Vol 22 No 1 Winter 2011 - Lothropp Family Foundation
Transcription
Vol 22 No 1 Winter 2011 - Lothropp Family Foundation
The Lothropp Family Foundation, Inc. Newsletter Winter 2011 WWW.Lothropp.Org A 503(c) 3 Corp Vol. XXII, No. 1 2011 REUNION TO BE IN SALEM, MA, November 4, 5, 6 See page 3 and much more info in the Spring Newsletter. Our President’s Message By: Lee Benoit Happy New Year! I hope everyone had a wonderful and safe holiday season. I find that this time of the year is filled with many different traditions and I’ve always enjoyed partaking and sharing in other families, friends, States and Countries customs. Our Endowment Recipients are the First Parish Unitarian Universalist of Scituate, MA (story follows) and the Barnstable Historical Society (see p.5) Rev. Richard Stower, pastor of the First Parish Church reads the proclaimation to the members of his church. Your editor hand delivered the grant at the regular service on January 2, 2011. The congregation was very pleasantly surprised at this generous grant and will use it for some long awaited improvements in the church structure. I would like to thank the Foundation’s Board of Trustees for the incredible work that they have done over the past year. The LFF is able to provide an excellent newsletter, informative website and sustain and grow the endowment through the dedication of its volunteer Board members. Kudos to each of you for a productive year! As most of you know, the end of the year marks a very special LFF event; the granting of money to historical 501(c)(3) charitable organizations. This is one of the most fulfilling and enjoyable acts performed by the LFF. Because of smart investing by our Treasurer, Elaine Bartlett, the LFF was able to give a total of $5000.00 for the year 2010. This year’s endowment grants were distributed as follows: $3500.00 was given to the First Parish United Universalist Church of Scituate, Scituate, MA and $1500.00 to the Barnstable Historical Society, Barnstable, MA. Rev. John was the minister of First Parish from 1634 to 1639. There are more historical facts at the church’s website. The land at 3087 Main Street which is the address of the Barnstable Historical Society was once owned by Isaac Lothrop and the Society also houses Lothrop genealogical folders as well as other artifacts of Rev. John descendants. Presidents Message continues on P. 4 HELP WANTED: Responsible people who can spare us some time to work for the Foundation. People who can understand how and why we work the way we do. (In other words abide by the restrictions we are under because we are a (501(c)(3)). People who can make themselves available for a telephone conference once or twice a year. It's not a full time commitment, but it is a commitment. You will be responsible for governing the Foundation as it carries out its charitable mission. The law imposes upon us two primary duties. The duty of care means that you must act with such care as an ordinarily prudent person would employ in your position. The duty of loyalty means that you must act in good faith and in a manner that you reasonably believe is in the best interest of the Foundation. (That last paragraph is from the Massachusetts Guidebook for Non-Profits.) We know we have the right people out there; please won't you come forward and work with us? Early Origins of First Parish First Parish, Scituate is over 350 years old. A group of Nonconformists started meeting in London in 1616, led by the Rev. Henry Jacob. He was succeeded by the Rev. John Lothropp a former rector in the Church of England, in 1624. Discovered by Bishop Laud’s men while worshipping clandestinely in 1632, 42 members of the congregation were arrested and jailed. After two years in jail, Rev. Lothropp was released from jail with the proviso that he leaves England forever. With a majority of the members of his congregation, he sailed for New England and arrived in Scituate in September, 1634. A few months later, Rev. Lothrop and about a dozen people gathered together and made a covenant with each other, forming what is now known as the First Parish Unitarian Universalist Church of Scituate. A small log cabin on Meeting House Lane served as the first church. The site is marked today by a monument that lists the early members of the parish, "The Men of Kent," as they styled themselves and by gravestones from the 17th century. Growth, Schisms, and Daughter Churches Over a span of some 60 years and the succession of six ministers, First Parish was the scene of considerable theological dissension. Continued on Page 4 Lothropp Family Foundation Newsletter Vol. XXII No 1 Winter 2011. Pa ge |2 From the Editor: Our Board of Directors We have a lot going on this with this issue, A couple of interesting