(Cross-posted on the June and Art blog…)
Last summer, I returned home from Florida with twelve large boxes comprising our family collection. So much history… and yet there are still countless gaps in the record.
Last summer, I returned home from Florida with twelve large boxes comprising our family collection. So much history… and yet there are still countless gaps in the record.
Art’s letters are missing for that nine-day stretch of correspondence between June’s return to school and Thanksgiving vacation. At the very least, we know we are missing the letter that June refers to as the “shortest.. on record” and the one with the “long, low whistle.”
We have no pictures in our family collection of the Traphagen School of Fashion where June attended for two years. I’d be happy with an interior or an exterior. My sister and I have searched the internet, the New York Public Library, and the New York Historical Society. We’ve found nothing.
There are no photographs of June’s apartments in the city.
We've found no pictures of Shirley Stahl, June’s roommate and close friend. Perhaps June used her as a model for some of her fashion illustrations? There’s no way to know.
I don’t know where Jack’s (where June would eat breakfast before class) was located. We’ve found no pictures of Roulston’s on Main Street in Southampton or Partida’s where Art went for his art classes. And I’d sure love to uncover a photo of Helen Darby’s house where June and Art met.
Nevertheless, frustrating as it is to acknowledge these gaps, I’m deeply thankful for all that we have – twelve gift boxes from the past for us to care for and pass forward into the future.
Our personal heritage is important. We’re indeed fortunate to have so much.
© 2010 Lee Price
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