tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-345635782024-03-12T19:27:19.576-04:00MorningsiderThoughts of a progressive Episcopalian. There's a lot more to my life than that, though.Allenhttp://www.blogger.com/profile/04082981127553205332noreply@blogger.comBlogger239125tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-34563578.post-73641532210495928542016-03-08T11:26:00.000-05:002016-03-08T14:56:34.069-05:00Feel the BernTo my mind, whether Bernie or Hillary is better at debate is irrelevant, as is which of their stated policies have the best chance of getting through Congress.<br />
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It’s the vision that matters. When we elect a president we elect an entire administration including presidential advisers, the White House staff, and the Cabinet.<br />
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Immanuel Wallerstein, in his October 2015 article <a href="http://iwallerstein.com/resurgence-of-the-world-left/" target="_blank">The Resurgence of the World Left? </a>says that <br />
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the real battle [facing the world is] the one concerning the direction of the transformation of the capitalist world-system into a new world-system (or systems). That battle is between those who want a new system that may be even worse than the present one and one that will be substantially better.</blockquote>
Wallerstein asserts that the apparent leftward swing appears to obscure this real battle. Perhaps so, but I think it depends on who the observer is. As the US version of the <i>Internationale</i> puts it, "'Tis the final conflict," and it is a real conflict of and over real interests -- perhaps even a genuinely final conflict considering the climate peril. Each step in the struggle is important.<br />
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Bernie keeps reminding us of the obscene economic inequality in the US (not to mention the world.) The people at the top, the 1%, the oligarchy -- call them what you will -- are working overtime to make sure any new system preserves their privilege and dominance.<br />
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Bernie's vision is in the direction of a system that is substantially better for the majority of people. I think he can help us move in that direction. Hillary, a neo-liberal, is bound up with the oligarchy. Her answer on fracking in the Flint debate showed how beholden to the oligarchy she is. She can’t say no to fracking. Or to Wall Street.<br />
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Both Bernie and Hillary are principled people. I prefer his principles. Allenhttp://www.blogger.com/profile/04082981127553205332noreply@blogger.com2tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-34563578.post-52721553692195871952015-03-25T10:42:00.002-04:002015-03-25T10:42:14.167-04:00A QuestionWhat, if anything, is there about sexual activity that puts it in a different sphere of discourse for the church from other kinds of interpersonal activity?Allenhttp://www.blogger.com/profile/04082981127553205332noreply@blogger.com0tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-34563578.post-35325104319744673822015-03-25T10:19:00.000-04:002015-03-25T10:19:24.830-04:00Individual or Family?As the Episcopal Church approaches the 2015 General Convention, there has been discussion, yet again, of same-sex marriage. On a Listserv that I can’t quote without permission, someone wrote “An important question to be addressed is whether the individual or the nuclear and/or extended family is the fundamental moral unit in Anglican (and/or our) moral theology, that is, the possessor of rights and privileges, and duties and responsibilities, within the Christian community. (This of course is the or a classic distinction between so-called liberals and conservatives.)”<br /><br />I must confess that I am astounded by this remark. First off, on its face it begs a question. It seems to me to be debatable whether “the fundamental unit of moral theology” is equivalent to “the possessor of rights and privileges, and duties and responsibilities, within the Christian community.” Any relevant rights and privileges we have as Christians come to us through God’s grace. And all of us have duties and responsibilities – to each other, to God’s creation, and to God.<br /><br />Second, is not “moral theology” the catholic term for Christian ethics? It seems to me that ethical responsibility ultimately rests with the individual. The summary of the law says “Thou shalt love the Lord thy God with all thy heart, and with all thy soul, and with all thy mind” and “Thou shalt love hy neighbor as thyself.” Note the singular pronouns. [I am quoting the Rite I version from page 319 of the 1979 prayer book because contemporary English does not make a distinction between singular and plural in second person pronouns.]<br /><br />In the baptismal covenant of TEC, we are asked “Will you seek and serve Christ in all persons, loving your neighbor as yourself?” and “Will you strive for justice and peace among all people, and respect the dignity of every human being?” The answer to each is “I will, with God’s help.” Again, note the singular pronoun. <br /><br />We are called by God and by the church to act ethically and morally as individuals. To act ethically and morally is to be in right relationship with God. As human beings, we can only be in right relationship with God if we are in right relationship with our fellow human beings, and indeed with all creatures great and small and with all creation. And the responsibility to do so in on each one of us as an individual.<br /><br />Allenhttp://www.blogger.com/profile/04082981127553205332noreply@blogger.com1tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-34563578.post-55060365208823590382015-03-24T19:57:00.000-04:002015-03-24T19:57:16.206-04:00Spring 2015.<br /><br />It’s been almost six months since my last post on this blog. I’m thinking of using it again on a more regular basis. We’ll see what happens.<br />
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<br /><br />I’ll start with the first day of spring. My friend <a href="http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Marie_M._Runyon">Marie Runyon</a> was <a href="http://www.ny1.com/nyc/all-boroughs/politics/2015/03/13/former-assemblywoman--housing-advocate-marie-runyon-turning-100.html">100 years old</a> that day, last Friday. I remember that Marie once told me that she first came to <a href="https://www.facebook.com/St.Marys.Harlem">St. Mary’s </a>in the 1940s and Wikipedia states that she moved to New York in 1947. Over the years she has been at <a href="http://www.stmarysharlem.org/">St. Mary’s</a> on and off. [Note: the two links for St. Mary's take you to different pages.] Currently she is more closely connected to <a href="http://www.csschurch.org/">Christ and St. Stephen’s Church</a>. <br /><br />On Friday afternoon, March 20, there was a potluck party in Marie’s apartment to celebrate her birthday. St. Mary’s people there, besides Liz and me, included <a href="https://www.facebook.com/dorothyeross?fref=ts">Dorothy Ross</a>, <a href="https://www.facebook.com/janet.dorman.7?fref=ts">Janet Dorman</a>, and Bonnie Phelps. Patty Ackerman, who was at St. Mary’s in the 1990's was also there. There were also a number of people from <a href="http://www.csschurch.org/">Christ and St. Stephen’s</a>.<br /><br />There were several “notables” who appeared. I was most impressed that <a href="http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Lynne_Stewart">Lynne Stewart</a> was there, in good spirits. (Former) <a href="http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/David_Paterson">Governor David Paterson</a> spoke as did our Assembly person <a href="http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Daniel_J._O%27Donnell">Daniel O’Donnell</a> (whose district currently does not include Marie’s building) and Manhattan Borough President <a href="http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Gale_Brewer">Gale Brewer</a>.<br /><br />The final notable to show up was our irrepressible State Senator <a href="http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Bill_Perkins_%28politician%29">Bill Perkins</a>. <br />All in all, it was a fun time.<br /><br />Allenhttp://www.blogger.com/profile/04082981127553205332noreply@blogger.com0tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-34563578.post-86803127956767878522014-10-01T12:11:00.000-04:002014-10-02T08:52:06.852-04:00Dancing Down the Mountain <div class="separator" style="clear: both; text-align: center;">
<a href="http://3.bp.blogspot.com/-MC7Or2ugodE/VC1J5iJilkI/AAAAAAAABGs/OtXKKwLs7II/s1600/Elmore.jpg" imageanchor="1" style="margin-left: 1em; margin-right: 1em;"><img border="0" src="http://3.bp.blogspot.com/-MC7Or2ugodE/VC1J5iJilkI/AAAAAAAABGs/OtXKKwLs7II/s1600/Elmore.jpg" height="183" width="320" /></a></div>