features and some early information on our reunion which is scheduled for the first weekend in November. Read all about it on Page 3. Lee Benoit, President 1512 Dublin Circle Grapevine, TX 76051 [email protected] Dues for 2011 Marla Vincent, Vice-President 226 Paddock's Path Dennis, MA 02638 [email protected] Our Annual Dues will remain at $25 for the year, please find the enclosed envelope for your remittance. Also, you might consider a donation to the Lothropp Family Foundation Endowment Fund; it is very well managed and historically it has been put to good use and since we are a [501(c)(3) your donation is tax deductible. Fred Lathrop, Secretary 1 Sunset View Road Flemington, NJ 08822 [email protected] Elaine Bartlett, Treasurer P.O. Box 563 Barnstable, MA 02630 [email protected] Huntington Update E-mail Address A new e-mail address dedicated to the Huntington Update, ONLY. [email protected] otherwise use MVincent.CapeCod.Verizon.net Rev. Doug Lathrop, Chaplain 536 South 100 East Kanab, UT 84741-3636 [email protected] An Apology Lexa Crane Membership 4704 Highland Terrace Austin, TX 78731 [email protected] Gordon Lothrop, Editor 12 Fairfield Street Salem, MA 01945-4808 [email protected] Diana Long, WebMaster P.O. Box 2781 Palmer, AK 99645-2781 [email protected] Dan McConnell, Historian 31 Ellens Way Harwich, MA 02645-2524 [email protected] Don Lathrop, Director at Large 375 W.Galbrath Rd. Apt. 18 Cincinnati, OH 45215-5032 [email protected] Helen Taber, Director at Large 52 Lookout Court Yarmouth Port, MA 02675 [email protected] Rexann Warner, Director at Large 271 Julie Ann Court Tooele, UT 84074 This Newsletter is late getting out to you all and I apologize. I can blame the weather, my work schedule, new software issues, the death of a close friend, the Christmas Holidays but none of those add up to a reasonable reason for being late. Therefore, I am delinquent in getting this to you. Sorry! Share Some Family History I read an interesting story in The Salem News recently, about Kathleen Kent, an author who took some stories passed down from her mother and grandfather about her ancestors from long ago. In fact, one of her ancestors was Martha Carrier, who was one of the victims of the 1692 witchcraft hysteria. Kent’s book, The Heretic’s Daughter created a result that she never expected. After the book was published, she started receiving e-mails from readers who were distant cousins who corroborated those stories referenced in her book from the stories that were passed along from their ancestors. Now 10 generations later, many “cousins” have emerged. In this case a reunion occurred in Salem for the descendants of Martha Carrier. I got to wondering if there are stories from early Lothrop/Lathrop families that have been passed down. Perhaps these should be documented and shared with the rest of the family. What do you think? Do you have a good story to pass along? If so, send it in. If you are worried about all that grammar stuff, not to worry; the crack editorial staff at this Newsletter will help you polish your story, only if you want, though. I would love to hear your stories and I am sure many of the readers would, too. What are the odds? Some of you may know that I work in the funeral business and during a recent eulogy it was mentioned that the deceased, Dorothy Ann (Simpson) Wilson was a Pioneer radio personality at radio station KFAR in Fairbanks, AK, going back to the late 30’s where she hosted, Tundra Topics. Later, at the collation, I inquired if the name Austin “Cap” Lathrop was known to them? Ears perked up and they wanted to know how I knew that name. Apparently, Dorothy and “Cap” were friends from Seattle. They were very impressed with the stories they heard about “Cap”. I guess that it is a small world, indeed. But what are the odds of making that connection all the way from Fairbanks to Marblehead, MA. Dorothy passed away in Marblehead on December 18 at the age of 93 and left a lovely group of descendants Lothropp Family Foundation Newsletter Vol. XXII No 1 Winter 2011. Pa ge |3 We acknowledge, with thanks, those members for their generous contributions to the Lothropp Family Foundation’s Endowment Fund, for 2010 In honor of Helen Lathrop Taber by John & Paula Boyd of Prides Crossing, MA Donation by Marylyn Pauley of Ketchum, ID In Memory of Bertha Lathrop Lyman of Lebanon, CT by Charles Leonard Lathrop, of Lebanon, CT Donation by Ellen (Lothrop) and David McKinnon of Marblehead, MA In Memory of Gerald B. Lathrop, by Carol L. Sheffer, N Troy, NY In honor of Lexa Crane by Lucy Draper, Santa Fe, NM In Memory of James Robert Price, by Richard Price, Salt Lake City, UT Donation by Robert Parker, Chapel Hill, NC Donation by Marguerite Kelly, St. George, UT In Memory of James