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It’s All About the Name

Fri, Dec 18, 2020, at 12:05 AM
 
Beth,
 
This is the letter I sent Jeff a very long time ago.
 
John, IV
 
Dear Jeff,

We’re excited about the news of a Basketball team in the making, and yes, I have some original thoughts about possible names.

You mention family genealogy as a source of ideas. In this specific regard, I am somewhat handicapped. It seems that all my material was sent to our brother Jim for a school project that Lauren or Stacy did. They still have the original material, so give them a call and drop my name. If they still recognize it, it might be worth a 10-cent phone call…You say you don’t use Sprint’? Have I got a deal for you? There’s this bridge in Brooklyn… Sorry, the land in Florida is taken; a fellow named Disney, I think.

I’m at a loss as to how you knew of my special expertise with naming babies… Generally, it’s been a well-kept secret.

First, however, some history bears repeating. One upon a time, a good brother was crestfallen to lose out on the opportunity to name his daughter after the middle names of his exceptional brothers Jeffery Lee and James Stacy. Both the brother and his lovely Indiana bride had easily agreed the name “Stacy Lee– would be a terrific way to honor his siblings. Ultimately. in a naughty moment. one of the brothers broke up the name set by daring to name one of his own daughters, Stacy. Sure, it was his name. nevertheless…

Michelle Kathleen became the second incarnation of a “magnificent obsession–. Michelle after “David Michael– & Kathleen Ann. “Kathleen Ann–. i.e., using the first names of the siblings to the wife of the good brother as the new source of inspiration. This “family– tradition, started by “yours truly– could create some interesting combinations. How about. Paul Stacy. Lee Stacey or John Jim? And is it Paul Lee? or Pauly? Let me digress…

Then there was my attempt several years ago to convince my then boss. Duane Burris to let me name his and Debbie’s fourth or fifth baby (at some point, I’m told you stop counting. Is a basketball team enough, or is football the current rage’?). Anyway, we were driving to Myrtle Beach. Smith Carolina for a conference, and you know how it is when you have too much time on your hands. All the Burris’s children and the parent’s names all begin with a “D.” I campaigned hard for 12 hours to get Duane to choose –Dean Burris thinking I had a shoo-in recommendation. I honestly thought with our involvement with Colleges and Universities that Duane would jump on the concept that –Dean– is a convenient short cut to academic rank. Who needs to get a doctorate when “Dean”– will do. It turned out, however, that the baby was a girl rather than a boy. Not listening to the Dr. (me again), they named her Dallas. You may not be old enough to remember a famous porn movie called. Debbie Does Dallas. Enough said. Dean would have been a better choice. even for a girl.’ How about President Elcik? Commodore Elcik? You get the idea…

This christening a child with a name is obviously a tricky business.

Jeff, do you remember my teacher for the eighth grade? I can’t seem to remember her name. She was also the Principal of the grade school. Perhaps I can’t remember her name because of the wooden ruler she broke over my head. Who would have thought she would get upset because I asked her to be quiet and stop bugging me? My memory is shaky… What really was the word I used’? Never mind…

Anyway. I remember quite well the day she returned from a principal’s conference, just busting a gut to tell us a story she heard at the conference.

As I remember the story, a young impressionable schoolteacher is chagrined to learn that a new boy in her first-grade class was named “Dammit– by his obviously distraught parents. (Rumor had it they had wanted a girl and “Dammit– was a surprise. The teacher didn’t like it much. but what could she do’? –Dammit was the boy’s given. Christian name. Well, several weeks into the school year, the teacher learns the Principal will soon visit her class. Vowing to make a good impression, she decides that she should call on the new boy under no circumstance. The day of the visit comes, and she decides to hold a spelling bee. As the words get progressively harder to spell, the teacher notices that the new boy is trying harder to get her attention. On the very next word, the whole class seems stumped, all except the new kid who continues to wave wildly for her attention. In exasperation, the teacher was heard to say. “Dammit. You know that you can’t spell that word. The principal at this point ventures. “Hell, let him try.”

Now really… which is worse –Dam it or “Shut up–? 

Michelle (the girl who could have been named Stacy Lee) thinks you should seriously consider one of the top 5 baby names for 1996. as reported by health departments. These are in the order of their popularity: Michael. Matthew. Christopher, Joshua, or Jacob. Michelle’s favorite suggestion is “Matthew Lee.”

John, IV

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Re: Civil Patriot’s Big Tech Approved Letter

Sun 12/20/2020 12:51 AM

 
This letter was such a hit with me because Pam and I have dozens of annual letters that I have preserved as life stories for the MyCousins Family Tree. 
 
A letter has often accompanied either the annual Christmas or the New Year’s greeting card in our family.  For decades we were faithful and did one or the other, sometimes both.  For the last decade, we have thought ourselves too busy, and the practice stopped.  Pam and I need to revisit this. She often wrote the first draft, and I would add embellishments. It has been fun to do.
 
