Sunday, April 12, 2026

Sepia "Sunday?"

 I knew I had some interesting old homes to share, but it took a while before I could plug in the external hard drive to search for them.


Sepia Saturday says: "We've always been proud of our houses. Once affordable cameras became available to the general public, we have highlighted that pride by having our photographs taken outside our houses. It doesn't matter whether we are talking about mansions or cottages, caravans or terraces: we want our photographs taking whilst we are lined up alongside them. This week on Sepia Saturday we are celebrating houses and you are invited to share your old photographs by posting them on or around Saturday 11th April and leaving a link ..."

I love this neat old house...when it was not brand new, but the yard was established with flowers and a tree had been planted, as well as a big bush by the front steps. That could be the man who did most of the hard work leaning against the wall.



Google street photo of my Geat grandfather, Alexander John Swasey's home, where my grandmother grew up, Galveston TX.


Alexander John Swasey, 1853-1913. I don't know much about GGranddad Swasey, as there are just dates bookmarking his life. His wife was a Christian Science practitioner, as well as my grandmother when she grew to adulthood.

GGranddad Swasey was born in Charleston SC, just before the Civil War, while his ship-captain father was imprisoned for the duration 1861-65. His father returned from Massachusetts prison to die in Charleston in 1866.  How  did John (as he went by that name) get to Galveston? That's probably where he met his wife, who he married in 1881. My grandmother Ada Swasey Rogers, was born there in 1886.

She married George Rogers and he built a house, which was still standing in the 1970s. I'm searching for photos that were taken then.

House built by George Rogers Sr. in Galveston, TX




I've posted a bit before about Galveston and my family which came from there.
my-family-from-galveston


Our front steps were often the site for family photos...my mother on the left, and obviously in love with my dad centered, with grandmom the next step down ...San Antonio TX. My parents married November 1936, and lived with his parents for a while. 


Mother and dad, with baby sister, and myself standing in front of my first home in Dallas TX 1946.


Christmas 1954 in St. Louis, my sister Mary on left, and myself on the right in our poodle skirts and dolls. At 12, I was a bit old for a doll. But loved the faux collar of red velvet with bead work.

----------------



Liberty leading the people by  Delacroix.




Thanks to unknown photographer.

Update on my health...progressing healing along at home again. Whoopee!

Friends have kept me going!










17 comments:

  1. Replies
    1. Thanks. Glad to have had your steady presence here as I bounced around one bed to another. Ah there were days when the meaning of that would have been risqué!

      Delete
  2. Glad to hear you're getting on well now. Keep doing that.

    ReplyDelete
    Replies
    1. Here we go again. Upswing time. Plan to spend at least an hour today NOT paying attention to health issues.

      Delete
  3. Love the beautiful home and family photos.
    I am happy to hear you are healing.
    Take care, enjoy your day and happy week.

    ReplyDelete
    Replies
    1. Thanks. I've got many many more family photos in front of houses, but just checked a couple of albums.

      Delete
  4. Good to hear you are recovering at home. I hope you heal quickly. What a time you've had.

    ReplyDelete
    Replies
    1. Thanks, I sure do hope this is the low point. Though I did mark the low point as the horrible painful experience of an IM antibiotic injection. I said I would not be going any lower than that!

      Delete
  5. Nice house! And I bet those Baby Dolls were "walkers," weren't they. I imagine you're having much better sleeps at home than in the hospital with all that noise going on there.

    ReplyDelete
    Replies
    1. By now I've actually learned how to catch cat-naps each 30 minutes or 2 hours between procedures. Of course the construction noises were beyond my acceptance level. I do like being able to lie down or get up when I wish.

      Delete
  6. You explore sepia Saturday extensively. Good for you. Glad the health issues on the upswing.

    ReplyDelete
    Replies
    1. It's funny, there used to be 20 or so people doing SS...and I'm one of the holdouts. It's kind of a good excuse to check back on various ancestors.

      Delete
  7. Applause that you are now at home healing. take it a day at a time. Don't try to do too much. Let your friends pamper you! I'm off to Greece on Tuesday!

    ReplyDelete
    Replies
    1. Thanks so much for good advice! Enjoy your trip.

      Delete
  8. I was just showing a picture of my mother when she was a baby, along with her two big brothers to my grandson. Sepia, yes. Mostly. To my grandchildren, that picture looks prehistoric. It even looks pretty old to me!
    I do love that dogwood and butterfly shot.
    May every day bring you better health.

    ReplyDelete
    Replies
    1. Thanks again...yes there are still old photos of our grands, and fewer and fewer of theirs. We are in a lucky generation. I don't think I know Julia Weatherford. Sorry. But now I'll keep an eye out for her.

      Delete
    2. Grandparents, I meant...being old photos. Duh.

      Delete

There is today, more than ever, the need for a compassionate regenerative world civilization.