Showing posts with label John Allen Hudson. Show all posts
Showing posts with label John Allen Hudson. Show all posts

Sunday, March 16, 2025

This Week On My Family History Calendar-Missing My Dad





Dad
John Allen Hudson
(17 March 1941-18 May 2019)



March 17
John Allen Hudson 

 This day would have been my dad's 84th birthday. He was born in Sumter, South Carolina to Benjamin Allen Hudson (1918-1976) and Mary Baker Hudson (1920-2010)
Happy Birthday, Dad.
You are now and always will be missed terribly. 


March 19~
    Eliza (Brazell) Roberts (1836-1890), my maternal 3rd great-grandmother, died 135 years ago in Richland County, South Carolina. She was buried in Brown's Chapel Cemetery, Richland County, South Carolina. 

Elisa Brazell Headstone
photo credit: Jim Hepler



March 22~

 This day would have been the 131st  birthday of my paternal great-grandfather, William Treadford Roberts (1894-1959).
 He was the son of George Phillip Roberts (1856-1930) and Hattie (Brazell) Roberts (1870-1927) and was born in Richland County, South Carolina. 



 Who are you remembering this week?


Thanks so much for stopping by!
Helping you climb your family tree,


Sunday, February 16, 2025

Celebration Sunday-Genealogy Happy Dance: An Unexpected Find!





 You know the dance. You know you've done it. The one every researcher does after finding something new. The one where you want to jump up and down and shout to everyone that you found the document, contacted a cousin with the family Bible, made a DNA connection, or found a new branch to your tree. The one that is met with glazed stares and eye rolls.

                                                          Celebration Sunday is a place to share your discoveries. 
This weekly series enables everyone to tell about their Genealogy Happy Dance moment. 
Share by scrolling 
down and add your story to the comments section, or you may also put a link to a blog post telling about what had you dancing this week.







My Happy Dance Moment for the week:

My father was stationed in the US Air Force in Bermuda when I was a child.

We lived there for three years. I have so many wonderful memories.

After my father died in 2019, my mom and I booked a cruise to Bermuda. We planned to return to all the places we lived and see the sites again. Our trip was scheduled for the spring of 2020. 

We all know what happened. COVID hit, and our cruise was canceled. We rebooked, and it was canceled again.

Fast forward to March 2024.  My mom passed away peacefully in my home. 

I decided that my husband and I would take the cruise in my parents' honor. 

I have spent the last year going through photos, making plans to recreate some of them, and visiting the places that meant so much to us.

The only problem was that we lived in two different houses while there and did not have addresses.

Our mail came to a PO box on the base, and the homes were named but not given numbers when we lived there. Mom couldn't remember what they were called, and I couldn't find any information letting me know.

I did find a clue on a map, where one of the locations was circled, but there was nothing specific, just a general area.

There has always been a strong memory of driving to the other home. We would go past a cemetery with white graves above ground. As a child, it was not a sight I liked to see! On a Google map, I was able to locate the cemetery and the road I felt we lived on.

I have photos of the homes and am pretty sure I found one, but the other? The one near the cemetery? The road it was on doesn't have a house that looks like the one from the photo. It's been decades, so I know things change.

Then, yesterday, as I was going through more of Mom's things, I discovered two Bermuda driver's licenses! One for my dad and one for my mom. Each listed different residences.  

They have the names of the roads and the name of the cottage that I can't find! 

I can't believe it!!!

Hopefully, this additional information will help me locate and visit both homes when we are in Bermuda!

I will be doing this happy dance for some time!



Share your Happy Dance Moment for the week, and let's celebrate together!


 Thanks so much for stopping by!

Helping you climb your family tree,




Sunday, October 13, 2024

Celebration Sunday-Genealogy Happy Dance: When Pictures Find You!

 



You know the dance. You know you've done it. The one every researcher does after finding something new. The one where you want to jump up and down and shout to everyone that you found the document, contacted a cousin with the family Bible, made a DNA connection, or found a new branch to your tree. The one that is met with glazed stares and eye rolls.

                                                          Celebration Sunday is a place to share your discoveries. 
This weekly series enables everyone to tell about their Genealogy Happy Dance moment. 
Share by scrolling 
down and add your story to the comments section, or you may also put a link to a blog post telling about what had you dancing this week.

                                                                      

Dad and his great-grandmother 
 on the porch of her home on Manning Road in Sumter County, SC.



