Monday, December 10, 2018

Genealogy update - culmination of research

Arthur Lee circa 1975

Melodie's first Christmas 1970

It's been nearly nine years since my dad passed away from cancer. He spent a lot of time researching his family history and had compiled a lot of information on various distant relatives, and was able to visit his ancestral village and see the family home in 2006.

The visit rekindled my interest in genealogy that had waxed and waned throughout the years, but my summer visits were never long enough to delve into his files.

Written and computer files were all lost in the Carr Fire on the evening of July 26, 2018. The only record I had was on the Geni website - the names in a family tree. I started my own research through emailed queries to my mom, my mom's brother, and my dad's sister. Later, I contacted distant cousins and relations through a Mississippi Delta Chinese Facebook group to find information on my maternal side of the family. 

After finding the 1940 Census records for my maternal grandparents and learning about a collection of files in the Seattle National Archives created during the Chinese Exclusion Act, I decided to take up my dad's work culminating in a written family history of first, my maternal, Fong grandparents, and later, my paternal, Lee grandparents, based on records found and recollections of my relatives.

My post in March included photos of some documents in my maternal grandparent's files, so this post includes some from my paternal grandparent's side.

Harry Lee Re-entry Form 430 1915

ticket stub 1929
Harry Lee admitted 1929
Harry Lee Certificate of ID issued 1929

baby Mamie and parents

Mamie Alice Jew Re-entry Form 430 1922

Mamie Jew Health Inspection Card upon boarding in Hong Kong 1939

Mamie Jew Certificate of ID issued after admitted 1939





Saturday, November 17, 2018

Redding memories

I left Redding in 1986 to go to college and returned throughout the years during holidays and summer vacations. The home I left on Keswick Dam Road was lived in for nearly 40 years until July 26, 2018, the evening the Carr Fire blew up and wiped out over 1,000 homes on the west side of town. It is nothing compared to the Camp Fire that is currently burning not 100 miles away and that has destroyed 10,000 homes/structures and counting.

There are so many memories I have of the house I came of age in, and returned to again and again bringing my children to play with childhood toys like the alphabet block ride-on truck, table hockey game, Sears Brix Blox, and Tinkertoys. The Fisher Price Little People items were a favorite - house, school, bus, airport, village sets with people, pets, furniture, cars, planes, helicopters all gone. I loved the village mail truck with plastic "letters" to deliver and the airport baggage truck trailing carts with luggage. My sister and I made up so many little dialogs to have with the dentist, teacher, and various other residents as we played. Play is not nearly the same in the digital age.

There were books lost that stung. My parents both loved to read, thus instilling my love of reading. Lost in the fire were hard-cover series of Cherry Ames mysteries and Bobbsey Twins adventures that my mom purchased with her hard-earned money in her younger years. I lament the loss of a much-read illustrated children's encyclopedia set that was a source of knowledge in those pre-internet days. I was a prolific reader and won a prize in 4th grade for reading just about everything in my grade school library. Ironically, it was a book - of stories for children. I wish I remembered the inscription.

My mom lost sentimental wearable items - bridesmaids dresses, tailored cheongsams from her first visit to Hong Kong in the 50s, classic baby blue Converse One Stars, and a few suits and dresses from when she first started working in NYC in the 60s among them. Then there were some of my dad's old suits, sport coats, and sweaters she had kept after he passed away. There were items I left behind in a dresser purchased when I was a baby - hand crocheted vests made by my paternal grandma, prom dresses, letterman's jacket, track team tees, and a tee with the first logo of the fledgling Chinese Students' Association of UC Santa Cruz. I met my husband playing intramural sports on the CSA teams.

Even household furnishings were dear - lost included that baby dresser and a nightstand, a set of two dressers, one for my sister and one for me; the items my parents bought to set up one of their early homes together after marrying in 1966 in, perhaps, my first home, an apartment in Stuyvesant Town, Manhattan, or the first my parents owned, 60 Jaffe Street, Staten Island. There was a mid-century starburst clock, hand-made afghan, and furniture built to last - the bedroom set of ebony hardwood including a headboard, dressers and mirror; the dining room, sofa, and side table sets, and the Lazy Boy recliner my dad so loved. There was formal china, silver and silverware, crystal, lead-crystal, and copper-bottom Revere Ware pots and pans received as wedding gifts, unbreakable 70s melamine dishes, Corelle dishes, and early microwave Corningware Grab It bowls and sandwich plates, stainless Oneida silverware, mixing bowls, and measuring cups, and the kitchen canisters holding coffee, tea, sugar and flour.

