Anita Mae Draper
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Anita Mae Draper: Mamma's Memoirs & Giveaway

2/12/2012

 
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Surprise! I'm Anita Mae Draper and I'm the story behind this blog. I've re-scheduled this week's author, so you're stuck with me. I'm not published yet, but I am the author of several manuscripts, I have a memory to share, and I have a giveaway. So, I hope you'll stay and visit while I share my heritage with you.
Let me know what you think of this post. If there's interest in memoirs or letters of bygone days, it will be an option for guest authors.

Mamma's Memoirs
by Anita Mae Draper

If you mention Finland in my vicinity, I'll get a dreamy, faraway look on my face. No, I've never been to that Scandinavian country, but my early life centered around it because that's where my maternal grandparents originated. 

Mamma left a small book of memoirs behind when she went to heaven in 2003, so instead of me telling you about her life, I'll let her do it herself. One note though, Mamma's 1st language was Finnish and she carried a heavy Finn accent throughout her life. If you find grammatical and spelling mistakes (as you will) in the following account, please excuse them. I'm presenting Mamma's memoirs the way she  wrote them... mistakes and all.
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Grandma Henrekson (Kakkonen)  Memoirs--in English
other books are in Finn language--

I'm not good in English--Never went to school--
only learn a little at home from my children--
Thank you Children
(1992)

I have lots to write about my own life.  But this book first goes to my parents.  They worked hard all their life  and--kept poor all the time--Why was this?

First my dad born when his mother died--

Grandfather had a good house and lots of land. 

But  when his first baby was born and mother died, he have to take a new wife and they had lots of children.  So they told my dad to make his own house, so he did push land top of a hill --
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There was a lake down below but very deep steps down so he start to make well.  Borrowed money for paid helper ticking well...

No water in 3 of them ...

It took many years, could not pay back the money.  There were already 7 children.  Mother worked hard.
 

I was born on February 16, 1908, in the village of Kiteenlahti, Selateenmaki, Kitee, North Karelia.  The city of Joensuu is the centre of the North Karelia region. There in my father's house I had a happy life until springtime, 1917.   I was 9 years old, when everything was sold in Auction Sale.  

My father was not home.  This was the time of the First World War.  My father went behind Lake Laatokka to work as a carpenter in order to be able to pay his debts.  He had Eino, his older son with him.  Then the war started and they couldn't come home.
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Back row L to R: Tyyne (Mamma), Antti Vasarainen (Mamma's father), Eino (Mamma's brother), 2 younger bros. Front row L to R: Wihelmina nee Parkkonen (Mamma's mother). Hilma (Eino's wife), Hilman (Hilma's mother). Taken at Kitee, Finland.
We Lost Our Home:

So the man to whom my father owed money, sold everything from us--the land, cattle, house.  But no one wanted the children!  I was nine years old.  We looked out the window, when three men walked all cows away.  Mother cried.  We had no place to go.  The men put locks on doors, after we were outside of our home, so we could not get in again.  Our neighbor let us live in a cool storage building. 

My younger brother was only 3 months old, my brother Armas was three years.  Between Armas and me there had been Jenny.  She went to look at the cattle by the fence, and a cow picked her up with her horns and she died.  I missed Jenny, but I know she didn't suffer all this time.

Hard Life:

My mother worked on the fields, and I took care of the baby.  My sister Aino was 12 years old.  She was taken as a baby sitter for another family.  She was also good at weaving the loom.  When my father and Eino got back, Eino went to look for work in Viipuri, but my father looked around all summer for a place where we could stay for the winter.  He found a very small house for sale at the village of Ruppovaara.

We moved there just before the school started at the Fall.  I had to walk 4 Km morning and night to school and back.  So I was able to finish my schooling and god a Diploma, when I was 14. 
Picture
Mamma's school in Finland
Picture
Back of Mamma's school photograph.
All summers were wonderful.  I worked for farmers.  They had good food!  In September we picked berries and for two weeks we picked potatoes before the school started in October.

In our little house the two boys and I slept in the only bed.  There was no room for another bed, so my parents slept on the floor.  Spring time my mother started to do weaving.  Father made a small weaving  loom to fit in the corner of the room.  Now my parents had to sleep right in the front of the door.  The bed clothes had to be taken outside for the day.  Father was digging wells winter time, but summer time he made roofs.  I helped him summer time running on the roof!

My First Real Job:

When I was fifteen I had a really hard job with another family.  I had to milk cows and wash clothes. 

In that year I went to Church School  It helped me alot.  I forgot to tell that when I was twelve years old, there were Mission girls (ladies) in my village.  I loved to go to their meetings.  There are all kind of obstacles, when I didn't know, what to do, I prayed to God to forgive me all my sins, and He helped me all these years.  I gave God my life, and wanted to please Him in every way.  I became a Christian, born-again Christian.

