.

Here, gathered in our beloved South Dakota, are a few members of our Williamson / Mattson Clan. Charles and Luella are to be blamed (be kind, they didn't know what they were doing). We're generally a happy bunch and somewhat intelligent (notwithstanding our tenuous grasp on reality). I'm also proud to say that most of us still have our teeth.

Tuesday, August 14, 2012

Aunt Bev's Photo Album. Spearfish, South Dakota. 1973/74

From the Fortress of Solitude
Pleasant Grove

Hello All,
Tonight in our digital gathering we pass around more pictures from Aunt Bev's family photo album documenting the every growing Mattson clan in the early 1970's.  These pictures were taken at the Mattson home in Spearfish, South Dakota.  Aunt Bev's handwriting can be seen in the margins.  Please excuse the scanner for cutting off the part of the descriptions.  What you can read is good enough to make out the meaning.   

Several of the photos are dimming with age.  Others are color shifting and darkening.  The distortions are due to the actually photo and age.  I did my best to correct the color.  Other photos are displayed in both their poor state and in black and white.  By removing the color, I was able to bring some clarity to the photo. 

The gems in today's post are 

1.  Joseph's first photo at 1 week old. 
2.  Kirk off to his first day of Kindergarten. 

Simply,
Victor







































Sunday, August 12, 2012

Our Cousin at the Battle of Bunker Hill. Mattson, McCrillis Line






From the Fortress of Solitude
Pleasant Grove

Hello All,
The middle of August and the temperatures are still in the mid 90s here in Utah Valley.  I'm anxious for Autumn and cooler weather.  I think most Americans are ready to see the back side of the summer of 2012.  

Today in our digital family reunion we discover a 1st cousin 7 times removed who fought and died in the battle of Bunker Hill at the start of the Revolutionary War.  

I begin with the Relationship Chart:  


William McCrillis (1749 - 1775)
is your 1st cousin 7x removed
Father of William
Father of Willaim
Son of John
Son of Daniel
Son of Robert
Son of John K.
Daughter of Joseph
Daughter of Isabel Deanora
Daughter of Vesta Althea

Violet married Walter Mattson
to
Luella, Linda, John and Marvin
to
Us


Cousin William McCrillis served in Capt. Simon Marston’s Company.  Capt. Marston was under Colonel Joshua Wingate.  William enlisted on Apr. 23, 1775 and served 2 months 17 days.  Killed in the Battle of Bunker Hill. 






The Battle of Bunker Hill

The sun was shining from a cloudless sky a little past noon on June 17, 1775 when a British force of 1500 men landed on Charlestown Heights in Massachusetts. Their objective: a surprise attack to nullify the threat posed by "rebel" batteries on the peninsula.  However, the night before   for nearly twelve hours   the Americans had worked non-stop building their main fortification on Breed's Hill which lay at the foot of Bunker Hill to the north.

At daybreak on the 17th gazing through the morning fog, British General Howe was astonished to see a six-foot high earthwork   a mushroom fortress   that seemingly appeared overnight. "The rebels," he exclaimed, "have done more work in one night than my whole army would have done in one month." British cannons immediately opened fire from the ships offshore but the patriots continued work on the intrenchments without harm.
By mid-afternoon General Howe ordered his troops to advance and open fire. As the British moved forward, the Americans remained as silent as the tomb. "Don't fire until you see the whites of their eyes," was the order passed along the lines. When that moment came, the word "FIRE!" was shouted, and whole enemy platoons were mowed down and shattered, retreating to the foot of the hill.


Howe rallied his forces and repeated the attack with the same crushing results. Not to be discouraged, Howe rallied his men a third time, ordering them to use only their bayonets. After a desperate hand-to-hand struggle, the Americans were driven out.
In that final assault American General Joseph Warren and British Major John Pitcairn were killed. While the exact number of casualties varies among historians, the Americans were estimated at 441 killed and wounded... with the British casualties at 1,150 killed and wounded.

In all of the twenty battles of the Revolution, Bunker Hill exacted a heavy toll on British officers. In this one battle alone one-eighth of the British officers in the entire War were killed and one-sixth were wounded on that day.

Following the earlier skirmishes at Lexington and Concord, the battle of Bunker Hill was significant in that it overruled any real hope of conciliation. The outcome of the battle rallied the colonies and moved a lethargic Congress to take action. Bunker Hill showed the Americans that the British were not invincible. It showed the British Government that the "rebels" were a serious opponent, that "the mightiest army in all of Europe" had a real fight on its hands.


Monday, August 6, 2012

Aunt Bev's Photo Album. Post 3. 1972/73

From the Fortress of Solitude
Pleasant Grove

Hello All,
I can see another fire on the opposite side of Utah Lake through the Great Room's large window overlooking the valley.  The wind is beginning to pick up and its very hot.  This summer may go down as one of the hottest on record for northern Utah.  

Today I please to post more photographs from Aunt Bev's photo album.  These pictures take us from 1972 into 1973.  

Pictures taken in front of the Williamson home at 2214 38th Street, Rapid City.
 

Bev's handwritten notes are to the side of the photos.  Kirk is in the left.  The gentleman on the right is Bev's father.



These pictures were taken in California at Christmas 1972.  John, Bev, Kirk and Gina were visiting Grandma and Grandpa Mattson at their home in Harbor City, California.


More from Christmas 1972.







Grandpa Mattson died in 1973.  The family gathered for the funeral (picture on the right).  I'm not sure what's happening in the picture on the left.



Matt is one of Aunt Linda's boys. Shane Mattson is also with Kirk on the left.  The Mattson's gather on the right, sadly, Uncle Marvin was cut off in the picture.  In the photo Left to Right. Marvin, Linda, Grandma Violet, Luella and John.