Walter Lathrop II, by Sara H Lathrop, Mystic, CT In Memory of David Lathrop Taber, from Marlyn I. DarbyColeman , Goodyear, AZ In Memory of my beloved parents Donald Dwight Lathrop and Frances Pauline Greenwood Lathrop by Dorothy L. Bedford, of Syracuse, NY In honor of my beautiful loving wife Lois by Bruce M. Lothrop, Peabody, MA In Memory of Annabel Etta Lothrop, Robert Winston Lothrop, and Beverly Ann Lothrop, by Richard John Lothrop, Nelson, NH Donation by Julie Melton, Peaks Island, ME Donation by Catherine Cummings, Redding, CA Remember your donation to the Lothropp Family Foundation’s Endowment Fund is tax deductible. Some early notes on the Lothropp Family Reunion for November 4,5 & 6 We are currently negotiating with the historic Hotel Hawthorne in downtown Salem, MA, if all goes according to plan, this reunion will be a “walking” reunion, that is, no long bus rides. Salem is a terrific walk around city and I am sure that you will enjoy every inch of it. OK, not everybody can walk a mile or want to, so there is the Salem Trolley www.SalemTrolley.com that will allow pick-ups and drop-offs all day long while offering narrations along the way. The hotel’s website is www.Hawthornehotel.com Just to whet your appetite for Salem, here are some websites for the exciting places to visit, We have the Peabody-Essex Museum, a world class venue at: www.pem.org The House of Seven Gables. www.7gables.org The Salem Witch Museum, at: www.SalemWitchMuseum.com Destination Salem http://salem.org or the Salem City Guide www.salemweb.com These last two sites will provide links to pretty much everything there is to see and do in Salem In Memory of Dorothy Maraspin Vetterling Dorothy Lothrop (Maraspin) Vetterling, 88, of Barnstable died on January 8, 2011. Dorothy was born in Malden, Massachusetts and graduated from Winchester High School in 1940 and from UMass/Amherst) in 1944, where she majored in Economics. Following graduation she was commissioned in the United States Navy as an Officer and made it her career attaining the rank of Commander, the highest rank a woman could achieve at that time. She retired from the U.S Navy in 1966, while working at the Pentagon she met and married Philip W. Vetterling and resided in McLean, Virginia until relocating to Barnstable, MA in 1975. She was a member of St. Mary’s Episcopal Church and served on the Altar Guild for many years. Dorothy also volunteered at Cape Cod Hospital from 1975 until 1990 A funeral service for Dorothy was held Friday, January 14, at St. Mary’s Episcopal Church, with the burial following in Lothrop Hill Cemetery in Barnstable. Dorothy was a long time member of the Lothropp Family Foundation and will be missed by all that knew her. All things in life are temporary. If going well, enjoy it, they will not last forever. If going wrong, don't worry, they can't last long either. "Fools need advice most, but only wise men are the better for it." Lothropp Family Foundation Newsletter Vol. XXII No 1 Winter 2011. President’s Message continued from P.1 2011 is a Reunion year! I am so excited about the Salem Reunion. I have to expound a little about Gordon the LFF’s newsletter editor. He is a certified tour guide for Salem, MA and the Chair for the Salem Reunion. Wow, right? What a combination! And, what better way wrap-up the Halloween season than a visit to the Salem Witch Museum and maybe a walking ghost tour in the night shadows of historic Salem? First Parish Church Scituate Continued from Page 1. The principle points were, first, baptism and. later, the Unitarian/Trinitarian schism. These disagreements led to the separation, at three times, of a major portion of First Parish's members to form new churches. Dissension over baptism soon divided the parish and in 1639 Rev. Lothrop led an exodus of a majority of the congregation to Barnstable on Cape Cod. His successor, Charles Chauncy, another Anglican minister, was described as a spirited, impatient man. His staunch support for baptism by immersion provoked another defection which led to the founding of a church in South Scituate, now known as Norwell. Rev. Chauncy served until 1654, when he became the second president of Harvard University; he held this post until his death in 1672. The first president of America's first university, Henry Dunster, succeeded Rev. Chauncy as the third pastor of First Parish, Scituate. Rev. Dunster was succeeded by Nicholas Baker, who in turn, was followed by Jeremiah Cushing of Hingham, the first pastor of the parish who was born in America. Rev. Baker was the first of many ministers in the parish who were trained at Harvard University (including our present minister, Richard Stower). Conflicts between orthodox and liberal factions became intense in the late 18th