 AM reveille, roll calls, drill, guard duty, bed checks, taps etc.  But regardless of how I feel not being RA and being subject to their regulations, I must take what they call “chicken” with all the rest.  But they shall not take advantage of me, especially when I work off hours as it is.  One drastic measure which hampers our work, and I may still consider going to Stars and Stripes.  The proposal was aimed at the bad soldiers, and it’s hitting everybody.  That’s what hurts – we who do our job as best we can get the same punishment as those who do nothing.  Mamma, I wanna cum home.

Das ist alles for now – more very soon.

All my love, Gord

PS – These are scenes of Munich

He did send the program home and my brother is keeping it safe and promises to scan and send it to me SOON!

Bombed out rubble of Munich

Munich, April, 1946

Munich Church

Art gallery in Munich's Koenigsplatz

And a snippet from another letter:

Furstenfeldbruck, Germany

6 August 1946

Dearest Mom and Pop: -

Just got back a few hours ago from Nurnberg, where we spent a very enjoyable three days as official correspondents.  Our plans to fly didn’t pan out (as usual) but we were fortunate enough to requisition a command car and drove up and around Nurnberg.  Our place of stop-over was with the “big time” at the International Military Tribunal Press Camp, where we finagled our way in since we are official newspapermen.  After rubbing shoulders with such correspondents as Hoddenfield of the AP (who the hell is he?) and men from all the Allied countries, I feel like a man whose been around.  We spent Sunday at the ET swim championships, which the Air Force won its first major athletic title over here.  About seven fellows from our base were on the AAF team, so we were justly proud of them.  They literally outclassed everybody, and gave the enemy-Infantry boys something to wonder about.

Monday (yesterday) we spent the entire day at the trials, in which the organizations such as the SS and SA are now under examination.  They had some big SS leaders on the stand, which got to be both boring and dry.  But the presence of all the “boys” such as Goering Ribbentrop et all made this second visit just as interesting.  Thru our press affiliations, we sat in on a press conference by Leslie Hore-Belisha, former British Minister of War, who was visiting the IMT for a day or so.  It was the same room in which La Guardia had his press meeting two days previously – too bad we missed that.  It was an interesting day, needless to say.  And today we rode back.

Nurnberg, 1946

I have loved reading and transcribing these letters and feel like I have a bit of history at my fingertips.  I'm considering putting the letters and photos together into a book and my brain is pondering just how to do this and what a fitting title might be. 

 The American GI at heart is a generous creature

My dad really was a generous creature.  Well, he was!