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Faith, Love & Truth

November 16, 2019

Blogvember Day Sixteen | Favorite Blog Posts

For a complete list of The Blogvember Challenge prompts, click HERE!

November 16 – Make a list of your favorite blog posts you’ve written.

This is such a great prompt.  With having my blog as long as I have, there are lots of posts that qualify as favorites.  I tried to narrow it down as much as I could, and came up with nine.  So in no particular order, I give you my favorite posts.

Five Words That Shaped My Life //  As parents, we have the power to use our words to build our children up.  One of the most powerful parenting tools we can use is our words.

When Your Child Has Anxiety //  Anxiety will tell you that you can’t handle this.  But the truth is with God we are stronger than we think, because in our weakness He is the strongest!

Ignite Intimacy //  I strongly feel the only way to arm our children with the tools to strengthen their marriage from the start is to talk honestly about the hard subjects.  And let’s be honest, there isn’t one much harder to discuss than sex.

To My Son’s Girlfriend //  It’s so important to show our love to the people our babies love.

To The Wife Who Just Found Out // A letter to the wife that just found out about her husbands unfaithfulness. Through all the conversations and deepness, you now know each other differently.

When Someone Doesn’t Like You //  The thought of not being liked makes my heart race and makes it hard to breathe.I have to force myself to step back and gain perspective.

Putting Your Spouse First //  Does your spouse come first, or do your kids take the number one spot? Pour your heart into those littles, but don’t neglect your man.

Daily Love //  He has continued to choose me, even on days I wear sweat pants and a messy bun. He has continued to choose me, throughout every sickness and surgery. He has continued to choose me, even when I’m undeserving. And I’ve chosen him.  This is daily love.

A Letter To My Husband //  While we are completely unaware of what the years ahead may hold, I know you will be right there as we walk through the valleys and reach the mountaintops.

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Filed in: blogvember • by Amy • Leave a Comment

November 15, 2019

Blogvember Day Fifteen | Tour My Town

Well here we are after me dropping the ball for two days.  This past week has been rough y’all…from losing my 16-year-old dog to a medical issue.  This week has been emotionally, physically and mentally draining.  BUT, here we are back at it!

For a complete list of The Blogvember Challenge prompts, click HERE!

November 15 – Give us a tour of your town/city.

I live in a very small rural town in central Pennsylvania.  My family has lived in Ansonville for generations.  In the picture above my parents live in the middle house and we live in the house to the left.  Our house used to be my Grandparents.  I thought I would do a little internet research, and talk to my Dad, to get y’all the history of my favorite country town.  Not only the history of our town, but a little family history as well!

Ansonville is located on the dividing ridge between the headwaters of the South Fork of Little Clearfield Creek and Potts Run.  It was hard to find census information for our town.  With the town not having it’s own zip code, I think the census info is lumped into a neighboring town.  I would guess our population is near 50 and that’s being generous.  I did find an article that said the population of Ansonville, including Strawtown and Bretzinville, is over three hundred.

In 1820, John Swan Sr. (a forgman by trade) left his home in New York state with his wife, Phoebe (Tubbs).  Their destination was Ohio, but stopped in Tyrone because some members of their party were sick.  They decided to move to Clearfield County because of the cheap land.  Accordingly, in company with Truman Vitz, he came into what is now Jordan Township, cutting his way through the forest all the way from Tyrone.  He and Mr. Vitz purchased 433 acres of land, the same land constituting the beautiful farms later owned by his son John, and Major D. W. Wise.

Mr. Swan began producing lye which requires large amounts of wood ashes.  Kettles holding twenty barrels were produced in Pittsburgh. Large quantities of wood were cut and burned, the ashes were leached, and the lye boiled down and shipped in barrels down the river on rafts. This made a market for wood ashes, and his neighbors for some distance around hauled their ashes to this immense lye factory. This was soon improved upon by building a large oven, and concentrating the liquid by intense heat into potash, which answered the same purpose, and brought better prices, with a reduced cost of transportation. He also erected machinery for grinding rock oak bark for tanning purposes. This he boxed and shipped to Philadelphia on an ark, receiving sixty dollars per ton for it. He also turned his attention to agriculture, which supplied the family with products of that kind, although in a commercial way it did not pay, for wheat brought only forty-five cents per bushel.

Mr Swan’s oldest son Anson settled in this area and this town was named for him, Ansonville.  Anson was deaf and mute.  He never married, living in Ansonville with friends.  Anson died in 1883.

The first building in the place was built by a Mr. Singer, and was at first occupied as a store by John Miles and James Foutz.

The Johnstons in this township are descendants of Robert and James, two brothers, who came to this country from Scotland. Robert settled on the tract later owned by his son David. Robert M. married Priscilla Wise, a sister of ex-Treasurer D. W. Wise, of this township.

John C. was in the mercantile business in Ansonville for many years. His first wife was Christina Curry, who died about 1882. He later married Mrs. Martha Witherow, widow of Henry Witherow, and daughter of Frederick Shoff, of Beccaria township. He was in partnership with John McQuilkin in a meat market in Ansonville.