Bev's mother is helping Gina hold Angie

Kirk watching Angie.  Angie one week old.

Kirk's 4th Birthday

Sunday, August 5, 2012

Richard III of England. Our 14th Great Grand Uncle, Williamson Line. Think Shakespeare..


King Richard III
Yes, think Shakespeare.


From the Fortress of Solitude
Pleasant Grove

Hello Williamsons,

"Did you know that some of the family really believe everything you write about me in your stories?" Luella asked me last week while we were driving to Salt Lake City.
.
I was a bit surprised.  "You mean some of them believe you really take your washing to the canal below the house and do it with a wash board?"

"Yes!" she replied.

I was even more surprised.  "You mean to tell me that some of them really believe you use a WalMart shopping cart to cart your laundry up and down the hill between house and canal?"

"Yes!" she replied.  "I don't think they understand your sense of humor."

"Its called satire and irony mother," I explained.  "Its a simple bending of the truth to make things a bit more interesting.  Buried within every embellished story is the 'real story'.  You just have to do some digging to ferret it out."

"Well, some of them don't get it."  Luella redirected the air conditioning toward her face for its full effect.  Our Utah heat was causing persperation to form on her upper lip.  I knew what was coming next.  If she stayed true to form, she would try to distract me while redirecting the air vents on my side of the car's dash to blow on her.

"Don't even think about it," I warned as soon as she told me to look at the unusual cloud formation over the Wasatch Mountains. There was a long pause during which she dealt with the strangling effect of the seat belt.

"What about our Swedish relatives who read your blog?  Are they going to understand the stuff you write is made up or are they going to believe it all and think I'm some loony ready for the home?"

"Do the Swedes have a sense of humor?"  I asked.

"My Swedish grandmother was a serious woman,"  she replied.

"Who wouldn't be serious living on the open planes of Montana on a homestead without electricity and running water.  I think having to use an outhouse in the dead of a winter's night would sure suck the laughter right out of you."

"She also had terrible asthma and the weeds were everywhere," Luella remembered.

There was another pause.  I glanced down at the outside air temperature.  The screen showed 97 degrees. "I think the Swedes have a sense of humor," I continued after awhile.  "What difference does it make anyway?  They live in Sweden, we live in Utah, we've never met.  Let them think what they want.  Besides, I think the stories shed some light on the real Luella."

"I'm not senile yet."

"What about the burners on the stove?"

"Once, just once," she became defensive.  "Your father's the one who exaggerates.  Don't believe the things he says I do either."  There was another pause.  I turned on the radio.  Something about Mitt Romney came up that set her off in another direction.  The city's tall buildings were coming into view.
I nodded while she expounded on all things political.  I hoped it wasn't going to be a long afternoon.



Richard III our 14th Great Grand Uncle 

Today we take a moment to read about one of our 14th Great Grand Uncles, Richard III of England along the Williamson line.

Let's begin with the Relationship Chart so you can see how it traces back.....

Relationship Chart
  
III Richard (1410 - 1438)
is your 14th great grand uncle
Father of III
Daughter of RICHARD
Daughter of Anne
Daughter of Anne
Son of Margaret
Son of Giles
Daughter of Sir John
Son of Grace
Son of Edmund
Daughter of Thomas
Son of Rebecca
Son of Cuthbert
Son of Cuthbert
Son of Mathew


William Jonathan Williamson, son of George Matthew Williamson (1858-1934) married Effie Helen Victor (1867-1944)

to their children

Ima Della, Vinnie, Inez, Lillie Ethel, Josie Elvery, Emmett, Walter, Charles, Maurice

to

Us
Richard III
1483-5 AD

Richard III, the eleventh child of Richard, Duke of York, and Cecily Neville, was born in 1452. He was created third Duke of Gloucester at the coronation of his brother, Edward IV. Richard had three children: one each of an illegitimate son and daughter, and one son by his first wife, Anne Neville, widow of Henry IV's son Edward.

Richard's reign gained an importance out of proportion to its length. He was the last of the Plantagenetdynasty, which had ruled England since 1154; he was the last English king to die on the battlefield; his death in 1485 is generally accepted between the medieval and modern ages in England; and he is credited with the responsibility for several murders: Henry VI, Henry's son Edward, his brother Clarence, and his nephews Edward and Richard.

Richard's power was immense, and upon the death of Edward IV, he positioned himself to seize the throne from the young Edward V. He feared a continuance of internal feuding should Edward V, under the influence of his mother's Woodville relatives, remain on the throne (most of this feared conflict would have undoubtedly come from Richard). The old nobility, also fearful of a strengthened Woodville clan, assembled and declared the succession of Edward V as illegal, due to weak evidence suggesting that Edward IV's marriage to Elizabeth Woodville was bigamous, thereby rendering his sons illegitimate and ineligible as heirs to the crown. Edward V and his younger brother, Richard of York, were imprisoned in the Tower of London, never to again emerge alive. Richard of Gloucester was crowned Richard III on July 6, 1483.


Four months into his reign he crushed a rebellion led by his former assistant Henry Stafford, Duke of Buckingham, who sought the installation of Henry Tudor, a diluted Lancaster, to the throne. The rebellion was crushed, but Tudor gathered troops and attacked Richard's forces on August 22, 1485, at the battle of Bosworth Field. The last major battle of the Wars of the Roses, Bosworth Field became the death place of Richard III. Historians have been noticeably unkind to Richard, based on purely circumstantial evidence; Shakespeare portrays him as a complete monster in his play, Richard III. One thing is for certain, however: Richard's defeat and the cessation of the Wars of the Roses allowed the stability England required to heal, consolidate, and push into the modern era.