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<a href="http://maps.googleapis.com/maps/api/staticmap?center=44.54311,-72.53247&zoom=15&size=285x276&maptype=satellite&markers=color:0xFF6728%7Csize:mid%7C44.54311,-72.53247&key=AIzaSyBzSij2hY0kqWrbep8p0B4zaBGb1oGUPIs&sensor=false" imageanchor="1" style="margin-left: 1em; margin-right: 1em;"></a>On Monday, September 29, 2014, Liz and I and our five year old granddaughter Juliana climbed Mt. Elmore, in Elmore State Park, about a half hour away from our daughter Jane’s home in North Middlesex, VT. We walked up the Fire Tower Trail, which on the trail map is marked at 1.25 miles. When we got to the park, a little before noon, a whole school, the Wolcott Elementary School, was coming down from the top. When we got to the top, the views were spectacular. <br />
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In order to make a loop, we had decided to return on the Ridge Trail, labeled as 2.2 miles. The trail up had some challenging steep climbs over rocky territory, and we heard from someone on the top that the ridge trail also had some challenges, but that there were also numerous stretches that were fairly level. <br />
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It was somewhere between 1:30 and 2:00 when we started down the ridge trail. We expected to get back to the trailhead in a couple of hours. There was a sign that told us that the Balancing Rock was a half mile along. <br />
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Well, for me it was mighty slow going. There were lots of ups and downs, and my legs were getting tired which made me very slow. Because of my neuropathy I take very cautious small steps on terrain like that. <br />
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I think we had been going about two hours when we got to the Balancing Rock – I was dismayed, that it was taking so long and here we were less than a quarter of the way. As it got close to 5 o’clock, Liz decided that she should go ahead to call and let Jane and Scott know that we would be later than we expected. It's lucky she did. Juliana stayed with me, and we kept plodding onward. I began to get concerned as the sun sank lower and lower and visibility got more and more difficult. I realized we had a long way to go and thought that it was possible that darkness would overtake us. Juliana was getting tired and anxious to be home and see mommy and daddy and Amanda. I told her that we just had to keep going and we would see them when we got to the end.<br />
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Meanwhile, as Liz discovered that it was farther to the bottom than she expected she realized it wasn't a matter of saying we would be late, it was a matter of calling for help. As it happens, we had left our cell phone back at the house (normally it would have been in the car -- we're just not cell phone people.) So she had to find someone who could call.<br />
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As twilight was coming on, a young couple caught up with us and I asked them whether they had a flashlight. They did, and I anticipated joining up with them and continuing onward. And then, a woman came up the trail towards us with a dog. She was Nikki (I’m don’t know how she spells it) and Liz had encountered her as she got to the bottom. It had taken Nikki about 20 to 25 minutes to reach us from the bottom. She thought there was about a half hour before sunset. Nikki told me that she had called Jane and that emergency had also been called, so I knew help was on the way. The other couple proceeded on down.<br />
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I told Nikki that I wanted to keep going and not wait for help to arrive. With Nikki’s aid I negotiated some fairly rough terrain, some of it sitting down and sliding along. Nikki was on her cell phone to both the state police and later to the Elmore Fire Department, which functions as a rescue squad. As we went along, Juliana was doing pretty well -- she's a game girl. Nikki was watching out her for as well as guiding me.<br />
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Finally, the Fire Department arrived, and things changed. I don't know what time that was, but it was sometime after 7, perhaps as late as 7:30, because it was pretty dark. I didn't realize it, but along with the fire department was a state policeman. <br />
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The firemen asked me if I wanted to proceed with my walking sticks, or whether I preferred to have two guys sort of walk me along. I told them I wanted to use the sticks, and I wouldn’t mind having people beside me at the same time. <br />
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From that point on, I was surrounded by the firemen. When I described the setup to her, Liz said it reminded her of the 14 guardian angels in the Evening Prayer from Hunperdinck's opera, <i>Hansel and Gretel</i>. She's right, it was like that. I’m sorry that I remember only two of my guardian angels' names – Zach, who was on my right and Joe who was on my left. For most of the next two hours, Zach walked backwards or sideways, holding on to me as I inched along. It was as if we were dancing, slowly, down the trail. Joe was also gripping me on the left, but he was mostly walking forwards. It had taken them about twenty minutes to get to me, but I took 6 times that long to walk out. At the outset, the state policeman and Nikki were behind me with Juliana, but after a while they went on down ahead so that Juliana was reunited with her parents and Amanda. I’m told that Nikki was carrying Juliana piggyback, but I didn’t see it.<br />
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This neuropathy is a real drag – I can keep up a pretty good pace when I get moving on level ground – slowed only by the old knee injury and my limp. But on uneven ground I’m slow and on severely uneven ground I’m agonizingly slow. <br />
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I’m very grateful to Zach and Joe and the others for tolerating my slow pace. Coming down that trail in the dark was a real ordeal – what I was most aware of at the time was my slowness. At one point someone on the radio asked from the base if there was anything we needed that would help. I didn’t hear what answer the guy on our end gave, but I said “How about wings,” Zach and Joe said they liked my sense of humor. In fact I kept my spirits up the whole way.<br />
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When we finally got to the end, I was relieved to see and hug Liz and Jane. They had been waiting a long time and the waiting was in some ways more of an ordeal than I had experienced. For me. it was just a very slow walk out. I was doing something -- walking -- the whole time.<br />
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Liz and I rode down from the trailhead to our car in the assistant fire chief’s truck – I don’t remember his name either. Jane and Amanda walked down (it’s not a long walk and it’s on a fire road so it’s easy) and Scott and Juliana, who was by now sound asleep, rode in the emergency vehicle. The girls got teddy bears that the Vermont Teddy Bear Company donates to the fire company to give out. I think I deserved a teddy bear too, but no one thought to give me one.<br />
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Jane drove Liz and me back to the house and after we went in the first thing Jane gave me was a big glass of wine. By now it was 10:15 and too late to make supper so I went to bed on crackers and cheese and grapes.<br />
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I’ll never forget slowly dancing down the mountain with Zach holding me the whole way.Allenhttp://www.blogger.com/profile/04082981127553205332noreply@blogger.com0tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-34563578.post-50030429165401219882014-09-28T18:12:00.001-04:002014-09-28T18:12:22.855-04:00TransitionsAllenhttp://www.blogger.com/profile/04082981127553205332noreply@blogger.com0tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-34563578.post-3490262216948482762014-09-22T08:42:00.002-04:002014-09-22T10:13:37.138-04:00St. Mary's at the People's Cliamte MarchOur good friend Winnie Varghese took this picture of some of the St. Mary's contingent at the march.<br />
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Holding the banner at the left is one of this year's interns, Spencer, next to him is former intern Sydney Korngay, then Liz, then looking to the left Andre Zucker, next is Janet Dorman, then someone I don't know the name of, then partially obscured Lisa Slocum, then peeking over the banner is Lysander Puccio, then another person I don't know, and finally yours truly.<br />
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Here's another picture of the banner, also by Winnie:<br />
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<a href="https://fbcdn-sphotos-h-a.akamaihd.net/hphotos-ak-xpf1/v/t1.0-9/10320528_10152318865416437_8403156417220872674_n.jpg?oh=f43f73ba719eeb0e9855b672fb031d81&oe=54CBFF87&__gda__=1422760184_76c3dbf70a3c904d3352bcc6b6cad220" imageanchor="1" style="margin-left: 1em; margin-right: 1em;"><img border="0" height="300" src="https://fbcdn-sphotos-h-a.akamaihd.net/hphotos-ak-xpf1/v/t1.0-9/10320528_10152318865416437_8403156417220872674_n.jpg?oh=f43f73ba719eeb0e9855b672fb031d81&oe=54CBFF87&__gda__=1422760184_76c3dbf70a3c904d3352bcc6b6cad220" width="400" /></a></div>
