104th Edition Carnival of Genealogy--Cars as Stars
The topic for the 104th edition of the Carnival of Genealogy will be: Cars As Stars of Our Family History II! Three years ago, on April 4, 2008, we celebrated the automobile with stories of cars that touched our hearts, made us laugh, made us cry, and best of all made us remember the (mostly ;-) good old days. That you to Creative Gene for again sponsoring the Carnival of Genealogy. There have been so many cars throughout the years Growing up Hughes. I was lucky to be a kid during the 50's and 60's when chrome and fins on cars were all the rage. To me the classic cars are those of this time period. The smiling fellow waving from the window of this brand spankin new 1947 Mercury Town Sedan is my Dad. It was my parents first car and as my Mom wrote under the photograph in the old album...."The New Merc". I can remember years back, when my Mom and I were looking at these old photos, she remarked that the car was purchased for them by her mother, Martha Marie Frederick Stark. Oddly, Mom's folks never owned a car. Her Dad got to work in Pittsburgh on the streetcar and her Mom walked uptown for shopping and also used the streetcar to get into the city. Vacations were taken in Uncle Walter's "buggy," my grandmother's name for the new fangled automobiles, or on trains.
That's a classic photo of your dad leaning out the car window with his fist raised in a celebratory gesture. Classy car-- for a new doctor, fab wheels to get where he's going and a fine symbol of well-earned success.
Great photos! I especially love the reflection of the building/house in the second.
ReplyDeleteGreat photos, great story! Wow! Your parents had a red Chevy convertible? LUCKY!
ReplyDeleteWoohoo! What a beauty! Hubby would love to see this one for sure!
ReplyDeleteGreat story! I love the picture of your dad. He looks so proud!
ReplyDeleteGreat photos and cool post! A red convertible when you were 16! Color me envious!
ReplyDeleteThat's a classic photo of your dad leaning out the car window with his fist raised in a celebratory gesture. Classy car-- for a new doctor, fab wheels to get where he's going and a fine symbol of well-earned success.
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