Finally Done!! Family Memory Box
Posted: Sun Feb 14, 2021 9:49 pm
With so much spare time available due to COVID, I decided to complete a project that’s taken way too long to finish. It’s a memory box containing many different items going back as far as one of my maternal fourth great-grandmothers. The project began quite a few years ago when I was still married. I designed the box and then asked my husband to build it for me. Unfortunately he never completed it before we divorced, having only gotten as far as assembling less than half of the sections. Thankfully he had cut all the wood for each section because when he left he took all his tools with him. I put the project aside for many years and only recently decided during COVID that I needed to complete it. I wanted something to pass on to my daughter and grandchildren and have provided them with information about all the items in each of the sections so they know the importance of each to our family. I painted it a few days ago. In the photos it doesn’t look like it but it’s white and the wall behind is pale beige. It measures 32” x 25 1/2” and has a glass face that can be moved sideways or removed.
I’ll describe a few items in each section.
The white hand towel was handwoven by my 4th great-grandmother when she was a girl - approx. 1750. The black hanging ribbon has pins and awards won in school by my mother. The red ribbon has pins and awards I won in school. There is also a diary my dad kept when he joined the Navy Air Force. On the upper right is my mom’s school letter from Storm Lake High School, Storm Lake, Iowa.
The doll dishes at the top belonged to my maternal great-grandmother when she was a child. The pink bootie was mine. The other was dropped somewhere on Mt. Hamilton near San Jose, CA at about 4,000’. Behind the silver cup on the right at the back is a photo of my brother leading me off to my first day of kindergarten.
The wooden toy blocks were my maternal grandfather’s as a child and behind them is his high school graduation announcement. He was valedictorian in his class of 4 girls and himself. On the top of the left side is a photo of my maternal great-grandfather who was a 49er during the Calif. Gold Rush. He sailed by ship from Boston around South America to San Francisco and after 3 years and not striking it rich, he sailed to Panama, walked across the Isthmus, and caught a steamship to New York. He eventually settled in Illinois and was a farmer.
The upper picture is of my brother and me. Below is my ID when I was a flight attendant for United.
The white napkin is from my parents’ 50th wedding anniversary.
The lower right section has many mementos and awards from my father’s 33+ years as an aeronautical engineer with NASA and its precursor NACA.
All closed up and some larger photos on top. Those are my parents on the right.
One funny thing is it’s VERY heavy and I was trying to figure out how I would bolt it to the wall by myself. I’m a lover of Egyptian history and tried to figure out how the Egyptians would do it. I ended up putting a bar stool against the wall with two pillows on top and then put the box on top of the pillows. With that I had it at the right height and bolted it to the wall. Hopefully the Egyptians would be proud.
Sandi
I’ll describe a few items in each section.
The white hand towel was handwoven by my 4th great-grandmother when she was a girl - approx. 1750. The black hanging ribbon has pins and awards won in school by my mother. The red ribbon has pins and awards I won in school. There is also a diary my dad kept when he joined the Navy Air Force. On the upper right is my mom’s school letter from Storm Lake High School, Storm Lake, Iowa.
The doll dishes at the top belonged to my maternal great-grandmother when she was a child. The pink bootie was mine. The other was dropped somewhere on Mt. Hamilton near San Jose, CA at about 4,000’. Behind the silver cup on the right at the back is a photo of my brother leading me off to my first day of kindergarten.
The wooden toy blocks were my maternal grandfather’s as a child and behind them is his high school graduation announcement. He was valedictorian in his class of 4 girls and himself. On the top of the left side is a photo of my maternal great-grandfather who was a 49er during the Calif. Gold Rush. He sailed by ship from Boston around South America to San Francisco and after 3 years and not striking it rich, he sailed to Panama, walked across the Isthmus, and caught a steamship to New York. He eventually settled in Illinois and was a farmer.
The upper picture is of my brother and me. Below is my ID when I was a flight attendant for United.
The white napkin is from my parents’ 50th wedding anniversary.
The lower right section has many mementos and awards from my father’s 33+ years as an aeronautical engineer with NASA and its precursor NACA.
All closed up and some larger photos on top. Those are my parents on the right.
One funny thing is it’s VERY heavy and I was trying to figure out how I would bolt it to the wall by myself. I’m a lover of Egyptian history and tried to figure out how the Egyptians would do it. I ended up putting a bar stool against the wall with two pillows on top and then put the box on top of the pillows. With that I had it at the right height and bolted it to the wall. Hopefully the Egyptians would be proud.
Sandi