I
didn't know my maternal grandmother, Gertrude Mallory (1891-1975), very well.
She sometimes came to stay for a few days at my family s home in a suburb of
So when one of my brothers sent me the image of a stately Victorian home, made from a digital scan of a turn-of-the-Century photograph he had discovered on my father s home computer, I initially drew a blank. My father had labeled the computer file, Old Woodsfield House, however, and my brother guessed that it might once have been owned by the Mallory family.
The
Old Woodsfield House at the Turn of the 20th Century |
My mother died in 2004, but we sent the scan to her sister the only survivor among my grandmother s three children who confirmed that it was indeed my grandmother s childhood home. It was built when Mother was very little, she wrote, and was considered quite something. It had the first indoor bathroom. [My mother] asked me several years before she died whether I remembered that the first floor had electricity but the second floor had a gaslight. I had forgotten.
The
image was striking and I was curious to know whether the structure still
existed. However, I wasn t keen on hopping in the car and driving more than 300
miles I live in
I
made a print of the scan and brought it to work to show to a colleague who had
been researching his family s history, thinking he might have some suggestions.
He told me many local historical societies around the country had set up
websites, and suggested I try a Google search. It only took a few minutes to
track down the site of the
Meantime,
without saying anything to me, my colleague had begun a painstaking street-by-street
search of Woodsfield using the street view feature of Google Maps, which
offers panoramic photographs of thousands of locations made by the company s
fleet of roving camera vehicles. The next morning, after arriving at work, he
asked me to follow him into his office and look over his shoulder at his
computer monitor. He tapped a URL on the keyboard and suddenly I was looking at
my grandmother s house, as it appears today, on a corner lot on
|
Google Maps' Street View of the
House 2008 Google |
Within
a few more days, the electronic mail responses from Dick s group of current and
former
Delvin Devore verified the street address of the house (Google warns that its address listings are approximate) and gave me the names of the current owners, to whom I sent a print of the old photograph. Frank Schumacher informed me that the house is still known locally as The Mallory House, provided more information about the Mallory family s Ohio connections than I suspect my mother or her siblings ever knew, and sent me a copy of a 1902 photograph of the interrelated Schumacher and Mallory families with a legend identifying each of the individuals, one of whom was my grandmother.
My siblings and I are still searching for the original photograph, by the way. My father, now well into his 90s, recalls making the scan at the request of my mother, but doesn't know where she later put the hundred-year-old print.
Chris Kern
Washington, D.C.
February, 2009
Provided
by Chris Kern
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