century, culminating in the third removal of one-half of the congregation. This time the departing members of the congregation stayed close at hand, removing themselves around the corner to establish the First Trinitarian Church of Scituate in 1825. As one wag has put it, "the Trinitarians kept the faith, while the Unitarians kept the furniture." A notable visitor to First Parish, Scituate in the 19th century was Henry David Thoreau who courted Ellen Sewall, the daughter of the church's 12th minister, Edmund Sewall. She eventually rejected his marriage proposal; he later retreated to the woods of Concord. Pa ge |4 Gordon has so many ideas and there is so much to see in Salem. There is something for everyone! I hope to see each of you there. In closing the Board and I would love to hear from you. We welcome and hope that you would share historical findings, especially Lothropp based, that you have come across in your travels or hometown. Lee The Buildings That Have Been Home to First Parish Scituate's first meeting house was located on a rise slightly inland from the harbor on Meeting House Lane. Two successive larger meeting houses were located on the same site. A fourth meeting house was built farther to the west (on the western edge of what is now Lawson Park). The fifth meeting house was built in 1774 on the site of the present church. It was a large, two-story building with galleries on three sides. Its high, graceful steeple was a landmark for sailors at sea and the church became known as the Old Sloop because of the spire's resemblance to the white sails of a sloop. On July 4, 1879, children playing with firecrackers on the front steps set fire to the church and it burned to the ground. The only items saved were the heavy mahogany pulpit, the settee, and the communion table that are all used in the church today. Chunks for the metal from the Paul Revere bell that melted in the fire were made into miniature bells which were sold to raise funds for the present edifice. While the present church was being built, services were held in the Cudworth House (rebuilt in 1797), located across from the church. The present edifice was dedicated in 1881. Stained Glass The tall window to the left of the pulpit is a stained glass. It was donated by the Waterman family in memory of Andrew and Lucia D. Waterman. It depicts a three-masted sailing vessel of the type that was built in the shipyards of the nearby North River during the 19th century (one of these yards launched the ship Columbia after which the Columbia River in the Northwest is named). The window celebrates the extensive involvement of parishioners with seafaring and carries the verse, “They that go down to the sea in ships that do business in great waters: : these see the works of the Lord and his wonders in the deep.” Historic Artifacts in the Church Furniture When the present church was built the parishioners desired new furniture; they placed two oak Continues on next page Lothropp Family Foundation Newsletter Continued from preceding page: chairs, presently in the rear of the auditorium, on either side of a small, oak pulpit. When the interior of the church was redecorated in 1924, someone remembered that the mahogany furniture was stored in the basement of a parishioner, and they were refinished and restored to their present places in the church. Vol. XXII No 1 Win t er 2011. Page |5 by the Asa and Shadrach Merritt who lived in Scituate. A companion instrument was made for the Trinitarian Church after it separated from First Parish in 1825. Other Artifacts There is a large wooden ship's steering wheel mounted in the entrance foyer. It came from a merchant sailing vessel that plied the waters of the Great Lakes. It was given to the Church by Barbara Geyer to enhance the nautical tradition of “Old Sloop". Musical Instruments The organ was a gift of Cornelia and George Allen in 1907 in memory of George's wife, Deborah. Originally pumped by hand, it was electrified in 1928. A bass viol, which was the first instrument used in the church, stands in a case in the rear of the church. It was made in 1823 ____________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________ A note of thanks January 18, 2011 Dear Gordon, On behalf of the members of the First Parish Unitarian Universalist Church of Scituate, I ask that you extend our gratitude and thanks to the Lothropp Family Foundation for its very generous gift of $3,500. We are pleased that through history and friendship First Parish is associated with the Lothropp family. We welcome descendants of Rev. John as our own and invite them to come to the church anytime they are in the area. Sincerely, Richard Stower, Pastor From Our Historian Dan McConnell Lucy Loomis of the Sturgis Library referred