All Good Gifts by Kathleen Morgan

By complete coincidence, on a separate trip to the library I picked up this book. When I got home I realised that it was the same author as the last book I read – One Perfect Gift.

Again, written in a gentle style with a Christian slant to it. This is a lovely story, utilising the same location as the last book, with characters of several generations later.

Devra is a Doctor in New York City and suddenly received word that her beloved father has passed away. She heads home to familiar territory to the ranch her father owned, his ranch hand, whom she once had a crush on and the married housekeeper.

After the funeral, the will of her father is read and there are a few surprises. Devra will only inherit the family ranch if she returns to live in it, otherwise, the ranch hand will inherit. The is as you can expect anger and resentment at her late father’s instruction, and an ending that is fairly typical and not unexpected.  A lovely gentle read.

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Creative Blog Award

I was awarded the Creative Blog Award by Deirdra of The Storybook World for my contribution to the April A-Z blogging Challenge.

Thank you for the nomination.

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One Perfect Gift by Kathleen Morgan

The gentle story of widowed Jessie and her daughter Emma, who relocate to make a new life for themselves in Colorado after the death of Jessie’s husband Paul. Upon arriving to take up her nursing post Jessie discovers that the post is no longer available and now has very little to offer her 6 year old little girl.
The doctor that she was to be employed by makes hasty, temporary arrangements for Jessie to go and live at her parents home and help her mother, who is recovering following a stroke. 
Jessie settles in well and builds a relationship with the family who take her in, that is a relationship with the family with the exception of their son who is bitter and angry following a failed marriage and the subsequent death of his wife.
This is a very gentle story, and although written with a Christian slant to it, is not particularly overburdening and this religious slant does not detract from the story the book is telling.
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Blogging A-Z – April Challenge – J is for……

J is for……Journals

Journals, diaries and notebooks. Are they really any different? perhaps a mixture of all three?

I have kept a diary for appointment and schedules since I was at school. I guess at the start it was to record birthday’s homework and library book dates, even my senior school had a fine system! I still have every diary, I have ever had in my study.

I also have a typical journal, for thoughts, observations and contemplations. I have also kept note books, filled with the names of books, recipes, names of plants and restaurants, films, research and a whole host of other snippets, the kind of trivia that keeps us thinking. Looking back at my notebooks and journals I can see that these two have become amalgamated driven around that whichever book I had with me I always wanted to write in the other one! Likewise, these span back across the last 20 odd years or so.

I have also a travel journal, kept for the duration of the time I spent in Australia and my travelling en route and likewise of my trip to Kenya (more about Kenya tomorrow!). All of these are kept in my study and are indexed of sorts, reflecting on the years covered and each book has a number. The only two things I still keep separate is a book for recipes and an old diary which has a pile of book names for my wish list.

In this age of iphones and computer programmes there are various note facilities that do not involve paper and pens. Which means that notes can be editable and thus notes and thoughts can be removed with the touch of a button.

I wonder what will happen to my notebooks, diaries and Journals in the future? Do they hold and will they hold fascination for future generations in the same way the journals of Pepys and Woodforde do to us now? I suspect not, but you never know!

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Blogging A-Z – April Challenge – I is for …..

I is for …….Islands

I can’t help wondering if there is a genealogical reason that I like, or feel an affinity to islands. I was born and brought up in the United Kingdom, an Island. My Italian roots and heritage are linked to Sicily, an Island. I love Australia, I spent a year living there and have family there, and obviously, is an Island. I posted under H a super photograph of Tioman, yet another Island!

Over the last few years we have spent time on, and holidayed at a few of the Scottish Islands – Arran and Bute. Both very beautiful and yet different from each other.

Another view across one of the Lochs  – Isle of Bute
July 2009
View across Rothesay Bay – Isle of Bute July 2009

And, we have not finished there! – There is an Island off the coast of Devon called Lundy which I have always wanted to visit. A former colleague stayed on the island a few years ago and made me very envious. What is though the attractions with Islands?

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Blogging A-Z – April Challenge – H is for …..

H is for…..Holidays

To say that I like holidays would hardly be surprising. There can’t be many of us that don’t. What I don’t like though is the extra work it involves within the day job, so that you are almost doing 4 weeks work in 2 weeks.

The whole experience, getting the suitcases or holdalls out of the loft, or off the wardrobe, selecting the clothes & toiletries, camera and assorted paraphernalia and, most importantly reading materials and perhaps some research notes. I am afraid to say that I was responsible for our packing for one trip and so enthused to packing a whole selection of reading material I forgot a pile of essential clothing for my other half. He was not overly happy, but hey never mind, it could have been worse, I could have left my books behind!