At The Saastamoinens'

When I was sixteen I went to Wartaila.  There I worked first for the Saastamoinens'.

Mr. Saasta-moinen was in charge of the railroad.  They had three girls who were in school  They also had a son, David, who was fifteen years old.  He had a white horse.  Every Friday he went with his horse to the railroad station and gave a ride to the men, who came by train to sel their goods at the Market Place.  I took care of the three cows they had.  I milked the cows, separated the milk and made butter.  Mrs. Sastamoinen baked and cooked for us all.

At The Waananens':


For the summer the cows were taken to the pasture for from the Saastamooinens'.  There was a woman nearby who did the milking and made butter, so they didn't need me anymore. 

Now I got a job at another Christian work place at the Waananen Bakery.  There were three girls.  One girl was needed in the barn in the morning.   Mr.  Waananen himself usually did baking, but those days were no machines.  Five o'clock in the morning we two girls did the mixing of dough with four hands.  Then we let it rise.  Next we worked the dough on the table and made rings on it.  They were allowd to rise again and then boiled quickly and put in the oven.  When the rings had baked to light brown color they were taken out of the oven and dropped into a large basket.  After everything was baked we started stringing the rings. 

 18 rings were stringed together, that was one kilogram. I carried them to the storage room, where they were kept until the storekeeper got them out to the store to be sold.

Water Baptism At Lehmo:

I wanted to go to Church Conference to be baptized.  The Waananens' let me go in September to Lehmo.  When I cam back, they had hired a male baker and two older girls so they didn't need me any more.  I decided to go home.  My Sister Aino asked me to go with her to visit our auntie's place.

So we went...

.....And I found a man there.
to be continued...


Notes
1 kilogram = 2.2 pounds
1 kilometre = 0.6 miles
4 kilometres = 2.5 miles
Mamma says:
"ticking well" = digging well
"18 rings were stringed together, that was one kilogram" = pretzels or bagels? I'll have to ask.
- Mamma pronounced any words ending in 'ed' as a separate syllable so that walked became walk-ed, etc. In the same fashion, we pronounced her name with a deep emphasis on the word 'mum' then carrying the 'm' for a beat before completing the 'ma' and cutting the 'a' off sharply. Mummmm-ma

Since there's only one copy of Mamma's Memoirs and I don't have it, I'd like to thank my cousin, Nancy Lou Roy for posted much of this information on family genealogy sites.
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
GIVEAWAY!
Leave a comment with a valid email address by midnight, Feb 19th
to be entered in a draw for
 a 4-book set of Great Lake Romances by Donna Winters.

Why am I giving away this set? Because Mamma and Pappa eventually settle within a couple hours drive of Lake Superior. But that's for another day. :)
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~

Great Lakes Romances by Donna Winters

Picture
Rosalie of Grand Traverse Bay, brings Rosalie Foxe north from her southern home to encounter undeserved legal entanglements and the romantic advances of Kenton McKune.  Characters from the Lighthouse trilogy abound in this turn-of-the-20th-century Traverse City story. 

Sweet Clover, A Romance of the White City brings readers the excitement and wonder of Chicago's World’s Columbian Exposition of 1893, written by an author who attended the event.

Elizabeth of Saginaw Bay takes readers to the Saginaw Valley, 1837, where newlywed Elizabeth Morgan confronts the challenges of a pioneer settlement.  Will she ever find true happiness in this untamed wilderness?

Isabelle’s Inning features a turn-of-the-20th-century heroine and her very troubling affliction that challenges her happiness and her future.

 Thank you for visiting Author Memories. Next week we have
 a fascinating post by
Christa Allen about an 1840s Manor.
Christa's giveaway will be a copy of her novel,
 
Love Finds You in New Orleans.
Eva Maria Hamilton link
2/12/2012 01:27:15 pm

Anita, you are so very lucky to have these! What a family treasure! Loved the photos! Can't wait for the continuation :)

Anita Mae
2/12/2012 01:42:39 pm

Thank you, Eva Maria. I'm thankful that today's technology allows for digital saving of things like this. I don't know who actually has Mamma's book - I believe my mom because she took care of Mamma the last few years -I forgot to ask and maybe make a copy when I was home last summer.

However, I spent hours in my mom's kitchen taking photos of almost every photo in her album. So actually, this is the first time some of these have been published online.