      An unexpected photo! Sometimes, it feels like photos and documents make sure you discover them. This was the case last week as I was looking through some old family photos to gain clues to answering a research question. After taking out the pictures in the file that I thought might help me, I placed the file folder on my desk.
Then, all of a sudden, a photo-just one- slid out and onto the floor. One that I didn't remember I had.  A picture of my father, John Allen Hudson (1941-2019), and his great-great-grandmother Martha "Mattie" Victoria (Bradford) Baker (1862-1947).  This photo was taken on the front porch of the Baker home on the Manning Road in Sumter County, South Carolina. 
Dad was born in 1941, and Mattie died in 1947; the photo was most likely taken around 1945. My dad had fond memories of playing at his Nana's home as a tiny boy.  Although under new ownership, the house still sits on the road from Sumter to Manning; I wish it would share its stories of the Baker family who lived there long ago.
How did this photo help answer a research question? The Baker family lived in several different homes while raising their large family. I am trying to determine a timeline for the homes. 
This photo of my dad on the porch helps put this home in the correct time period.
Thanks to my dad and my third-great-grandmother for pushing that picture out of the stack so I wouldn't overlook it!


What's your Happy Dance Moment?

 Please share, and let's celebrate together!






     
 Share the fun! Click below to tweet this post! 
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Looking forward to reading about your Happy Dance moment!

Thanks so much for stopping by!
Helping you climb your family tree,

Sunday, March 12, 2023

This Week on My Family History Calendar: Remembering a Birthday and a Death.




March 12~
   This day marks the 93rd anniversary of the death of my maternal great-great grandfather, George Phillip Roberts (1956-1930).  George was 73 when he died from Endocarditis. He was buried in Macedonia Church Cemetery, Columbia, Richland County, South Carolina. 


George Phillip Roberts
Headstone
Macedonia Chruch Cemetery
Columbia Richland, South Carolina 





Dad
John Allen Hudson
(17 March 1941-18 May 2019)

March 17
John Allen Hudson 

 This day would have been my dad's 82nd birthday. He was born in Sumter, South Carolina, to Benjamin Allen Hudson (1918-1976) and Mary Baker Hudson (1920-2010)
Happy Birthday, Dad.
You are now and always will be missed terribly. 


 Who are you remembering this week?


Thanks so much for stopping by!
Helping you climb your family tree,


Sunday, March 13, 2022

This Week On My Family History Calendar

  





Dad
John Allen Hudson
(17 March 1941-18 May 2019)

March 17
John Allen Hudson 

 This day would have been my dad's 81st birthday. He was born in Sumter, South Carolina to Benjamin Allen Hudson (1918-1976) and Mary Baker Hudson (1920-2010)
Happy Birthday, Dad.
You are now and always will be missed terribly. 


March 19~
    Eliza (Brazell) Roberts (1836-1890), my maternal 3rd great-grandmother, died 132 years ago in Richland County, South Carolina. She was buried in Brown's Chapel Cemetery, Richland County, South Carolina. 

Elisa Brazell Headstone
photo credit: Jim Hepler



Who are you remembering this week?


Thanks so much for stopping by!

Helping you climb your family tree,


Sunday, March 14, 2021

This Week On My Family History Calendar

 






Dad
John Allen Hudson
(17 March 1941-18 May 2019)

March 17
 This day would have been my dad's 80th birthday.
The first birthday since his death last year.
You are missed terribly. 
John Allen Hudson (17 March 1941-18 May 2019)


March 19~
    Eliza (Brazell) Roberts (1836-1890), my maternal 3rd great grandmother, died 131 years ago in Richland County, South Carolina. She was buried in Brown's Chapel Cemetery, Richland County, South Carolina. 

Elisa Brazell Headstone
photo credit: Jim Hepler





Who are you remembering this week?

Thanks so much for stopping by!
Heping you climb your family tree,

Sunday, March 15, 2020

This Week On My Fmaily History Calendar

March 15-March 21






Dad
John Allen Hudson
(17 March 1941-18 May 2019)

March 17
 This day would have been my dad's 79th birthday.
The first birthday since his death last year.
You are missed terribly. 
John Allen Hudson (17 March 1941-18 May 2019)


March 19~
    Eliza (Brazell) Roberts (1836-1890), my maternal 3rd great grandmother, died 130 years ago in Richland County, South Carolina. She was buried in Brown's Chapel Cemetery, Richland County, South Carolina. 

Eliza Brazell Roberts
Headstone
photo credit: Jim Hepler



March 22~

 This day would have been the 126 birthday of my paternal great grandfather, William Treadford Roberts (1894-1959).
 He was the son of George Phillip Roberts (1856-1930) and Hattie (Brazell) Roberts (1870-1927) and was born in Richland County, South Carolina. 


William Treadford Roberts
©Cheri Hudson Passey



Who are you remembering this week?