me to a very interesting book. The Library has, in their archives, a very old book Thomas Goodwin's Sermons, that she thinks may have come from Rev. Lothropp's own private library. She brought it up to show me recently. In the first few pages are what looks like a child's penmanship exercise, and the signature "Rebekah Lothrop" also there is a lineage down from an Israel Lothrop to another Israel Lothrop then down to a Francis Lothrop [with the date 1824]. I looked them up in Huntington and replied to her as shown below. Rev. Thomas Goodwin was a contemporary of Rev. Lothrop in London. They may have known each other. I may have unraveled the notes in the book of Thomas Goodwin's sermons. First, there is a Rebeckah Lothrop cited in the Huntington genealogy of the Lothrops. The spelling is the same. She is the daughter of Benjamin, son of Rev. Lothropp, therefore Rev. John’s granddaughter. She is the only Rebecca/Rebeckah in the 2nd or 3rd generation. There are two Rebecca’s in the 4th generation, daughters of Hope Lothrop (39) and Thomas Lothrop (40). Both of these later Rebeccas, with that spelling, were born in CT. The other lineage was a bit difficult, but there is probably an error in the first generation. The lineage, going backwards in time, with their Huntington numbers, are Francis 1028[where it shows the date 1824] b.1800 in CT, then Roger 517 [CT], then Jonathon 234[CT], then William 101[CT], then Israel 26 [CT] then [should be] Samuel 7, who went to CT. He was the son of Rev. Lothropp. There is no Israel among Rev. Lothrop's sons. Dan Mc Lothropp Family Foundation Newsletter Vol. XXII No 1 Win t er 2011. Page |6 Llewellyn Day Lothrop From: GENEALOGICAL AND PERSONAL MEMOIRS, Relating to the Families of Boston and Eastern Massachusetts. VOLUME II. PREPARED UNDER THE EDlTOR1AL SUPERVISION OF WILLIAM RICHARD CUTTER, A. M. From a 1904 edition Historian of the New England Historic Genealogical Society; Librarian of Woburn Public Library; (Suggested by: Elliott C. Lothrop of San Jose, CA) hook on a line. This he caused to be patented and the device Llewellyn Day Lothrop. only son and second child of Isaac immediately came into general use among fishermen, much to and Sally (Webster) Lothrop, was born in Appleton, Maine, his profit and advantage. Later on he invented several other March 21. 1836, and for something like half a century has lived practical devices, but the greatest of all of his inventions is that chiefly in Gloucester, Massachusetts, where for many years he known the world over as "Lothrop's Mechanical Fog Horn," a has been safety device which is in general use on sailing vessels actively and throughout the world. In 1880 Mr. Lothrop started a general closely ship chandler's business in Gloucester, where an extensive trade identified has been carried on for more than twenty-five years. One article with the in his stock is the fish hook, made largely after patterns designed business life by himself, and supplied from factories in England as well as in and history this country; and it is a fact that his establishment in Gloucester of that city. has the largest trade in deep sea fishing hooks of any house in When the world. All of this gratifying condition of things Mr. Lothrop fifteen years has built up for himself, and from a very small beginning so far old he went as starting capital is concerned. fishing from While in the army he always helped his widowed mother to Rockland, maintain herself in comfort. His efforts in business life have Maine, and been abundantly successful, and he has deserved all of the after his success he has achieved. He is very fond of the pleasures of removal to travel and indulges frequently in trips to the far west and south, Gloucester, and also into Mexico; and that he may gratify himself in this in 1857, he respect as fancy dictates he keeps free so far as possible from fished for business engagements. For the last two years he has been a various director of the Gloucester Co-operative Bank. In politics he is a firms of that Republican. port until he entered the service during the Civil War. He enlisted at Dover, In October, 1867, Mr. Lothrop married Ervilla E. Bowley, a New Hampshire, in Company F, Thirteenth New Hampshire native of Union, Maine, daughter of Washington Bowley. Mrs. Volunteer Infantry, served a year and a half with that command, Lothrop died in 1880, having borne her husband four children: and in May, 1864, was transferred to the naval arm of the 1-2. Mary Ellen and Bertha May (twins) both died; one died at service, where he remained until mustered out, September 19, age of four months. 3. Frank, born March 21, 1872, married 1865. He was in Fort Fisher when it was blown up, but escaped Ada Clark, of Gloucester. Frank Lothrop is the active head of injury. Returning from the army, Mr. Lothrop visited for a time the business founded by his father. 