Thanks for the visit. :)

Eva Maria Hamilton link
2/12/2012 04:04:13 pm

Technology can be wonderful! I take pictures of pictures too! What I found was always great advice was to always record the names, date and places where a photo is taken so it can be passed down and never forgotten! I hope you find the book! :)

Anita Mae
2/13/2012 01:53:55 pm

Eva Maria, I'm still waiting for you to post here and share some of that info. Any time, girl. :)

Sue Laitinen
2/13/2012 02:11:07 am

Very interesting story so far. Reminds me a little of my grandmothers story. Her family was very poor, so at the age of 12 she was farmed out to work for a family as a housekeeper etc. That was the only time in her life that she moved though. She fell in love with the son of the people she worked for (and lived with), and eventually they married. My great grandfather had built that house (that's what he did for a living) and that's where they lived until the day they died. Thanks for an interesting story!

Anita mae
2/13/2012 01:30:55 pm

You're welcome, Sue. I hope you find the next part as interesting as this one. Unfortunately, I don't know when that will be at this moment.

Actually my mom sent me out to work as a mother's helper when I was 12, too. We lived in Winnipeg, Manitoba and I received $5 for working from after school on Friday until 5pm on Sunday.

Thanks for sharing with us. :)

DebH
2/13/2012 05:20:04 am

I love the peek into your heritage, Anita. I think it is pretty neat to get to see more about you even though you're pre-pubbed. I'm sure many people have been curious about the who behind the authors memories.

I love that you left her memoirs in her words with her not so good english. I think that adds to the whole history feel of reading about her. It makes me feel like she IS here, talking to us, the reader.

thank you so much for sharing.

Anita mae
2/13/2012 01:40:54 pm

Hey Deb, it's always a pleasure to see you here. :)

Actually, I'm adding memoirs and journals as an option to those who don't have - or want to - share their history. So those authors who want to post on Author Memories will be able to if they post a letter or an interesting entry from someone's old journal. Does that sound like something you'd like to try?

anita.

DebH
2/14/2012 02:01:56 am

it sounds like something i'd like to try, but i'm not sure if i have any old journals from relatives. will have to consult my moms about that (i've got three to check with *heh*)

Anita mae
2/18/2012 07:58:19 am

Deb, it doesn't have to be a family journal or memoir.

It just has to be interesting enough to give us a glimpse of what life was like back then.

Lyle Trush
2/13/2012 05:58:35 am

Thank you for posting this. :) I do have a copy of Mamma's story as well. I'm one of her great grandsons. I love to read her writings she is such an inspiring influence in my life as well as Grandma Roy! I'm so thankful for them! I always wanted to design something around her writings someday. It would be a fun project and the family would love it.

Anita mae
2/13/2012 02:02:03 pm

Hey Lyle, I believe the last time I saw you was at Mamma's funeral. :(

Yes, I think designing something around Mamma's stories would be special.

Keep in touch, okay?

Anita.

Faye Oygard link
2/14/2012 07:59:37 am

Thank you Ms. Draper for sharing this wonderful family treasure with us. And I'm looking forward to hearing the rest of the story :)

crazi.swans at gmail dot com

Anita Mae
2/14/2012 12:26:52 pm

Hey there Faye, nice seeing you here. Thank you for telling me. :)

LoRee Peery link
2/14/2012 12:17:47 pm

What a memory to treasure. When you read the unedited words, I have no doubt you hear her voice.
Good contest, too!

Anita mae
2/14/2012 12:39:35 pm

Oh, I do, Loree. She's been gone a decade, but yes, I still hear her voice.

And do you know what's so special - it's only by cyber-publishing her memoirs, that I'm realizing she was a writer - like me. Or should I say... I'm a writer like her. :)

Thanks, Loree.

Christina Turner
2/17/2012 02:48:12 am

I have read some of Donna Winter's books and would love to read more! Blessings to you both!
Christina
charliebear<at>rogers<dot>com

Anita Mae
2/18/2012 07:56:48 am

Thank you, Christina. I was really looking forward to reading these books, but needed a giveaway so here they are because they kind of fit the post since Mamma and Pappa settled in the area north of Lake Superior when they arrived in Canada...oops... I'm getting ahead of myself. LOL

I like supporting Donna and I'd love to get the word out on her books, partly because of the locations, and partly because of the Gilded Age settings.

Angie Adair link
2/17/2012 12:27:24 pm

Wow..I really enjoyed this story. I'd love to read more! Good luck in your writing..I wish you the best! angadair@nwcable.net

Anita Mae
2/18/2012 08:00:49 am

Thank you for letting me know, Angie. I'm not sure when the next part will go up, but if you keep coming back like you have been, you shouldn't miss it.

And yes, thank you for coming back. :)

Sharon Moore
2/17/2012 12:40:50 pm

Anita - Thanks for sharing your history. I wish I could have known my great grandparents that came over from Sweden. All my grandmother and her sisters would say was that life on the farm was hard.
I'll be back to hear the rest of the story!
Sharon

Anita Mae
2/18/2012 08:12:25 am

You're welcome, Sharon.