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Holding the banner is another intern, Lillian, and in the lower right corner is our junior warden, Celia Braxton.<br />
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St. Mary's people who marched but aren't in these pictures include Dane, Armando Howard, Bonnie Phelps, Evie Fortna, Dorothy Ross, Lynda Burton, Shirrell Patterson, Sheila Patterson, Marilyn Seven, and maybe others we didn't see. Among the alums that I know of besides Winnie were Chloe Breyer and Ansel Scholl, and Anne Ditzler. Thanks to Janet for helping remember who was there.<br />
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All in all, a pretty good turnout. <br />
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I apologize that I don't know everyone's surname.<br />
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<br />Allenhttp://www.blogger.com/profile/04082981127553205332noreply@blogger.com0tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-34563578.post-26679976093985614592014-09-17T06:49:00.000-04:002014-09-17T06:49:25.630-04:00Administrationi spent the better part of the afternoon yesterday finding out how to add our new rector Mary to the Diocesan Payroll service and get her signed up for health insurance. <br />
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Zoraida, the payroll manager, sent me six forms, and on one of them was a statement that for clergy we need a seventh form. I managed to download that from the diocesan website -- it was page 11 of a 12 page compilation of forms, most of which duplicated the forms I had been sent and had already printed.<br />
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Sara, the benefits administrator, sent me the form for the health insurance. Since Mary is coming from another parish in the diocese, Sara told me what plan she was in now, but Mary still has to fill out the form anew.<br />
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In all there were eight forms. Four the clergy person has to fill out, and four just the parish fills out. It came to me to send Mary the four for the clergy person so that she could fill them out and send them back to us. Two of them we need to add to.<br />
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The other four are written in such a way that the presumption is that the treasurer will sign them. I'm prepared to do that. There is, however, a timing complication - I won't be in New York very much for a few weeks. In additon to sending Mary the forms she needs to complete, I sent copies of all the forms to the wardens, Radford and Celia, for their information. The one that came as part of a 12 page packet, I printed and scanned, so as not to confuse anyone with the duplicates in the other part of the packet.<br />
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Liz and I are getting as much time here at Heart Lake as we can, and we also are going to Vermont in a week and a half for our granddaughter Juliana's fifth birthday. So we will be in New York on only a few days before Mary starts at the beginning of October. We will be there this week Friday, Saturday, and Sunday (Sunday is the Climate March.) Next week we will be there Thursday only. (If you count evenings we will be there Thursday evening this week and Wednesday evening next week.)<br />
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The week following the birthday party on the 28th, we will wend our way back to New York. Depending on whether we come by way of Heart Lake, we will get there either on Wednesday or on Friday or Saturday. <br />
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Then comes Mary's first Sunday at St. Mary's as rector. We'll be there for that. Probably we'll come back here sometime that week, at least for Columbus Day. I don't yet know when we'll turn off the water here and drain the pipes. <br />
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I have another task related to Mary while I am in New York. Mary and her family are moving into the rectory on the last days of September, when Liz and I will be in Vermont. Since the parish has to pay for the move, I have to arrange for a bank check to the moving company and cash for the tip before we leave. I also have to reimburse Mary for the deposit to the moving company.<br />
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All of this is in addition to the fact that I have to prepare a financial report for the vestry meeting on September 28 -- a day I'll be away so I have to get the report done four or five days in advance. <br />
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All will be well. <i>Deo gratias.</i> <br />
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<br />Allenhttp://www.blogger.com/profile/04082981127553205332noreply@blogger.com0tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-34563578.post-56425367842349339732014-09-08T07:11:00.000-04:002018-07-01T16:15:35.442-04:00Rectors This is one, perhaps the first, in a contemplated series of posts on the history of St. Mary's, Manhattanville. Researching and writing that history is my current project.<br />
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We are about to have a new rector at St. Mary's. (For the moment, I won't release her name on the internet since the Letter of Agreement has not quite been finalized .) I'm taking this opportunity to make a list of all of the rectors we have had since our founding in 1823. By and large this is just a list of names and dates. More information about these people will be included in my history, and some of it will be posted here..<br />
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<b>First</b>, the rectors during or just before my time at St. Mary's. I first came to St. Mary's in November of 1958. The list begins with Dr. Ackley, who had retired when I cam here, and ends with Earl Kooperkamp, who left a little over two years ago. The dates given here are from my memory..<br />
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When my partner Rex Slauson came to St. Mary's, the rector was <b>Charles Breck Ackley</b>. Dr. Ackley had served as rector throughout the 1920s, 1930s, and 1940s and here it was the middle of the 1950s.<br />
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Dr. Ackley was succeeded by <b>Richard Gary</b>, who was priest in charge in the late fifties and early sixties.<br />
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Dick was succeeded by <b>Neale Secor</b>, who started as seminarian, became assistant and then priest in charge in the late 1960s and finally was styled rector, although he was never formally called as rector.<br />
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Neale left in the early 1980s and after a brief interim was succeeded by <b>Floyd "Butch" Naters Gamarra</b>, who had to leave because we didn't have the money to pay him.<br />
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After another brief interim, in the mid eighties <b>Robert Castle</b> became rector.<br />
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Bob left at tne end of the 1990s and was succeeded by <b>Earl Kooperkamp</b>.<br />
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Earl left in May 2012 and we have been without a rector since.<br />
After an interval of over a year, we began a formal search in the summer of 2013 and the search has just concluded with the selection of a rector.<br />
We expect that our new rector will begin on October 5, but the Letter of Agreement has not yet been finalized and signed by the Rector, the Senior Warden, and the Bishop. So it's almost a done deal but the i's aren't yet dotted and the t's are not yet crossed.<br />
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<b>Second</b> is the list of rectors from the the organization of St. Mary's in December 1823 up to Dr. Ackley in 1920. The dates here are from my notes and I have not double checked them yet.<br />
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This brief account necessarily can only hint at the fascinating complexity of the first thirty five years of St. Mary's' history and the various ministries associated with its early rectors, William Richmond and Thomas McClure Peters.<br />
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When St. Mary's was organized at the end of 1823, <b>William Richmond</b> was elected as rector. William Richmond was already rector of St. Michael's and St. James'. Over the course of the next thirty years, William Richmond served three stints as rector.<br />
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After less than two years William Richmond resigned in 1825. <b>John Sellon</b> was elected to succeed him, and his name appears on the mortgage for the church building, but he never actually served as rector.<br />
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Next the vestry elected <b>Thomas Thornton Groshon</b>, who was lay reader from even before the church was organized in 1823 and who was a member of the first class to enter General Seminary. Unfortunately, Thomas Groshon died in the yellow fever epidemic of 1828, before he was ordained, so he never served as rector.<br />