4. Leon D. Lothrop at the home of his mother in Dover, then went back to The lineage is as follows: Llewellyn from Isaac, from Zenas (65) Gloucester and engaged in fishing until 1867. The years he from Joseph (22), from Mark (9), from Samuel (3), from Mark, spent on the fishing boats and the experience he gained there the pioneer (1). Number in parentheses are from the Mark Line served a useful purpose and suggested to Mr. Lothrop's mind according to the Huntington Genealogy some very valuable ideas in connection with that pursuit, and led to his invention of a fishing swivel for using more than a single ____________________________________________________________________________________ Barnstable Historical Society We are pleased to announce that the Barnstable Historical Society is a recipient of a 2010 Lothropp Family Foundation Grant in the amount of $1,500. The mission of the Barnstable Historical Society is to create and foster an interest in the cultural heritage and maritime history of Barnstable, Massachusetts and to collect, preserve and exhibit artifacts and documents, and to promote historical research and education (with respect of the history of all of the Barnstable villages). Several items of historical interest relating to the descendants the Rev. John Lothropp are housed there. Visit them at its a new location at the Warren T. Jones House, 3087 Main Street (Route 6A, Old King’s Highway) P.O. Box 829, Barnstable Village, Massachusetts 02630. (Across the street from the earlier location) or visit them at http://BarnstableHistoricalSociety.org/ Lothropp Family Foundation Newsletter Vol. XXII No 1 Win t er 2011. Page |7 Book Review: Exiled; The Story of John Lathrop, 1584-1653 by Helene Holt Fourth Edition, Oxbow Publishing, Isleton, CA, 2010; ISBN 978-0-9831058-0-0 Reviewer, Dan McConnell, Cape Cod Genealogical Society The “reading” of history may be interesting and profound, or dull drudgery, depending so very much on the depth of research, and the knowledge and skill of the author. The “living” of history, especially in desperate times, may be truly heroic and memorable. Our historical understanding of Reverend John Lothrop is that he was a major figure in the English reformation, a formative actor in the emergence of the Congregational Church in England and America, and the founding minister of Scituate and Barnstable, MA. It is the context of his times that we have a hard time envisioning. His world was utterly different from us. How to understand it? The book, “Exiled” by Helene Holt, recently released in its’ fourth edition, is “living history” in its finest form. Ms. Holt’s research is first-rate, both in the historical facts concerning the life of John Lothrop [variously spelled Lothrop and Lathrop in America, but Lothropp in England], and in the religious and social background of early 17th Century London. Ms. Holt tells the story of John Lothrop in biographical form and as historical fiction, using the real characters, plus a few imagined ones to evoke a true feel for the times. She creates vivid scenes of the public torture of dissenting ministers, the arrest and capture of Rev. Lothrop’s congregation, their trial before the inquisitional Court of High Commission, and their long incarceration in unimaginably dangerous and foul prisons. She adds scenes of family life that help our understanding of the people and times. She carries the story through the two year imprisonment of Reverend Lothrop, during which time his wife dies, and his children are left destitute and then concludes with his release and flight, with his many children, to America in 1634. The historical impact of Reverend John Lothrop on our country and the large number of his descendants commends his story to our attention. Ms. Holt brings it to life, and makes it human and inspiring. I recommend this book to anyone who tries to understand the realities of the desperate struggles and ultimate triumphs of the early founders of our American society. In truth, the Founding Fathers of our country were not just those of the revolutionary generation, but that of their great-grandfathers, like Revered John Lothrop, who fought for religious and political freedom some 150 years earlier. In addition to the story she tells so very well, the author provides five useful appendices with time lines, historical and genealogical information, and lists of descendants including several American Presidents. The book can be purchased from Oxbow Publishing, 179 Oxbow Marina Drive, Isleton, CA 95641 for $19.95 plus $6.00 shipping. Or, it is available through Amazon.com. Reverend John Lothropp Honored