Sunday, July 28, 2013

Days of '47 in Salt Lake City

Myrona, Jocie, Ashlyn, Tommy, & Heber
 This week it was celebration time in Salt Lake City as it was "Pioneer Days" and time to celebrate the arrival of the Saints to "The Valley." There is always something fun to do here and this week was no exception with rodeos and parades in different cities around the Valley and the big parade in downtown Salt Lake. We had our grandchildren here from Ohio and that made watching the parade all the more fun. There was one of the groups getting ready for the parade on the street outside the apartment building. When we went out to see the horses, the young man with them brought one of the littler horses over for the kids to pet.
The day before the parade these Fuller grandchildren went to Heritage Park and were getting the to ride the horses there. The redhead you see in the picture asked his Mom if the horse was a boy horse or a girl horse and when she told him it was a girl horse, he refused to ride it!!??

Pres. Uchtdorf and his wife were the Grand Marshal

The Clydesdales are big and beautiful (look closely and you'll see a Dalmation sitting on the Stagecoach)



A sampling of the floats


          
Chris and Myrona left after the parade as they were headed on to Arizona for a wedding of Myrona's sister. Wednesday afternoon our granddaughter, Meg Fuller, who was returning to Arizona from Ricks, spent a couple of nights with us.  We took her to the airport on Friday and she traveled on home to Arizona. We have sure enjoyed having the family visits we've had this summer.

Our normal schedule is to work at the Family History Library Monday through Friday 7:30 - 4:00 pm.  However, once a month we work on Saturday and when we do, we have Friday off.  It seems there are fewer missionaries at the library on Saturdays so we stay busier helping patrons so we really enjoyed our day there yesterday.

Our cultural events for the week included Clive Romney & Willingly which was dubbed as "Original folk music, cowboy poetry, and storytelling of Utah's best pioneer sagas." We heard some really great stories about some of the early day pioneers and the music was fun. (Mr. Romney said they were called Willingly because they are willing to join him for concerts!)

Clive Romney & Willingly with audience participation "playing" the farm tools for instruments.

Saturday night we attended a concert in the Assembly Hall performed by a combined choir of a number of the institutes around Salt Lake. They did a number of patriotic songs as well some of my favorites including, "Savior, Redeemer of My Soul" and "God of our Fathers, Whose Almighty Hand."
Salt Lake Valley Combined Institutes of Religion Choir

Portrait done for us by Sister Giles
One of the missionaries who serves with with us in the British Zone is Sister Dorothy Giles who is a very good artist.  She very kindly took our mission picture and made a portrait for us. This week we'll go on a hunt for an appropriate frame.

Tuesday, July 23, 2013

Visit from our Ohio Family

Chris and Myrona with their children atop the Conference Center
This summer has been so much fun as we've had family come to visit.  Our children, Chris and Myrona and their 4 children from Ohio, got here Sunday morning about 1:30 am - yes you read it right, 1:30 in the morning.  We were so happy to have them come and have enjoyed getting reacquainted with their 4 children. We were able to take the 2 youngest to the theatre to see the Sunday morning Tabernacle Choir Broadcast while Chris and Myrona took the older two into the Conference Center to enjoy it. (Children under 8 are not allowed to attend the broadcast).
City Creek Mall

Fun at the reflection pond
 

If any of you are coming to SLC anytime soon be sure to allow enough time to go to the Church History Museum to see the Norman Rockwell display.  They have most of the pictures that he has done that were originally published in the Boy Scout Magazine and on the cover of Life. I took pictures of most of the pictures that are there. (The display just opened last week in honor of the 100th anniversary of Boy Scouts and I believe will be up for one year.)

















This week we had the pleasure of going with some fellow missionaries, Dilworth and Pat Rust, to Midway, Utah (a little west of Park City) to see the Music Man.  It was put on by the High Valley Arts and was held outdoors.  We drove there in a POURING rainstorm and waited until about 8:30 for the show to start.  It was scheduled to start at 7:45 but we had to wait for the rain to stop.  The storm did indeed blow over and we were able to enjoy a nice cool evening and a delightful show.  Dilworth's brother, Marvin and his wife, Kay were in the show.  We knew them when they lived in Mesa as they lived directly across the street from us. Prior to the show we had a nice picnic lunch together as we held our umbrellas to keep the sandwiches from getting soggy.


Marvin and Kay Rust in the Music Man
 We're looking forward to the "Days of 47 Parade" which will be held on Wednesday, July 24th to celebrate and honor the arrival of the first pioneers to the Salt Lake Valley in 1847. The Library will be closed for the day so we have an extra day to "play."

And last, but not least, I must add a couple of flower pictures, just a few of the many that are in bloom on Temple Square.

The purple flowers come in varieties of purple, pink, and yellow and are breathtaking (sorry I don't know what they are.)

Sunday, July 14, 2013

More Visits

This has been an eventful week! In addition to finding some good sources to add to "The Tree" we also managed a trip to the Draper Temple and a number of concerts. Our goal is to visit all the temples in the Salt Lake Valley while we are here. Like the other temples we've visited, Draper is beautiful; the chandelier in the sealing room is especially breathtaking. We took a few pictures of the homes surrounding the temple. As you can see from the pictures they are more like castles than homes; they are huge!
Draper Temple about 20 minutes south of Salt Lake
This is one house!!
This is one house too!