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In 1828, William Richmond resumed the rectorship for the next ten years, while still the rector of St. Michael's and St' James'. He considered his parish to be all of Manhattan north of Greenwich Village.<br />
In 1837 William Richmond turned over his duties at St. Michael's, St. James, and St. Mary's to his brother <b>James Cook Richmond</b>, who remained until 1842.<br />
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In 1842 William Richmond resumed the rectorship and held it until 1852. Also in 1842, he appointed <b>Thomas McClure Peters</b>, a seminarian at General Seminary, to be lay reader.<br />
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William Richmond went on a misison trip to the West Cost at the end of the 1840s and Thomas McClure Peters was effectively in charge. Peters realized that St. Mary's could not survive without resident clergy and he was responsible for the erection of the rectory in 1851, at which time he also became rector. Thomas McClure Peters was also Rector of All Angels Church in Seneca Village. In the meantime he had married the daughter of William Richmond and they all lived in William Richmond's house. in the 90s. St. Mary's Rectory was occupied by George L Neide, an assistant who did most of the services at St. Mary's.<br />
In 1855 George Neide resigned as assistant. The rectory was enlarged to its present size and Thomas McClure Peters moved in wirth his family. He remained only until 1858 when his father in law William Richmond died and Peters was elected rector of St. Michael's.<br />
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<b>Charles F Rodenstein</b> became rector in 1859 and stayed only until 1861. He entered medical school and graduated from the College of Physicians and Surgeons in 1867.<br />
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<b>George F Seymour</b>, who had been the first warden of St. Stephen;s College, later Bard College, was rector from March 1861 to 1862. He later became the first Bishop of Springfield.<br />
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<b>Charles Coffin Adams</b> came in 1863 abd stayed until he died in 1888.<br />
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<b>Lawrence Schwab</b> was rector from at least 1891 to 1898. I need to check some records that are not avaialble online to determine when he started. That is the time the Sunday School Building, now the parish hall, was built.<br />
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<b>Hiram Richard Hulse</b> was rector from 1899 to 1911 or 1912. Again the records are not online. During his tenure, the old church was torn down and the present church was built.<br />
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<b>John Loftus Scully</b> became rector in 1912 and he died in 1914.<br />
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<b>Francis A Brown</b> came at the end of 1914 and remained until 1918.<br />
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<b>Frederick W Goodman</b> came in October 1918 and stayed only until sometime between May 1919 and May 1920.<br />
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Charles Breck Ackley was here by May 1920.<br />
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Five, now almost six rectors since I have been at St. Mary's.<br />
Twelve rectors and one lay reader, who was in effect the pastor, before I came.<br />
We are about to engage the eighteenth rector, nineteenth if you count Tom Groshon or John Sellon, twentieth if you count them both.<br />
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Stay tuned.<br />
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<i>About my sources</i>: <i>As I indicated, for the rectors after Dr. Ackley, I have relied on my memory for the purposes of this post.</i><br />
<i>For the earlier period, my principal sources are online scans of Journals of Convention of the Episcopal Diocese of New York; the Annals of St. Michael's Church by John Punnett Peters; and the Landmarks Preservation Commission's 1998 report on St. Mary's (researched and written by Eric K. Washington). There is also a list of Rectors, without dates, on the St. Mary's Harlem website, that appears to have been compiled by Dt. Ackley for the 100th anniversary of St. Mary's in 1923.</i><br />
<i>My finished history will have appropriate citations to sources. I have not yet been able to consult the actual minute books of St. Mary's because access to the archives closet has been blocked for several months and it hasn't seemed worth it to try to gain access</i>. Allenhttp://www.blogger.com/profile/04082981127553205332noreply@blogger.com0tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-34563578.post-23682831497040306802014-09-02T05:08:00.000-04:002014-09-02T05:08:18.159-04:00New Rector?Tonight I will be part of a discussion with the Rector Designate of St. Mary's Manhattanville as we discuss compensation. Under Diocesan guidelines, I cannot yet say who the person is. That has to wait until the Letter of Agreement is signed by the Bishop.<br />
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Liz was on the search committee and thinks the person is a good choice and will be good for St. Mary's. From what I know of her, I too think she is a good choice. I hope and pray she will end up signing a letter of agreement.<br />
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Our problem is financial. We have been operating at a deficit for the past few years and at this time of year we have a severe cash flow problem, exacerbated this year by the loss of rental income from our major income producing spaces.<br />
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We need a rector badly, to provide administrative leadership along with other other leadership.<br />
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I can say the Rector Designate is a woman, becasue it was no secret that all of the finalists were women. Since two of the Philadelphia Eleven were from St. Mary's, it's appropriate that we finally get a woman as rector. (We have had several women assisting or as interims or regular supply.)<br />
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<br />Allenhttp://www.blogger.com/profile/04082981127553205332noreply@blogger.com0tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-34563578.post-60466209502530536702013-09-12T21:02:00.002-04:002013-09-13T12:34:49.180-04:00St. Mary's Manhattanville Did Not BurnInspired by the work of the Search Committee, of which I am not a member, I have begun to put together a history of my parish church, St. Mary's Manhattanville, which I first attended in 1958 when I was a graduate student at Columbia.<br />
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St. Mary's was organinzed in December 1823 and a wooden church was built and dedicated in 1826. In 1900 it was decided that the church was not big enough, and it was decided to plan for the erection of a new church. Financial considerations delayed the project, but the old church was torn down in 1908 and a new church constructed. The new church was dedicated in 1909.<br />
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In <i>Harlem Lost and Found</i>, Michael Henry Adams says that the wooden frame church burned. This is an error, and it has been repeated since, on many websites. In fact, as noted on <a href="http://stmarysharlem.wordpress.com/history/">St. Mary's Blog</a>, the sermon at the last service in the old church was given by the son of a former rector (and the grandson of the first rector.)<br />
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Among the websites which repeat the error are:<br />
<a href="http://immigrantentrepreneurship.org/entry.php?rec=124">Immigrant Entrepreneurship: Jacob Schieffelin</a>, a site with valuable biographical information on one of the founders and a first warden of St. Mary's;<br />
<a href="http://mrmhadams.typepad.com/blog/2012/07/losing-manhattanville-.html">Lost Manhattanville ?</a>, Michael Henry Adams own site - well worth visiting; and<br />
<a href="http://www.nycago.org/Organs/NYC/html/StMaryEpis.html">St. Mary's Church - Manhattanville</a>, a site of the American Guild of Organists. and another page worth visiting. Allenhttp://www.blogger.com/profile/04082981127553205332noreply@blogger.com0tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-34563578.post-11870263631802206262013-08-30T09:00:00.000-04:002013-08-30T13:14:48.362-04:001974 and 1975Just over six and a half years ago, I posted <a href="http://allenmellen.blogspot.com/2007/02/elegy-and-epithalamion-reflection-on.html">Elegy and Epithalamion</a> -- a piece that looked back to early 1973 when my partner Rex Slauson died after suffering a massive heart attack in a gay bathhouse. The post included this picture of Rex taken at the 1973 Twelfth Night party at St. Mary's.<br />