As a child we used to visit Devon and for day trips Brighton and Portsmouth were favourites. Into my early twenties I spent time in Europe and then a year in Australia via Canada, Honolulu & Fiji and returned home via Singapore and Tioman, a fabulous Malaysian Island.

Tioman July 1991
Taken with my Trusty Pentax  – July 1991.

In recent years we have frequented Scotland because that is my my in laws live and we have explored the Scottish borders extensively. We of course have a mental list of places we want to visit and some may wait until we retire, although that is some time off yet, but then again, why wait until then?…..

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South Riding by Winifred Holtby

Product details

·         Paperback: 518 pages

·         Publisher: Virago Press Ltd, this edition 2010. First Published 1936

·         ISBN-10: 0860689697

Following an interview for the position of head teacher, Sarah Burton returns to her hometown as headmistress of the local school. 

She is full of ambition, determined to create a great school and to inspire her girls to take all they can from life. The character of Sarah is modern, a women before her time. 

However, Sarah herself, becomes inspired by brilliance exhibited by Lydia Holly, a local girl, known as “the scholarship girl from the shacks”
Click HERE for more of the review
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The Civil War Genealogy Blog Challenge

Bill West, over at West in New England wrote an interesting post about the The Civil War Blog Challenge whereby we can write about our Civil War ancestors and connections.

This set me thinking and remembering. Not long after we were married I started to perhaps pay more attention to my husband’s ancestry. I knew where my father in law had been born and his father, but before that? I wrote to a fellow Goucher researcher who connected to a family in Staffordshire. We did not appear to have a connection, as my husbands family had been instead in the Derbyshire and Nottinghamshire borders.

One thing that the fellow researcher wrote was “Do you have a Samuel Goucher?” I wrote back and said we have two! one born in 1833 and his son born 1854 both born in Scarcliffe, which is not far from Bolsover in Derbyshire. Why do you ask was my reply. After a week or so I had a reply. There are lots of Goucher’s in this part of England, and the thread of Samuel seems to be significant, passed down generation after generation. With each generation creating another Samuel there would often be, in a community several Samuels, thus a trend started with the turning of the U in the surname to an A making the name of Goacher. Now, this is very likely to be true. Richard born in 1715 in Cuckney was recorded as a Goacher. Even now, we occasionally get post with our surname as Goacher.

I also have the added complication of  Goacher’s appearing on my own ancestry, in Surrey and Sussex…..

The story also goes, and it is at this stage a story, that a Goucher went to America as a Gunsmith and made a fortune during the Civil War. Now, as far as I can see from research my husband’s family are in Scarcliffe from 1898 with the birth of his Grandfather Ernest and can be traced back, through two Samuel’s to a Richard Goucher of Cuckney Nottinghamshire in 1715. So, at least part of the story appears to have a grain of truth in it.

So, I thought, that over the last 17 years of so I have not pursued this angle of research and this might be an opportunity to do so.

So, a quick search on Ancestry for the name of Goucher revealed more than 5,000 entries. Oh my, This will be a much bigger project than I first thought, especially when I am simply exploring the possibility, and nothing concrete. Some records revealed are entries for the same individual, and a search for a Samuel Goucher revealed 329 entries at first glance. Looking deeper, Most of the references were to a Goucher who had S as an initial for example Conrad S Goucher. There were references to those whose name appears in the same soundex as Goucher and one, just one Samuel Goucher, and even he had a spelling of Gaucher!

This is going to be a fascinating task and I hope to be able to devote the time to the project later in the year and give it the justice it deserves.

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Trace Your Roots with DNA by Megan Smolenyak Smolenyak & Ann Turner

ISBN – 1594860068


This book is a genealogical text and not light reading. It is also an incredibly useful and organised book on what is a rather complex subject.


The book deals with the concept that all women can be traced back to seven theoretical women – The Seven Daughters of Eve – who all lived in different places in the world, at different times. There are details on the setting up and contributing to a DNA project and a rather useful set of appendices dealing with resources and DNA testing companies.


This book was borrowed from the library, but I shall be purchasing my own copy as I want to undertake further reading and exploring of this fascinating subject.

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Weekend Cooking – Wheat Wine anyone?

This recipe is one of my treasured possessions. It is a recipe for Wheat Wine written circa 1965 by my Great Grandmother, Annie Prudence Butcher nee Harris.

Recipe - Wheat Wine

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