I would love to hear something of their lives in Sweden, trials and all. I believe it's necessary to pass on to our children everything that happened and not differentiate between the good and bad. Our kids need to know our history so they can take what they need and not repeat past mistakes.

Thank you for sharing, Sharon.

Sue Watson
2/18/2012 10:59:26 am

My grandmother immigrated from Finland. I would love to win this book.

Anita mae
2/19/2012 01:25:41 am

Sue, thank you for the personal email. I enjoyed getting to know you better as I feel an affinity re our shared heritage.

For your benefit and others, I've added a subscriber box on the sidebar to let you know of new posts although I'll try to remember to email you when I know the date of my next segment of Mamma's Memoirs.

Meanwhile yes, you are entered for the giveaway. :)

cara lynn james link
2/18/2012 10:40:25 pm

This is so interesting, Anita Mae! I don't know any other people of Finnish heritage and I'm afraid I know nothing about the culture. I'm wondering how and why they came to America or Canada. I always wonder why our ancestors left their countries to come to a foreign land. It must've taken great courage.

Anita Mae
2/19/2012 01:29:43 am

Hi Cara. That's one of the questions I always want to know, too. It must be the writer in us. :)

And in Mamma's case, yes, it took great courage - and heartache as well. That period of transition was something she always spoke of because of the tramatic event it caused. But, I'm getting ahead of myself again.

Thanks for popping in, Cara. :)

Suzie Johnson
2/19/2012 02:46:12 am

Anita Mae, I'm so glad you shared this. What a lovely post. Two things stood out to me:

1: Grandfather - Antti
Granddaughter - Anita

Could you have been named for him?

2: Jenny - poor Jenny, what a tragic way to die

Your mother's journals are a very precious legacy and you are so blessed to have them. I really loved reading this in her own voice, so I'm glad you didn't edit this.

Anita Mae
2/19/2012 09:31:49 am

Hey Suzie, thanks for your nice words. I don't think I was named after Pappa. My mom always said she just liked the name Anita Mae and that was that.

Mamma talked about Jenny's death whenever she mentioned her daughter, Taimi (my mom's sister) because Taimi was fearless around animals. She'd walk under them rather than around and everyone said it was a wonder she didn't get kicked or horned, too. Mom used to talk about Taimi walking in between the legs of the cows and horses as if they were trees, but she never got hurt once.

Suzie Johnson
2/19/2012 02:50:33 am

Oh! I almost forgot - I absolutely loved her dedication where she thanked her children for the things she learned from them. That is very touching. The pictures are awesome, too!

Anita Mae
2/19/2012 09:46:35 am

Thanks, Suzie. Remember in December when I posted all those black and white photos of me as a child at Christmas and realized that my love of photography came from my mother?

Well, guess what... I found out while researching this post that Pappa (my mom's father) was a photographer back in Finland. :)

But I'm getting ahead of myself again because Mamma hasn't met him yet. LOL

Or - as Mamma would say... tee hee hee. :D

Anita Mae
2/20/2012 11:10:38 am

With the help of random.org, I've picked a winner for the giveaway of 4 Great Lake Romance books.

And the winner is... Angie Adair!

Congrats, Angie. I'll shoot you an email in a bit.

Thank you everyone for sharing your thoughts of my first public posting of Mamma's Memoirs.

Thanks, again.

Ann Lee Miller link
2/20/2012 03:57:49 pm

I love, love, love Christa's writing. Thanks for the chance to win her latest book!

Anita Mae
2/21/2012 03:32:13 am

Ann Lee, you came down too far and commented on Mamma's Memoirs post.

If you want to be entered on Christa's post, go to:

http://www.anitamaedraper.com/3/post/2012/02/christa-allan-camellia-manor-back-to-the-1840s-giveaway.html

or you can just click on Author Memories and it will be the current post.

Taimi Discala link
2/23/2012 04:33:22 am

Oh, what a lot of good memories Anita - yes-I did love all animals & still do ! Now lost my 3rd Labrador in June - she was 2wks. from 15 yrs old- what a companion ! ! I shall get in touch with you on e-mail.
Lots of good luck with your books !Love Auntie Taimi

Anita mae
2/23/2012 07:23:55 am

Hey, Auntie Taimi. So nice to see you here. Except... was that Mina who died? :(

Say hi to Uncle Yvan for me. hugs.

Jessica Nelson link
3/6/2012 12:07:44 pm

Oh my goodness Anita!!! What an absolutely fascinating thing to have. I guess you got the writing gene from your mother. ;-) SO cool. Thank you for sharing!


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