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<a href="http://2.bp.blogspot.com/-gw2yD5ub8LI/Rc5CndbYiWI/AAAAAAAAAAY/NWINBRNgbi8/s1600/Rex+and+Jane.jpg" imageanchor="1" style="margin-left: 1em; margin-right: 1em;"><img border="0" height="320" src="http://2.bp.blogspot.com/-gw2yD5ub8LI/Rc5CndbYiWI/AAAAAAAAAAY/NWINBRNgbi8/s320/Rex+and+Jane.jpg" width="247" /></a></div>
Beside Rex is Jane Dudley -- they were the King and Queen of the evening. Also featured is a copy of <i>Women Priests: Yes or No?</i> by Suzanne Hiatt and St. Mary's own Emily Hewitt. A little over a month later, Rex was dead. A little over two years later, I married Jane's mother Liz Dudley and now Jane is my daughter and the mother of my grandchildren. In between, Emily Hewitt and Suzanne Hiatt were ordained priests in Philadelphia. Along with Emily, another of the Philadelphia Eleven at St. Mary's was Carter Heyward. <br />
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The push for women's ordination was only peripherally connected to St. Mary's. We were hospitable and many of us were supportive, but the drive came from the women themselves. It appeared to some of the Afro American and Afro Caribbean women in the congregation that this was a white women's movement. In early 1973 the involvement of Philadelphia's Church of the Advocate, the sermon by Charles Willie, and the participation of Barbara Harris as crucifer were all in the future.<br />
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In 1973 I was Clerk of the Vestry at St. Mary's. Carter and Emily were ordained deacons at the regular spring ordinations. Come December, St. Mary's implored Bishop Paul Moore to ordain them to the priesthood, along with the male deacons from the spring, but of course he did not. On April 21, Low Sunday, in 1974, my 38th birthday, at St. Mary's Annual Meeting, Liz Dudley nominated me as Warden and I was elected. [In those days, our Annual Meeting was officially on the Tuesday in Easter week, but it was always adjourned to the following Sunday.]<br />
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In May, Doug Clark, another deacon who was serving at St. Mary's, was scheduled to be ordained priest in New York and at St. Mary's on behalf of his Florida bishop. Again we implored Bishop Moore and the Standing Committee to consent to the concurrent priesting of our two women deacons. Our request was denied. In the event, Carter Heyward preached at Doug's ordination. As Clerk and then Warden, I was the author of several letters to the Bishop and Standing Committee at that time. As it happens, I kept carbons of my letters and also my copies of the replies. I recently gave those papers to the Archives of Women in Theological Scholarship at The Burke Library at Union Theological Seminary (both Emily and Carter were at Union while they were at St, Mary's.) Included in that gift were the picture above of Rex and Jane and the very copy of <i>Women Priests: Yes or No?</i> that Rex is holding in the picture.<br />
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This spring, archival copies of my papers, as well as other material, was included in an exhibit at General Theological Seminary's Keller Libray called <a href="http://kellerlibrary.wordpress.com/2013/04/15/womens-history/">
“…because they are women and not men”</a>, a quotation from Neale A. Secor, our then rector.<br />
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And now I come to the point of this post. In June, Liz and I, Neale, his partner Ricardo, his son and daughter in law Tom and Carla, and a few others met at General to see the exhibit. We had a picnic lunch in a conference room and over lunch Neale, Liz, and I were reminiscing about St. Mary's in the mid 1970's. It was Neale who remarked that the women were in charge of the ordination project -- certainly not St. Mary's and especially not we men at St. Mary's. (It was only a few years since women were allowed on vestries in New York.)<br />
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Neale happened to mention that St. Mary's was involved in accepting donations to the establishment of Integrity -- we provided tax deductibility. I was intrigued. In 1974, I was Warden, and gay. and I knew nothing about it. Neale said Louie Crew twisted his arm and I could find out more from him. As it happens, I am Facebook friends with Louie Crew, although I do not know him personally. The other day I saw a post that Louie and his husband Ernest, who were married in a religious ceremony about a year before Liz and I were married, had just had a civil marriage in New York State. I took the opportunity to congratulate Louie and Ernest and then I asked him about his recollection of the "money washing." He doen't have a clear recollection either and suggested it was to do with the New York chapter of Integrity. <br />
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Well! It was time for mongoosing ("The motto of the mongoose family, so Mr. Kippling tells us, is 'Go and find out.'" - <i>Murder of Roger Ackroyd</i>) From <a href="http://www-rci.rutgers.edu/~lcrew/pubd/briefhist.html"><i>A Brief History of Integrity</i></a>, I learned that Integrity began as a newsletter in November 1974.<br />
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November, 1974. I met Rex in a bar at 415 Amsterdam Avenue in the wee hours of November 5, 1958. Sixteen years later, in 1974, I think it was November 6, Liz invited me to a concert at St. Thomas Church where her nephew Chuck was a chorister. At the end of that week, I invited myself to move in with Liz. We have been together ever since.<br />
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I was transitioning from a nearly 15 year gay relationship to marriage with Liz. We were married on February 8, 1975. At the time, Liz's daughter Jane was living with her grandparents in Vermont. At the end of the school year, Jane came back to New York to live with us. Also we moved from Liz's two bedroom apartment to our new three bedroom apartment.<br />
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Remember stress points? In the period from February 1973 to July 1975 I had (a) lost a male partner (to death), (b) married a woman, (c) moved twice, (d) acquired a thirteen year old daughter. Mongoosing hasn't helped me find how many points that is. But it's a lot. No wonder I didn't notice that Integrity was being founded under my nose. Especially since I was convinced that it didn't matter that I had been gay. (By the way, it took me almost twenty years to admit to myself and to Liz that I am and always have been gay.)<br />
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The chronology is not completely clear from sources on the
internet, but apparently the first convention of Integrity was held in
Chicago in the late summer of 1975, before September 7 when four women
were ordained in Washington. The <i>Brief History</i> says that
immediately after the convention "Co-President Jim Wickliff and Editor
Louie Crew called the first meetings of chapters in Washington,
Philadelphia, and New York City, on their way to meet in September with
the Presidng Bishop." So Louie Crew was involved in founding the New
York chapter.<br />
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Memory is an odd thing. I was 77 in April of this year.
According to Ancestry.com, Louie Crew will be 77 on December 9 and
Neale Secor was 79 on July 3. We are all in the same cohort. And we all have different memories of that time almost forty years ago.<br />
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It was clear to Rex, on Twelfth Night 1973; it was clear to me; it is clear to Bishop Robinson; but it is not clear to every gay man now nor was it in 1973, that the oppression of gay men and the oppression of women, straight or gay, are inextricably intertwined.<br />
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More later <br />
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<br />Allenhttp://www.blogger.com/profile/04082981127553205332noreply@blogger.com0tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-34563578.post-32063657256371051842013-08-29T23:28:00.000-04:002016-03-09T06:31:55.981-05:00MusicI spend an awful lot of time at the computer. For many years I have been listening to (classical) music on the radio all the time. Let's say for over fifty years -- when I first came to New York, there were at least three 24 hours classical musivc stations. at Heart Lake there are two -- well, they're now 24 hour, but not 24 hour music -- or not classical music.
Anyway, I now mostly listen live to the BBC (Radio 3) on the computer. The music helps me work.
Recently, I discovered that there are full operas and operettas on youtube. Two days age I watched the met Opera Bartered Bride with Teresa Stratas, Nicolai Gedda, Jon Vickers and Msrtti Talvea. I have long been wanting to see and hear this again,
Then last night I watched the NYC Opera production of The Merry Widow, a glorious production which inspired me to mongoose a little and I'll write abohut that later.
Tonight I watched a concert production of HMS Pinafore from the BBC Proms ion 2005, conducted by Charles Mackerras.
The problem with videos is that I get engaged in them and don't write. Audio files without video are better for writing.
More later.
