Sunday, November 27, 2016

Margarite PIÑA (1886-1980)


Grandaunt Margarite -1902 - age 15


Aunt Margarite PIÑA---my only grandaunt I met and remember. In the summer of 1968, we took a visit to New York City with her to Radio City Music Hall to see the Rockettes. I have a photo of my brother, Gib, and Margarite with me. I remember this was taken with my first Kodak Instamatic camera. She always made us laugh with her stories. She would remember my birthday with a card and $2 cash every year. She was a great letter writer. She died in 1980. 

In 2000, after my maternal GABUZDA family reunion, I got interested in my father’s family sides. I wrote to my cousin, Jack COOPER, Uncle Bud’s (my father’s older brother) oldest son. Bud had most of the photos and documents of his parents and aunt. Most of these older family photo treasures are copies I made of his pictures.

Margarite PIÑA was the first born in Brooklyn, New York, 27 July 1887. She shared her mother’s name Margaret GUNTHER who married Ramon PIÑA, 20 years her senior, in 1886. Her father was born in Cuba in 1847 and emigrated to New York by 1876. Her mother was born in Brooklyn in 1867 with French/German heritage.

Margarite trained to be a teacher in the New York City public schools. She focused on Remedial Reading Skills. She retired in 1952 after 45 years of teaching. She spent her summers tutoring and traveling with friends. 

Most of her life she lived with her parents or her siblings. She never married.

I remember visiting her weeks before she died. She is buried at Everwood Cemetery in Brooklyn. She bought a dozen plots in 1917 (time of her father’s death) for $170. There are 4 graves with the allotment of 3 per grave. There are 8 family members buried here at this time. There is only one tombstone with 3 names, which includes Margarite with her parents. The gold attachment on the tomb stone says “Endowment Fund.” This means that Margarite paid for eternal care of this area. 

Tuesday, November 22, 2016

Hankies

As a quilter, I love old fashioned handkerchiefs. I love every pattern I see made with hankies. I have a collection that belonged to my mother including the box she kept them in. I also inherited the hankie holder that belonged to my grand aunt Margarite PIÑA. Did she create this with her own hands or did she receive this as a gift from a dear friend? The design and lettering looks to be hand painted.

Inside, I found a typed obituary of F. B. Gunther. See future post about Francis “Frank” Brazi GUNTHER (1864-1919).
I was honored to take a trip “home” to Ireland back in 2010 with the group Sew Many Places (Jim West) hosted by Vic & Rosie Gonzalez of Rosie’s Quilt shop of San Diego, CA. To memorialize this trip, I made a small quilt of linen handkerchiefs, a crochet bookmark,  and a lavender sachet.  


I am an avid quilter. So who did I get the desire and talent from? I believe it was my grandmother, Sophie Piña COOPER and grandaunt Margarite PIÑA. Here is a photo from Margarite’s photo album. Margarite is in the center stitching with her girlfriends.  Both Sophie and Margarite were teachers. I was a teacher for over 25 years. 



Thank you, Nana Sophie and grand Aunt Margarite!

Tourist in Australia - Day 10

Saturday, October 29, 2016


Up early at 5:30. We had a great breakfast to get us through a busy day. Dianne surprised me with these special  embroidered coasters of 5 states with their lovely natural flowers. She also included Tasmania. I love them! There was a duplicate copy of New South Wales.



A taxi picked us up to take us to the airport for our flight to Cairns. We hugged her goodbye. This was almost the end of family time (later spent time with Marg’s daughter, Tracy, in Canberra). We started the tourist aspect of our visit to Australia.

We landed and we arrived at our hotel early in which we checked in our luggage only. We found a nice place for lunch and walked around the quaint tourist harbor of Cairns. 

The next two days were full with our time exploring the Great Barrier Reef and visiting the Tjapukui Aboriginal tribe with the Skyrail Rainforest Cableway to Kuranda.