Thanks so much for stopping by!
Helping you climb your family tree,





Wednesday, February 14, 2018

Finding Love








My parents are an inspiration. 
In their 58 years of marriage, they have experienced the joy of family, the pain of being apart during dad's tour of duty in Viet Nam plus his other assignments with the Air Force and the heartache of debilitating illness.

This Valentines Day I honor them with this Adobe Spark video for their example of love, moving past difficulties and commitment through adversity.

Happy Valentines Day, Mom and Dad!





This post was written for this week's 52 Ancestors blog prompt "Valentine" from Amy Johnson Crow.


Do you have examples of enduring love in your family tree?



Thanks so much for stopping by!
Helping you climb your family tree!







Sunday, February 15, 2015

52 AncestorsWeek 7: Love~John and Brenda



 There was no question of who to write about when I read the 52 Ancestors in 52 weeks topic for week 7-Love.
     
 My parents, John Allen Hudson and Brenda Jean Roberts Hudson, have been in love since they met and started dating during High School in Camden, Kershaw, South Carolina.


John Hudson and Brenda Roberts
1957 School dance
©Cheri Hudson Passey

John Hudson and Brenda Roberts
1958 School Dance
©Cheri Hudson Passey



John and Brenda Hudson
Wedding Day 1959
©Cheri Hudson Passey



John and Brenda Hudson
Bermuda
1967
©Cheri Hudson Passey

John and Brenda Hudson
1968
©Cheri Hudson Passey


John and Brenda Hudson
1980's
©Cheri Hudson Passey

John and Brenda Hudson
1990's
©Cheri Hudson Passey



John and Brenda Hudson
November 2014
©Cheri Hudson Passey


Thank you for being such a great example of enduring love.



Are we kin? Please contact me. Together we can find our people

Thanks so much for stopping by!





Monday, March 25, 2013

Celebrating Women's History: Called to the Principles Office!

 Lisa Alzo at The Accidental Genealogist has this blog prompt for Day 25 of Celebrating Women's History Month:

Tell how a female ancestor interacted with her children. Was she loving or supportive? A disciplinarian? A bit of both?

  My Dad tells a funny story about his mother Mary Baker Hudson.  




Dad and his parents -About 1944
Benjamin Allen Hudson (1918-1976)
Mary Baker Hudson ( 1920-2010)
John Allen Hudson
© Cheri Hudson Passey


Dad was -as he will admit-a trouble maker at school and his neighborhood  My Grandmother, "Mimi" as we grandchildren called her, did her best to parent her strong willed, fun loving son.
 She must have known she was in trouble when in 5th grade Dad decided that his math test was too hard, told his teacher that he had to go to the bathroom, and climbed out the window and ran home! 
 One day when Dad was in High School, Mimi was called in for a meeting with the Principle to discuss my Dad's many absences. He pulled out a pile of written excuses that my Dad had  turned in and asked my Grandmother if it was her signature on each of these notes.
 Well, of course it wasn't-my Dad had been turning them in so he wouldn't get in trouble for skipping school and signing his Mother's name himself!
 He told me that she looked at the papers, looked at him, and then said to the Principle-Yes Sir, that's my signature.
 Ha! Ha! I think my sweet Mimi was an enabler! 
 This close call didn't stop him from his rebellious ways. His stories of pranks and trouble making are family lore. Mimi lovingly stood by him, supported him, and on many occasions covered for him.
  All in all she did a great job. As in the case of most Mothers, she is one of the reasons that he became the man he did. He is generous and kind. A loving father, grandfather and great grandfather. And that rebellious spirit? Oh, it's still in there! I am sure that has something to do with her as well!


© Cheri Hudson Passey

Tuesday, March 5, 2013

Celebrating Women's History Month-Day 5: How My Dad Met My Mother!

Blog prompt for Day 5 from Lisa Alzo at The Accidental Genealogist

How did they meet? You’ve documented marriages, now, go back a bit. Do you know the story of how your parents met? 


John and Brenda Hudson
Wedding Day
2 July 1959
© Cheri Hudson Passey
     My parents went to the same High School.. They had seen one another in the hall and at various school functions. Dad was “the bad boy" while Mom was “the good girl". They didn't hang out with the same people although they lived just a few streets apart.
 In their small town the local High School football game was the place to be on a Friday night.
 On one fateful  Friday night Mom was at the game with her friends-and Dad? Well, Dad wanted to be there too, but unfortunately he was broke and couldn't get in.
  Remember, I said he was “the bad boy". 
Not having money to pay to get in was not going to stop my Dad. He climbed the fence to the stadium and jumped over- only to be seen by a policeman who started chasing him!  Thinking quickly, Dad sat down in the nearest open seat.....right next to my Mom.
 They have been together nearly 54 years!

John and Brenda Hudson
November 2012
© Cheri Hudson Passey