Pam was surprised that I found my letter to Jeff. But, if she is a packrat when it comes to the house, I am a kindred spirit when it comes to my computer. I save everything, and I’m constantly reorganizing. I have two 8 terabyte hard drives in use, and one is a backup.  I also have several drives as offsite storage in case of a disaster.  
 
Relating all this to our ancestry research, I was reflecting on our responsibilities as genealogists. We need to do 5 things with our family history: preserve, identify, organize, analyze, and share.  It is helpful to step back occasionally and ask, “what am I doing in each of these areas.”  You and I have a pretty good record.  Encouraging others is the one area where I feel the need for improvement.  Our eBook will help. At least, I hope so.
 
John, IV
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The Ancestry.com Project

 
Tue 11/17/2020 6:05 PM
 
Jeff,
 
I’m almost ready to publish on a flash drive the “MyCousins” Family Tree with a companion eBook and supporting documents, images, and photos.  You and each of your boys will get a copy as a gift from Pam and me.
 
Before I send out copies of the drive, I wonder if you have time to assemble and ship the documents and photos you wanted to share.  There should be time for me to curate them before I go to press if you can do this soon.  This reminds me of one of my favorite poems.
 
Patience is a virtue,
catch it if you can.
Seldom in a woman,
never in a man.
 
Lol…
 
Also, FYI, I asked the Del Moral, Duryea, Flickinger, Grap, McClanahan, and Portell families to provide me with data on their parents, i.e., 1 generation so that I could use my 3-month subscription to US Discovery on their Surnames. I have data on Susie (expert researcher that I am).  
 
hope all is going especially well for you, Harry, Max, and Sam.  You are all included in my prayers.
 
Love,
 
John, IV
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Re: Status Updates

Sun 12/6/2020 3:55 AM

 
What is that old saying? “From your lips to God’s ear.”  I really do hope that that the two Elcik families are connected, and we find proof. 
 
I have two game plans:  
  • The DNA option is in play as I have submitted the Ancestry DNA kit for analysis. Ancestry.com’s tools for working with our family tree made it the best choice.  However, I also have recently purchased the MyHeritage DNA kit because of its uniquely large European database. It would help if I could get “Ilcik” DNA, but I will be patient. Sooner, or later one of the Ilick’s will share our interest in solving this mystery.
  • I also maintain the FamilySearch Tree because of its broad reach. Someday, I think that another tree will connect to ours, and it will have European ancestors that answer our questions.
To add another quote, “hope is not a strategy,” so I am taking all the action steps I can.  Do you remember the old joke about the individual complaining to God about his not winning the lottery?  He prays that he is a good person, a faithful person, etc.  The story goes on to have God respond, “you need to meet me halfway and purchase a ticket.” I’m buying tickets. Lol. 
 
My next action step will be to investigate immigration records.  Ancestry.com hasn’t been helpful with this part, so I need to try something else. 
 
John, IV 
 
P.S. I have also started writing a “Reader’s Digest” condensed version of the Elcik family history.  I’m about 12 pages into it, and because I want to keep it short, it is about done. Maybe. Maybe not. ? 
  
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Church History

Tue 12/8/2020 7:45 AM

I have been overlooking the historical aspects of MyCousins. The investigation into the origins of St. Cyril Cemetery will put me on track to fix this.

Saints Cyril and Methodius

Cyril and Methodius were two brothers and Byzantine Christian theologians and missionaries. For their work evangelizing the Slavs, they are known as the “Apostles to the Slavs.” They are credited with devising the Glagolitic alphabet, the first alphabet used to transcribe Old Church Slavonic. Wikipedia

Born826 or 827 and 815; ThessalonicaByzantine Empire (present-day Greece)
Died14 February 869 and 6 April 885; Rome and VelehradMoravia
John, IV
P.S. I have not given up on contacting the Cemetery who according to research, it has “1-4 employees.” I am confused as to why the (207) 353-2792 phone number for the Cemetery didn’t work.  Pam thinks there was a big snowstorm in Lisbon so we will try again. It should be a current number as it is posted across many websites and listed in the Business Directory of the Town Center for Lisbon as the Holy Trinity Rectory number. I believe they have inherited ownership. See https://www.lisbonme.org/business-directory/holy-trinity-catholic-church
Tue 12/8/2020 9:29 PM
John, IV,

You aren’t going to believe this, BUT Holy Trinity church is across the street from us.  They have a long driveway, and you can’t see the church from our house.  They combined Holy Family, St. Cyril, and the Catholic church in Lisbon several years ago and built on land across the street from us given to the church.  We walk over there every day as long as weather permits. 

There’s someone in the office some days, and I’ll walk over there and ask them if they have records of people buried in St. Cyril and Calvary cemeteries.  It’s worth a try, at least.  
 
I’ll see what I can do,
 
Beth
Wed 12/9/2020 12:43 AM
Beth,
Lol. It is a VERY small world. I look forward to learning more.
John, IV