Allenhttp://www.blogger.com/profile/04082981127553205332noreply@blogger.com0tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-34563578.post-56844259638029793962013-08-24T23:22:00.000-04:002013-08-24T23:22:17.909-04:00FacebookLast Sunday I blogged about wellness problems that Liz and I are enduring right now. I informed a few friends about the blog post and two of them acknowledged it in emails.<br />
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Until today, I have never posted statuses in Facebook. Every now and then, when i sign a petition, I have it posted to Facebook. I have also used Facebook to send messages, for instance when the coroner called me to tell me that my brother Philip was found dead in his apartment, I used Facebook to get in touch with my nephew. But I have never before used Facebook to report on my status.<br />
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I have 111 Facebook friends. They fall into three (or four) categories. One group is my relatives, including my dead Uncle Chuck. Another is people I got to know when I began blogging in earnest a few (maybe six or seven) years ago. They range from June Butler (Grand<span style="font-weight: normal;"><span dir="auto">mère </span></span>Mimi,) a laywoman a year older than I to Toby Haller, a priest in the Diocese of New York; they are all Anglicans and all are gay or gay-friendly . A third group is people I know either from Morningside Gardens or other contexts. The fourth group is people I know from my 55 years at St. Mary's Manhattanville. (Forgive me, I'm speaking [that is, writing] impressionistically here, because obviously with only 111 people, I could figure out my connection to each of them. But that is not the point of this post.) <br />
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Facebook sends me emails that say that 5 friends have posted updates. I used to click on them all the time. My cousin Leslie posts Bible verses; Ken Arnold, an erstwhile deacon at St. Mary's, posts updates on his serious health issues; and several people post links to their blogs.<br />
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Today, I posted an update on Facebook on Liz's and my health issues. As of now, I have received comments from two cousins, a St. Mary's friend, a Morningside Gardens friend, and my brother-in-law. There's something to be said for Facebook.<br />
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<br />Allenhttp://www.blogger.com/profile/04082981127553205332noreply@blogger.com0tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-34563578.post-54474831333256640252013-08-24T17:57:00.000-04:002013-08-24T17:57:55.134-04:00More personal stuffA week later, Liz and I are still not recovered. It now appears that Liz's problem was not kidney stones after all. Now her New York GP thinks it is most likely Lyme Disease. She has begun a regime of pills for that, and may be beginning to feel somewhat better.<br />
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My ear and balance problem are still with me, and I expect to see my own doctor on Monday. <br />
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<br />Allenhttp://www.blogger.com/profile/04082981127553205332noreply@blogger.com0tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-34563578.post-10610796867490126702013-08-18T09:54:00.000-04:002013-08-18T10:36:09.461-04:00August 2013Here it is the middle of August and once again our family (daughter, son-in-law, and granddaughters) are visiting us at Heart Lake.<br />
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It's been ages since I posted anything on this blog -- the reasons are various, and this post is going to be intensely personal. At St. Mary's, which currently has no rector, Liz and I are both deeply involved although neither of us is on the vestry. Liz is chair of the Property Committee and the point person on two significant construction projects, both of which require loans to fund them. She is also on the Search Committee, which right now is engaged in putting together a parish profile.<br />
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I am once again treasurer, and I'm trying to get our financial reporting in order. As a retired high school math teacher, and before that a pension actuary, you might think I would know something about bookkeeping and accounting, but in fact I never learned anything about either. The saving grace is that I am pretty bright and also a good mongoose (the motto of the mongoose family is "go and find out.") So I at least manage to keep up with the bookkeeping and am making slow progress towards improving the reporting.<br />
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This summer we knew we would be here at Heart Lake somewhat less than usual -- too many responsibilities keep pulling us back to New York and St. Mary's. But three weeks ago we set out from New York with the expectation of having a pleasant and productive month here, with only two quick returns to the city. On the way Liz began experiencing back pain. It took a week and a half before it was diagnosed as kidney stones. The pain medication is constipating, and Liz is often in great discomfort and/or severe pain.<br />
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Meanwhile, I had an incipient sore throat at the same time, and I kept expecting it to develop into either a chest cold or a head cold. But it didn't -- in four or five days I began experiencing pain in my jaw and ear, as well as severe balance problems. An emergency room doctor here in Montrose told me I had TMJ, with arthritis in the jaw joint. A week later, I went to my own doctor in New York, and he saw a canker sore way in the corner of the back of my mouth. I began using Orajel, and I think the canker sore is gone. But the ear ache is still with me, although much milder. Also my balance is closer to normal, but I am still not recovered.<br />
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The worst thing for me, apart from the discomfort, is that in the last three weeks I have not been at all productive. Now I have to at least rise to the occasion of a vestry meeting next Sunday, for which I need to have a financial report. I'll make it, but it will be a struggle.<br />
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I'm sorry for the tone of this post. I really want to write about the concerns that normally occupy my attention -- environment, the state of the world politically and economically, Bradley Manning, Edward Snowden, Trayvon Martin, the Supreme Court ruling on DOMA, all that stuff. I'm usually stopped from writing about those things by the pressures of everyday life -- and by my aversion to saying something trite. I hope to resume again before too long.Allenhttp://www.blogger.com/profile/04082981127553205332noreply@blogger.com0tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-34563578.post-67677162281162083662012-07-14T17:05:00.001-04:002012-09-04T20:24:24.770-04:00TEC is Practically Dead (not)When I was a teenager, I used to go the Binghamton Public Library, check out records of operas and musicals, take them home, and listen to them until I had practically memorized them. One show I heard was Rodgers and Hammerstein's <i>Me and Juliet, </i> in which a chorus of critics sings "The theater is dying, the theater is dying, the theater is practically dead." This show was on Broadway in 1953. I was reminded of it by the reactions of certain critics of the Episcopal Church to the just concluded 77th General Convention.<br />
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The theater is not dying, nor is the Episcopal Church. By the way, <i>Me and Juliet</i> had a song called "Keep it Gay," which did not have anything to do with LGBT matters, although you can find Perry Como's version on YouTube with a montage of LGBT images (mostly gay.) Another song was "No Other Love, " which used the same tune as "The Southern Cross" from Rodger's <i>Victory at Sea</i> music.Allenhttp://www.blogger.com/profile/04082981127553205332noreply@blogger.com1tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-34563578.post-45681383921004391752012-06-19T06:34:00.000-04:002012-06-19T06:34:21.649-04:00OccupyYesterday, Monday, June 18, 2012, Earl Kooperkamp, who just left as rector of St. Mary's, was convicted of trespass for occupying Trinity Church's Duarte Square on December 17. <br />
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Earl has just become Priest in Partnership at the Church of the Good Shepherd in Barre, Vermont. He was sentenced to four days community service.<br />
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Several others were also convicted, including retired Bishop George Packard. <br />
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I'm sure I'll have more to say about this topic.<br />
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<br />Allenhttp://www.blogger.com/profile/04082981127553205332noreply@blogger.com0tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-34563578.post-28325356134370398842012-06-19T06:06:00.000-04:002012-06-19T06:23:33.975-04:00SilenceOn Sunday, June 17th, 2012, Liz and I, and five other people from St. Mary's joined thousands of others in a silent march to protest Stop and Frisk, Several other members of St. Mary's marched with other groups -- I don't know how many from St. Mary;s there were in total.<br />
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Earlier Sunday, at the end of church, Ben Jealous came in and sat at the back. Ben ran a youth program at St. Mary's when he was a student at Columbia and has remained a friend of the parish. During the announcements, he spoke about the march. If you don't know, Ben is the President and CEO of the NAACP. During the announcements, Ben told us a little about the plans for the silent march.<br />
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At the silent march, our little group from At. Mary's was joined by a neighbor from Morningside Gardens who happened to see us.
