That he [ed: I think he's still talking about his Uncle Fred] had a great-aunt that owned an island in Italy. At the time I was old enough to ask questions. He said, "She lost her head.", when I asked him why we were poor. I said, "Oh, she let herself fall for a gigolo?" He stopped me, he said, "No, you don't understand. They had a war and she supported the losing side and they beheaded her." I asked him why no one sought to get revenge. He did not like my question. He also had an aunt that lived to be 106 years old. And an aunt in Chelsea.
Her name was Zia Florinda. She lived in Chelsea. She was an aunt on my father's side (your grandfather). She was a widow and lived with her son. Named Carline [ed: Dad, did you mean Carmine?] He was a carpenter and he worked for a contractor. He was single at the time that I used to visit my aunt. I was old enough to walk from East Boston to Chelsea. My father encouraged me to visit her. It was a good walk to get to her house. I would go over the Chelsea bridge. And at that place, were docked the old Donald McKay wind-driven, clipper ships. All stripped of their sails and valuable parts. They were an eye sore and eventually the city got rid of them by taking them one at a time on the 4th of July evening. Towing it down the harbor and setting it on fire. Its lower decks loaded with rubbish.
My father would ask me to visit her and I don't know whether she was an aunt on my grandfather's or grandmother's side. She was aged about the same age as his sister. She died during WWII. I liked to go there as she would always have me eat there. Just me and she made gravy [ed: spaghetti sauce] that was out of this world. It was an old recipe and she never parted with it. In retrospect it could have been patented and would produce a fortune. She used to put some [ed: can't make out the word] and other things like herbs. The pasta was spaghetti, it had a taste of its own.
Her son was a laid back individual, he drank a little and this upset her. She would tell him not to come home drunk. Not to drink. She would lecture him and he would stand there and smile.
He was a handsome man and he supported his mother. Paid all the bills, etc. He married late in life after his mother died and lived in the North End with his wife and children.
Wow, that is interesting story. I recently read Under the Scarlet Sky and the book has a scene where that happens to Nazi sympathizers. It's a fantastic story and I recommend it. And thanks for the Doctor Who comment. My sleepy 5:30 AM brain wasn't thinking although way back there I did know that. Or should have realized that. I enjoyed this weeks part of the serial. :) Happy Thursday. Hope you aren't getting snow from this storm. Hugs-Erika
ReplyDeleteWill have to see about that book. I have no idea when this woman lived. She'd be a great-aunt to my father so somewhere in the 1800s. Just a dusting of snow this morning. It stopped a little bit ago and the sun is out. Good thing as The Young One and I are head to Milton to see her GI specialist. It takes so long to get appointments I would have hated to cancel because of the weather.
DeleteWOW! Beheaded..... :-/
ReplyDeleteI know! And I haven't been able to find her!
DeleteHave a great day.
ReplyDeleteI did. Thank you
DeleteWow. Owned and island and lost her head. You have the most fascinating relatives. Lots of story fodder.
ReplyDeleteThis is just the family lore. I haven't found her in the genealogy, yet.
Deletetyping on a cell phone with a connection speed of SNAIL, just wanted to say hope you and your family have a very merry christmas and a happy healthy 2018❤️
ReplyDeleteYou, too, Tabbies. Headbutts all around
Delete=^..^= and a Merry Christmas and Happy New Year to the Food Service Girl
Now that gives losing your head an original twist. I love reading about this lost world. Have a nice afternoon, hugs, Valerie
ReplyDeleteIt's a cool story. I wish I could verify the truth of it through my genealogy research
DeleteSo sad to read about the beheading, but I enjoyed the story of the aunt. Too bad her sauce recipe couldn't have been patented, because the stuff they sell in bottles in my stores are all the same tasteless stuff that has to have various herbs and ingredients added to it.
ReplyDeleteI wish I knew the aunt's recipe. Maybe I could have patented it! And I wonder how different it is to the way Ma made gravy.
DeleteI forgot to answer your question about placing the Paintstiks in a bag. NO, that won't keep the skin from forming over these genuine oils. I didn't make it clear, apparently, these are OIL PAINTS, only in stick form. They are the same thing you get in tubes, only not wet. The advantage seems to be they dry faster and can be ironed in a day. They also blend like other oil paints, and you can use a brush or draw directly from the stick.
ReplyDeleteI apologize for the above post. I wasn't finished, but Squiggles decided to help finish the post by reaching for the keyboard. One time it would work well (grin).
ReplyDeleteAlways happy for little paws.
DeleteBeheading?? Really?? And, she owned an island? Wow!!! So interesting!
ReplyDeleteThat's the story, but I haven't found her in my genealogy research
Delete