in Provo, UT Contributed by Helene Holt: Hello Everyone, Gordon Lothrop contacted me sometime after the newsletter came out. Someone was wondering if there's a DVD or video of the Patriotic Service that featured John Lothropp as part of the program. I did some checking. And found that DVDs are available for purchase of the Patriotic Service which had a featured segment about Reverend John Lothropp. This was a non-denominational patriotic program so it's suitable for everyone. Usually they have a featured speaker and some singing, but this year, the entire program was one of history, music and patriotism. I thought it was very exciting that they told the John Lothropp story and he was the one they featured as the example of those early colonists who came to America seeking freedom of religion. The DVDs sell for $6. including Sales Tax. HOWEVER, they don't mail them. They are available for pickup, only. It wasn't a commercial venture for them. Thus, the DVDs are not on the general market for sale. However, I can order what we need and I can pick them up and mail them. I only want to make one trip because the place is several miles from my home, so if you're interested, please do the following: 1. SEND ME AN EMAIL at [email protected] THAT SAYS PATRIOTIC SERVICE DVD in the subject line. That will give me an idea of how many will be ordering. I will take orders and pick them up for mailing on March 1, 2011. I must have all of your orders (and checks) by then. After that, I will pick them up and mail them. Sorry, No Check, No DVD! 2. SEND YOUR CHECK for however many DVDs you want, at $6 each, plus shipping (see below). 3. SHIPPING OPTIONS: Option #1. Priority Mail Flat Box $4.95 (This can hold up to three DVDs) Option #2. Priority Mail envelope $4.90 (only holds one DVD) Option #3. First Class $2.00 (I have envelopes, which hold only one DVD, and there's no cushioning or extra protection.) Here are my addresses: Helene Holt 1055 Elm Ave Provo, UT 84604 [email protected] Lothropp Family Foundation Newsletter Vol. XXII No 1 Winter 2011. Pa ge |8 CURRENTLY..... I am sure that most of us can relate to this wonderful bit of humor… It wouldn't be funny if it weren't so true, Julie Andrews turned 69 and to commemorate her 69th birthday on October 1, 2010 actress/vocalist Julie Andrews made a special appearance at Manhattan 's Radio City Music Hall for the benefit of the AARP. One of the musical numbers she performed was "My Favourite Things" from the legendary movie, The Sound of Music. Here are the actual lyrics she used Maalox and nose drops and needles for knitting, Walkers and handrails and new dental fittings, Bundles of magazines tied up in string, These are a few of my favourite things. Hot tea and crumpets and corn pads for bunions, No spicy hot food or food cooked with onions, Bathrobes and heating pads and hot meals they bring, These are a few of my favourite things Cadillac's and cataracts, and hearing aids and glasses, Polident and Fixodent and false teeth in glasses, Pacemakers, golf carts and porches with swings, These are a few of my favourite things.. Back pains, confused brains, and no need for sinnin', Thin bones and fractures and hair that is thinnin', And we won't mention our short, shrunken frames, When we remember our favourite things. When the pipes leak, When the bones creak, When the knees go bad, I simply remember my favourite things, And then I don't feel so bad. When the joints ache, When the hips break, When the eyes grow dim, Then I remember the great life I've had, And then I don't feel so bad. Ms. Andrews received a standing ovation from the crowd that lasted over four minutes and repeated encores. Editor’s Note. The spelling is perhaps a bit different, but as George Bernard Shaw once quipped, “The British and the Americans are two people divided by a common language.” SOME CLOSING THOUGHTS "The education of the will is the object of our existence." Ralph Waldo Emerson "The most ignoble death of all is when freedom dies in its sleep." (Anonymous) "For when the Great Scorer comes to write against your name, He marks-not that you won or lost-but how you played the game." Grantland Rice "Form good habits. They're as hard to break as bad ones." Prayer is not a "spare wheel" that you pull out when in trouble, but it is a "steering wheel" that directs the right path throughout. Do you know why a Car's WINDSHIELD is so large & the rearview mirror is so small? Because our PAST is not as important as your FUTURE. Look Ahead and Move on. Friendship is like a BOOK. It takes few seconds to burn, but it takes years to write. Lothropp Family Foundation, Inc. 12 Fairfield Street Salem, MA 01970-4808 Address Return Service Requested.
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