Marching near us were Ethan and Rima Vesely-Flad and their son. Ethan works for the Fellowship of Reconciliation and has asked us all to "like" the the Felowship on Facebook, as a birthday present for him. Ethan and Rima are not members of St. Mary's, but they have attended from time to time, especially when they lived nearby a few years ago.<br />
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I also saw briefly Ted Auerbach my old friend and former colleague at Seward Park High School. We promised each other to try to get in touch.<br />
<br />Allenhttp://www.blogger.com/profile/04082981127553205332noreply@blogger.com0tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-34563578.post-36829656191161820202012-04-14T20:40:00.000-04:002012-04-14T20:40:20.050-04:00HiatusIt's been a long time since I posted. Months and months.<br />
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A lot has happened. One is that my brother Philip was found dead in his apartment on October 14th, two days after my last post. <br />
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Philip was the second to die among 17 cousins and siblings on my mother's side. My brother Curtis was the first. I am now the sole survivor of my nuclear family.<br />
On my father's side, Philip was the third to die of 13. The first was my cousin Meg and the second was her brother Max. <br />
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On October 28, two weeks after my brother Philip died, <a href="http://www.facebook.com/profile.php?id=1611692208&ref=ts">Glenn Bater</a> died. Glenn was my friend and colleague on the board of directors. I miss him.<br />
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Here at Morningside Gardens we're coming up on another election for the board. This one promises to be nearly as contentious as last year's was. I don't expect to say anything more about Gardens matters, but you never know.<br />
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At St. Mary's, we have found a treasurer to replace me, so I am back to the more comfortable role of assistant treasurer. Our rector of about twelve years, Earl Kooperkamp, has belatedly made good on his promise to leave after a decade at St. Mary's, so are gearing up for a search.<br />
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This past Thursday, April 12, we were shocked to learn that our long time sexton, Robert Jones, died of a severe asthma attack. There's a picture of Robert on <a href="http://www.facebook.com/St.Marys.Harlem">St. Mary's Facebook page</a>.<br />
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None of this, however, explains why I haven't posted since October.<br />
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I have been plugging away at my genealogy database -- entering sources I should have entered years ago. It's slow work, but I'm progressing. but that's not why I haven't posted, either.<br />
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I've started a few times to write something, but each time I've dropped it. I'm hoping that now that spring is here and I've got the news out of the way,I might find inspiration to write something substantive.<br />
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Meanwhile <a href="http://sphotos.xx.fbcdn.net/hphotos-prn1/20645_293249995414_677490414_3629551_5326785_n.jpg">here's</a> a picture of Liz and me (and others) posted on our 35th wedding anniversary. It must have been taken the day before There seems to have been a baptism at St Mary's that day.Allenhttp://www.blogger.com/profile/04082981127553205332noreply@blogger.com0tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-34563578.post-36315944021921455612011-10-12T18:29:00.000-04:002011-10-12T18:29:32.147-04:00Summer's EndAll right, it's actually Autumn. But today is the day the Liz and I finally begin withdrawing from our summer place and returning to the Big Apple. Yesterday we took our last canoe ride and put the canoe in the garage for the winter. Yesterday I briefly stood in the lake while I took the steps off the dock. Now that's all over.<br />
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We're not completely closing up yet -- we'll be back briefly tqwo r three times in the next couple of weeks. Partly it will depend on how much I can get in the car -- pratly on the weather. Our first return will be sometime next week -- I hope on Monday, since that is supposed to be warm and sunny, but perhaps later in the week. On that visit, I'll drain the water and bring in the outside furniture.<br />
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Oh, I forgot to mention that on Sunday we took a 6 and 1/2 mile hike that was actually 8 and 1/2 because of the walk from the car to the beginning of the loop and then became 10 and 1/2 because we tokk a wrong turn and had to retrace our steps. It was grueling and scary because we got pretty close to sunset, but since it turned out ok we were fairly happy and relieved at the end.<br />
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This summer I zeroed in on my family history project and I am planning to continue it over the winter -- which involves taking a lot of papers home that I don't really have room for in my study. So making room will be part of my New York activities.<br />
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My attention to what we are calling "my project" has had some side effects: I am less involved at Morningside Gardens than I might otherwise have been; I have not been following Episcopal Church developments as assiduously as I was before; I have not been blogging about things either.<br />
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For example, I have not mentioned meeting Canon Alan Perry in Allentown on September 24 -- that put me back in touch with my thoughts on the Anglican Covenant. In fact, I have not mentioned the meeting of the North American Academy of Ecumenists at all. Although I am only a hanger-on, I find these meetings stimulating and thought provoking and this one was exceptionally good.<br />
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One week ago today, we were going to come back to Heart Lake from New York, but we delayed our return by a day so we could join the march from Foley Square to the Occupy Wall Street (OWS) site. We were near the front of the gathering in Foley Square, which was union led. As we entered the square we were offered caps -- by chance they were UFT caps and I was happy to wear one. It was good to see the unions in solidarity with OWS. It is just possible that this will develop into a real populist movement on the left. It remains to be seem whether the kind of real structural change we (the American people and the entire human race) need will begin to happen. Can the 99% actually bring about change? In truth, the 1% are supported by a cadre -- at least 9% and probably more -- so the 99% is really 90% or less -- and how many of those have the consciousness to realize that the game is rigged and to (at least) sympathize with OWS? <br />
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Postscript: I wrote the above before breakfast. Now it's almost suppertime and we are in New York.Allenhttp://www.blogger.com/profile/04082981127553205332noreply@blogger.com0tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-34563578.post-79643550846128263972011-09-11T12:28:00.000-04:002011-09-11T12:28:44.236-04:00Update on September 11, 2011Today is 9/11. I have to admit that I don't feel particularly moved by this anniversary. This year that's partly because I am at last actually working on publishing my family history cum genealogy, and have already put some of it on the web. (at <a href="http://www.allenandliz.com/">allenandliz.com</a>.) <br />
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A month ago our famiy was here -- Jane, Scott, Amanda and Juliana. They arrive Thursday, August 11, and left Sunday, August 14. It seems such a long time ago now. The day after they left, I drove to New York for a meeting. After I came back, for a week and a half I worked fairly steadily on my family history project and on a sermon I was scheduled to give at the Heart Lake Church on August 28th. Meanwhile, Liz worked on a proposal for a grant related to a new boiler at St. Mary's. On Tuesday, August 23, we felt the cottage shaking -- it was the earthquake in Virginia. Then on Sunday August 28, Hurricane Irene broguht large amounts of rain to our area. We had lost power hear in the middle of the night, so we had no power when we woke up Sunday. Church at Heart Lake was cancelled, so I didn't get to deliver my sermon. For about four hours on Sunday, starting around 10:30 AM the winds off the lake was strong and drove large amounts of rain straight at us. Water came in around the glazing in our porch windows and under the door. Without power, Liz was unable to work on the proposal. We had planned to drive to New York on Sunday afternoon, but we rescheduled for Monday. When we left, the power was still off. Our drive on Monday was uneventful until we hit the intersection of Rte 17 and the Thruway (I-87). Both the Thruway and Rte 17 were closed and everyone was trying to cross Long Mountain on Rte. 6 and take the Palisades Parkway. A trooper told us that the parkway was a parking lot and advised waiting a few hours, which we did in a park in Monroe. When we finally left Monroe about 4 in the afternoon, it was slow but steady going over the mountain, but on the parkway itself we moved pretty steadily. <br />
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The remains of Irene did a lot of damage north of us -- in the Catskills and in Vermont. Where Jane and Scott are in North Middlesex was spared the worst, but there was a lot of flooding not far from them. <br />
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After mailing off the proposal, we returned to Heart Lake on Wednesday, August 31. Along with our cousin Tim, we hosted our by now regular Labor Day Sunday family gathering. My mother's two surving siblings were there with spouses, as well as other representatives of each of the four families of my grandparent's children. There was also one family of second cousins. The threatened rain held off, and it was a vey pleasant gathering.<br />
