"What is it?" A fun night of guessing
at the Logan County Genealogy and Historical Society
Send a link to a friend
[January 27, 2015]
LINCOLN - In what has become an annual
tradition, the Logan County Genealogical and Historical Society
turned its first meeting of the New Year over to its membership on
Monday evening for a fun evening of guessing "What is it?"
|
Guests and members were asked to bring in treasured family items,
especially ones that were odd and old. The object was not only to
share them with the members, but to try and stump those in
attendance as to what the items actually were. When a particularly
strange object was presented, the members shouted out their guesses
as to what they were seeing. Sometimes the item was identified
quickly, while other times it took longer.
In three cases, items brought by Bill Donath, Gary Freese and
Barbara Stroud-Borth could not be identified, even by their owners.
Their use had been lost in the mists of family history.
Joanne Marlin brought two Christmas tree candle holders, items that
would make it onto a current list of dangerous items. The holders
were clipped to a branch on the tree and a lighted candle placed in
the holder. Can you imagine the candle burning down and igniting the
pine needles on the tree?
In the buggy whip time-category of items that have faded from use,
Roseann Coers brought a button hook for pulling buttons through
button holes on shoes, a necessary item before laces were common.
[to top of second column] |
In addition to his unidentified item, Bill Donath did provide
one special object that no one else could identify. It turned
out to be a two sided butter mold for making individual fancy
butter pats with the imprint of a pig on them.
The LCGHS meets the third Monday of the month at 6:30 p.m. at
their research facility on Chicago Street in Lincoln. In
February, the group will return to its regular format of
inviting a speaker with a unique perspective on history to
address the meeting.
[Curt Fox]
|