Maurio Fischbeck, friend from Arizona
Earlier in the week our friend, Maurio Fischbeck, came to the Library as she was in Salt Lake for a family reunion and to do some Family History Work.

She was in the library for several days and we enjoyed helping her. She alsoattended a Family Tree  class with us where we learned more about the recent changes in "The Tree" and how to include photos. (Maurio is also our daughter's mother-in-law.)

Byde's niece and her husband, Ida and Lynn Ray and their son stopped by the zone to see us on Friday.  We were busily working on our assignments when they were all of a sudden standing there in front of us. We enjoyed a quick visit with them.  They were here from California to visit one of Ida's uncles who is in failing health.




Lynn & Ida Ray family

We attended the concert in the park on Tuesday night which was performed by a group of youth from Israel called "Israel Scouts Friendship Caravan."  They are here in the US on a goodwill mission and were a very talented group of young people.


On Thursday was the monthly "Men and Women of Faith" lecture entitled, "Iosepa: Utah's Pacific Islander Pioneers through an Archaelogist's Eyes," given by Benjamin Pykles. It was interesting especially in view of the fact that we had never heard of it before. A synopsis of his lecture is that from 1889 to 1917, Latter-day Saint converts from Polynesia settled in Iosepa, a remote desert colony in Utah's Skull Valley. Archaelogical investigations at the town site have revealed how these pioneers from the Pacific sought to make the desert "blossom as the rose" by drawing upon their traditional cultures and their newfound faith.

In addition to economic difficulties, there were other problems for the settlement. In 1896 three cases of leprosy were discovered and the victims were isolated in a special house, although fears of the spread of leprosy were unfounded. The harsh environment--burning heat in the summer and extreme cold in the winter--took its toll on the settlers, as witnessed by the large number of graves in the cemetery.

When the Hawaiian Mormons left Iosepa for Hawaii, many of them settled on the church plantation at Laie, Oahu. Iosepa was sold in 1917 to a livestock company. The cemetery was placed on the National Register of Historic Places in 1971.

The Friday night park concert was by a lady's trio who call themselves "Mercy River." Best of all was the Saturday night concert in the Assembly Hall by the Beehive Statesmen Chorus. This particular chorus was organized in 1948 and perform all around the Salt Lake Valley and the State of Utah. A women's quartet from a Sweet Adelines also joined them and performed several numbers. I love barbershop harmony!

Beehive Statesmen Chorus

Sunday, July 7, 2013

July 4th and a Visit From the Cox Family

Trish and Scott with their son Jaxon
One of our Nephews, Scott Sherwood, and his wife Trish and son, Jaxon, came by to visit us on Wednesday and took us out to eat at a great Brazilian Restaurant. The lunch was FANTASTIC. For those of you who haven't experienced Brazilian dining, you may want to try it. As they dropped us off and drove away I realized I had forgotten to get a picture so had to get one off Facebook.  Thanks Scott and Trish for a great visit and some yummy food to boot.

What a GREAT week celebrating the 4th of July and the Independence of our country.  The best part of all was having our children come from Arizona. Our Cox family arrived on the 4th dressed in their celebration attire and we have enjoyed getting to visit with them.  We have had several good rains along with some cooler weather which has been so very nice especially for our Arizona visitors.
YEAH the Cox family arrived!
We started with a trip to the Spaghetti Factory with all of them and enjoyed eating in the Trolley Car. Jennifer can remember eating there with Byde when they made a trip to Utah in about 1982.
Reviving an old memory in the Trolley Car
The whole group after dinner
After dinner we went for a walk on Temple Square and enjoyed the delightfully cool evening (it had rained earlier in the day).  We shot several pics there of the children and Jaylee even joined in with us even though she is far away serving in the Michigan Lansing mission.

Jerah, (Jaylee) Jamen, and Jori
Grandma, Jerah, (Jaylee), Jamen, Jori, and Papa
Jamen, (Jaylee), Jori, and Jerah. (Jamen has a mission call to Chihuahua, Mexico. He reports in November.)
 


(Jaylee), Jori, and Jerah
We didn't have to work on the 4th so for the first time since we've been here I spent a good deal of time working on a quilt and coerced Byde to help me with the ironing detail.  I got up and went for a walk on Temple Square about 6:30 am and there was not another soul in sight! I decided to take a "tour" for you in pictures even though I'm sure you've seen many of these before. Please notice the lack of anyone on Temple Square - I mean for the first 15 minutes I was there I didn't see another soul; I had it all to myself and it was delightful!!!
































 




All the above Temple Square Pictures were taken July 4, 2013
Missionary activities were concluded by me teaching my first inservice class on the British Floor.  The class was all about Tree Connect which you can get to by typing in recordseek.com and then dragging the tool to your Bookmark toolbar.  Once you have it there it will help you with all your sourcing in the Family Tree.  It is simple to use! Install it and love doing your sourcing on "The Tree."

The pictures below were taken at our apartment after the Tabernacle Choir Broadcast on Sunday.

Jennifer & Jeff Cox (Jennifer is our oldest)
Cox Cousins (Jaylee in the background)
We were able to fit quite a few into our small space!