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Then on Monday afternoon the rain started. The rain was light the rest of Monday and on Tuesday, but got heavier on Wednesday and serious flooding began on Thursday not very far from here. Finally the rain stopped Friday afternoon. The remnants of tropical storm Lee raised our lake as high as I have ever seen it. We are near the top of a hill. Down in the valleys, the flooding was devastating. Binghamton, my home town and just forty minutes from here, was flooded and in the surrounding area lots of homes were inundated. 20,000 people were evacuated. The Susquehanna River in this area isn't expected to subside below flood level until late tomorrow. <br />
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Tomorrow, I go to New York for evening meetings both Monday and Tuesday. Liz will stay here at Heart Lake and I expect to be back Wednesday afternoon -- I hope fairly early. In addition to the laundry, I'm taking home the first load of genalogical materials to aid me in writing through the fall and winter.Allenhttp://www.blogger.com/profile/04082981127553205332noreply@blogger.com0tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-34563578.post-72455663290650144612011-08-26T07:42:00.001-04:002011-08-26T07:44:38.854-04:00Another month gone byAnother month has passed, and the current week is certainly eventful. On Tuesday we were sitting on our porch here at Heart Lake in Northesatern Pennsylvania and we felt the cottage shaking. Of course it was the earthquake, but for a moment we thought it was a big animal.<br />
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Now there's a hurricane bearing down on us. We had planned to drive to New York Sunday afternoon, but now we realize that would be foolish -- we'll wait until Monday. There's no telling what conditions will be if New York City takes a direct hit, or even a very near miss. Here at Heart Lake we're certain to get a lot of rain and maybe wind, but so far the projected path of the eye is well to the east of us.<br />
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Meanwhile, I have been working steadily at my family history, found at <a href="http://www.allenandliz.com/">allenandliz.com</a>, or rather, that's the introductory page to the site. I have posted the bulk of my TMG data, some of which is really not yet ready for publication, and am working on text pages to accompany it. Some of the commentary is already there. I will be posting details about the current state of the work on my <a href="http://usetmg.blogspot.com/">genealogy blog</a>.<br />
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Allenhttp://www.blogger.com/profile/04082981127553205332noreply@blogger.com0tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-34563578.post-49861292638395704822011-07-26T11:56:00.000-04:002011-07-26T11:56:14.907-04:00Oh, What a Week!!Last Monday evening I had an insect sting or bite that I didn't even notice until my arm began to swell. On Tuesday, I began taking benadryl for the swelling and I was heartened that it was contained -- it didn't spread. But it didn't go away either and I knew I had to see a doctor. We were planning to drive back to New York on Wednesday morning, so I decided not to see a local doctor here in Pennsylvania, but to wait until I was home -- a decision I shouldn't have made, but in fact there were no bad consequences.<br />
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On our way home Wednesday, after we had been gone an hour, we realized we had forgotten to bring a very important flash drive, so we turned around, went back to the cottage, got the flash drive, and proceeded to drive home, arriving two hours later than we had expected. And arriving into a very hot New York City, with record breaking 100 degree temperatures.<br />
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I got to the doctor on Thursday and he prescribed a powerful antibiotic and told me to come back in a week for blood tests. Also, if there was no improvement, he wanted me to come back Monday (that is, yesterday.) I noticed a small improvement on Friday, and by Sunday it was clear that the antibiotic was dramatically reducing the effects of the infection.<br />
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One of the things on our schedule in New York last week was to have work done on our car -- it needed a new power steering pump and and oil pan gasket. So we took the car to our mechanic Thursday morning. We also had an important joint meeting of the finance, property, and stewardship committees at St. Mary's. Liz is working on putting together a grant proposal for some of the money we need for a new boiler at St. Mary's.<br />
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But our major preoccupation while we were in New York was working towards a resolution of a family situation involving some property in Vermont. That took up almost all of Liz's time and good deal of my time on Friday, Saturday, and Sunday.<br />
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Since my arm didn't need attention, on Monday morning we began loading the car for our return to Heart Lake. Thin coming weekend sees a trip to Vermont for Friday, Saturday and Sunday, a return to New York on Sunday so I can attend a meeting at Morningside Gardens on Monday, and then a return to Heart Lake next Tuesday, a week from today. So our packing took that upcoming schedule into consideration.<br />
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We got off shortly before ten in the morning, not good, but not too bad considering the things that had been occupying us on Sunday (I haven't yet mentioned the Vestry meeting and a farewell party for our interns, both on Sunday afternoon.)<br />
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After about 35 miles, at the top of the Palisades Parkway, I discovered that there was too much play in the brake. I was cautious with the brake as I went over Long Mountain on Route 6, and drove more slowly than usual on Route 17 to our favorite stop at Stewarts in Goshen. I began to notice a little stiffness in the steering, and thought, oh gee, I'll have to take it back to the garage to have that looked at. But as I pulled into Stewarts, I found that the power steering had failed completely. Manually steering a modern Buick is a lot different from manually steering a car was in the 1950's. A kind woman in the Stewarts directed us to a good garage in Goshen who sent us on to the local GM dealer. It turns out that we had sprung a leak in the brake line to one of the rear wheels, so we lost brake fluid. About the same time, the new (rebuilt) power steering pump failed. It was a message -- it's time to stop putting money into this car.<br />
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So we looked at cars in our price range that the dealer had, and narrowed the choices down to two, one five and one six years old -- a Buick LaCrosse and a Chevy Malibu. The Chevy is very like an updated version of the Vega we were driving when we first began going back and forth to Heart Lake -- it's very practical for carrying stuff, but not as comfortable as the Buick. The Buick has a very roomy trunk like our present Buick, and will suit our needs very well. So I think we'll go with the Buick. Both cars had to be prepped, so we got a loaner Malibu, and after the 2 hour drive to Heart Lake from Goshen, I am strongly leaning to the Buick.<br />
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Soon we face a four hour drive to pick up the car and come bake to the lake.Allenhttp://www.blogger.com/profile/04082981127553205332noreply@blogger.com0tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-34563578.post-43916612204560452472011-07-15T09:58:00.005-04:002011-07-15T14:07:12.000-04:00Publishing my Family History and GenealogyFinally my genealogy is back online at <a href="http://allenandliz.com/">my new website</a>. I'm starting small -- so far I have information up only on people descended from my 2nd great grandfather, Manzer Judson Goodrich. Manzer's oldest son, my great grandfather Earl Ashton Goodrich, was born in Susquehanna County, Pennsylvania, not far from Heart Lake where I am writing this. I am beginning by publishing the information I have on his family, because several of my first and second cousins have expressed interest in the family stories. All four of Earl's grandparents, six of his eight great grandparents, and three of his sixteen second great grandparents lived in Susquehanna County. Two of his great grandparents lived in adjacent Wayne County, Pennsylvania and two other great grandparents lived two counties away in Chenango County, New York. I'll be adding information on all of those families. After that I'll be moving on to my father's family, my maternal grandfather's family, and my great grandmother Grace (Dayton) Goodrich's family. There are also pictures, letters and other exhibits to be added. I can't predict the order in which I'll be adding things.<br />
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For over fifteen years I have been using what I think is the best genealogy computer program on the market, <a href="http://www.whollygenes.com/">The Master Genealogist</a>, commonly called TMG, from Wholly Genes -- the link is actually to the Wholly Genes website. Some people think that TMG is hard to use, but I have always found it pretty straightforward.<br />
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The web presentation of my genealogy data is generated by John Cardinal's program <a href="http://ss.johncardinal.com/">Second Site</a>, which is designed for use with TMG data. I am also using Second Site to link the narrative section of my family history to the more specifically genealogical pages.<br />
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I have no connection with either <i>Wholly Genes</i> or <i>Second Site</i> except as a satisfied user, although I contributed two chapters to the book <i>Getting the Most Out of The Master Genealogist.</i><br />
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The website is in its infancy and has a lot of growing to do. Right now all I have is the beginning of the narrative and some rudimentary information on Manzer Judson Goodrich, his three wives, and his descendants. Part of it is still pretty kludgy. There will be pictures soon and information on more people. Navigation will improve, too.Allenhttp://www.blogger.com/profile/04082981127553205332noreply@blogger.com0