There was the sewing table with built-in Singer sewing machine, a four-spool serger, a 50s Smith-Corona manual typewriter and adding machine. Cherished were the irreplaceable photo albums and photos in frames, 8mm movie projector and reels documenting my parent's and our early family years, the small leather-wrapped transistor radio, VHS and audio cassettes and machines to play them, the record player and LPs dating from the 50s and 60s as well as those singles on 45s from the eighties, and our first video game console Magnavox Odyssey 2. The not so old items included the Wii I bought my mom so she could exercise using Wii Fit, desktop computers, laptop, and an iPad mini.

In the garage were a Redding built Lemurian Skyway bicycle and an older Schwinn, and lots of Sears Craftsman tools that my dad taught me how to use - building and fixing things, or tinkering around adjusting the carburetor or the timing belt on my first car, a "three-on-a-tree" Toyota Corona Deluxe.

There are undoubtedly more items not remembered as I write, but these are all earthly things... My mom says perhaps the loss is a blessing in disguise saving my sister and I the trouble of going through everything after her demise.


I'm thankful she's well, my mom; matching her birth signs characteristics of Virgo and Year of the Ox. She has set up in a senior independent living apartment for now, and enjoys outings and travel with friends - we'll see what the future holds.


Alex wearing some of my dad's old clothes
The dress on the left my mom wore for my month-old party, the other two were suits she purchased for work

 
With paternal grandparents at my month-old party
Paternal and maternal grandparents, and uncles and aunts on my dad's side 


Monday, July 30, 2018

Currently in limbo

October 17, 1989 - Dad's 50th birthday evening. Also the day I was at home in Santa Cruz, CA when the Loma Prieta Earthquake wreaked havoc in the San Francisco Bay Area. Rental apartment was all right, college friend and I drove away to Los Angeles for awhile until things settled down and we had to return to school.

1993 - Married my college beau, Paul, and celebrated on two continents, honeymooned in the Caribbean.

January 17, 1994 - Northridge Earthquake toppled heavy furniture away from my new in-laws' sleeping heads in the family home. Drove like mad from a Lake Tahoe ski trip cut short, thankfully none hurt, house undamaged.

The year daughter Maggie was born

The year son Alex was born

September 11, 2001 - My city of birth, New York, attacked. Glued to the TV, finally able to confirm relatives were safe.

March 2005 - Dad's cancer diagnosis

November-December 2006 - Dad was in remission, first time parents visit us in Hong Kong  where we had settled to raise a family. Amazingly able to find his ancestral home in southern China.

December 31, 2009 - Dad had relapsed and slipped away New Year's Eve. Thankful I was able to make it back to be with him, Mom and my sister.

December 19, 2011 - My beloved Poa Poa passed away a week shy of her 98th birthday. Almost every weekend growing up my cousins and I would get together to hang out and eat.

Summer 2015 - Back to back vacations with my side of the family - first time cruising, and Paul's - second time (for me) to visit Las Vegas

October 6, 2017 - Paul's dad lost battle with cancer

July 26, 2018 - The monstrosity that is the Carr Fire in its third day approaches west Redding in the early evening, shockingly jumps the Sacramento River, roars up the hill, and destroys the neighborhood around the home we moved from NYC to in 1978. 

I had been following the progress halfway around the world with a 15 hour time difference, worriedly texting my mother about a possible evacuation, thankfully learning she made her way to a friend's home on the east side to nervously wait unsleeping overnight, only to decide that getting out of town the next day was probably safer, hearing that she met friends and made it to their home in Chico, waiting until the evacuation orders were lifted and roads reopened, or for other news confirming the definite fate of our family's home of 40 years while the fire was slowly being conquered. The gut-wrenching experience is written about so well in this article. 

Update: Cal Fire published the structure status map and it showed the information we didn't want to see. Currently in limbo...
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First photos of the aftermath - that intake of breath, a feeling of nauseating hollowness in the pit of my stomach, heart thump-thumping away, silence ringing in my ears...