In 1853 Henry Swan built a large storeroom on the corner opposite the Ansonville Hotel, and occupied it as a general store until 1874. Soon after this it burned down, and the lot remained vacant until 1884 or 1885, when Dr. A. E. Creswell purchased it and built the large store-rooms and dwelling later purchased by C. D. McMurry, and occupied by him as a general store, and by H. Gilliland as a clothing store. Other stores and merchants followed and enjoyed a steady trade.

The Ansonville post office was established about 1857. Eliza Chase (later Mrs. W. T. Bloom) was postmistress. Henry Swan had the office from 1864 to 1868, and was succeeded by Joseph Thomson, and he by Arthur B. Straw. J. C Johnston succeeded Mr. Straw, and had charge of the office several years until 1886, when C. D. McMurry was appointed.  The post office was closed in 1974.

The first schoolhouse built in the township, was erected in 1820, not far from where Fruit Hill Presbyterian church was afterwards built. The house was built of logs. A square pen-shaped arrangement was built inside to do service as a flue. The windows were made by cutting one or two logs off in the side of the building and pasting greased paper over the hole to keep the wind and cold out. The writing desks were made by driving pins in the walls of the building and fastening thereto a slab with the flat side up. The seats were also made of slabs, with the round side up. The first teacher of this school was David Cathcart.

 

This is a picture of our family homestead, where my Grandfather was born and raised.  The foundation of the house still sits on our 90 acre farm.  I can’t tell you how many times I’ve looked at this picture and dreamed of what the inside of their house looked like.  I would have loved to walk through it to see all the nooks and crannies of it.  The daffodils that my great great grandmother planted still come up on our farm every year.

I hope you enjoyed this little bit of town history, and I can’t wait to tour your town!

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November 12, 2019

Blogvember Day Twelve | Holiday Traditions

For a complete list of The Blogvember Challenge prompts, click HERE!

November 12 – Share your favorite holiday traditions.

I have to admit, this post has been a hard one to write.  I’ve spent many days thinking over what to write.  I think the best glimpse into our holiday traditions is me re-posting a blog I wrote a few years ago.

Growing up I always had this vision, this big dream, of how the holidays would be when I was grown.

I would cook a big meal and place it on a perfect, beautifully set table.  The table would be surrounded by family with friends sprinkled in.  I would have a house full of laughter and an evening full of fellowship and love.

Life doesn’t always go the way we dreamed of as a child, does it?

I have a confession: sometimes I feel lonely during the holidays.

It’s something I don’t often talk about at all because it makes me feel guilty.  Why do I feel guilty?  Because I have a husband and two kids to spend the holidays with, not to mention two amazing parents.  Still, the loneliness is there.

When I was a child, holidays were spent with family.  Thanksgiving at my Grandparents, Christmas Eve at my Aunt and Uncles and Christmas Day at my Grandparents.  I loved it, I soaked in every single moment of being surrounded by laughter, love and the feeling of belonging.

When I was a child it seemed we had endless traditions.  We would make cookies and candy with my Mama, Grandma and sometimes Aunt and cousins.  We always had a big Christmas get-together with my Dads side of the family in the weeks leading up to the holiday.  And we can’t forget the Christmas program at church.  We would practice and have a little party on the Saturday before the program, and I can remember we would get a little treat bag and it always had a piece of fruit in it.  Do you remember the days when after the holidays you would go to your families house and they would show you what they got for Christmas?  I know, I loved that!

Once I got married, the family we spent the holidays with doubled.  Sometimes holidays even meant visiting two or three different houses in one day.  I have to admit, I loved it.

Maybe more than loneliness, its’ a heart craving.  A craving and desire to have things the way they used to be.  I have this desire to be a hostess, to show hospitality by making my house warm and welcome and to show my love and thankfulness through the food I cook.

Throughout the years, the seasons of life have changed.  Between people passing away, children growing up and moving out and just life changing we’ve been left spending holidays among our little family.  Thanksgiving at my parents, Christmas Eve at home (with my husband normally working until 8 pm), Christmas Day at my parents and New Years Eve at home.

It’s certainly not how I envisioned my life.

But, what I’ve realized throughout this, the holidays are not about me and my feelings.  The season is about Him.  Thinking of Jesus’ humble, magnificent, unimaginably difficult, astonishing birth stills my heart during the Christmas Season.  It helps me to align my heart with joy.

This holiday season when I feel the familiar pangs of sadness and loneliness creep over me, I will look up and focus my eyes on Him. I will be reminded that what I have is enough.  I will remember that He IS the most important element in my life.  He brings TRUE peace, joy, and celebration in the midst of this season.  He is the TRUE reason for the season.

You are invited to the Inlinkz link party!

Click here to enter


Filed in: blogvember, christmas • by Amy • Leave a Comment

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Wife & Mama • Iced coffee seeker & curator of chaos • Collector of words & magic • Obsessed with laughter & bright lipstick • Dreaming & homesteading in the hills of PA

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