Showing posts with label King Charles II. Show all posts
Showing posts with label King Charles II. Show all posts

Tuesday, May 29, 2012

TREE MEMORIES

May 29, aka Oak Apple Day or Royal Oak Day in Britain is the anniversary of the Restoration of the Monarchy (1660). It was the date (according to the Julian calendar) when King Charles II returned to London after years of exile, during the rule of Oliver Cromwell as Lord Protector.
"Parliament had ordered the 29th of May, the King’s birthday, to be forever kept as a day of thanksgiving for our redemption from tyranny and the King’s return to his Government, he returning to London that day."
From the diary of Samuel Pepys, June 1, 1660.
The day used to be commemorated by the wearing of oak apples or oak leaves, recalling the Boscobel oak in which Charles II hid after the battle of Worcester. Numerous British pubs have names recalling the event (see right).
29 May was also the birthday of Charles II, but when converted to the Gregorian calendar his date of birth for astrological purposes becomes June 8 - still with Sun in Gemini. Astrodatabank has his natal chart HERE.

Chambers' Book of Days tells this about the King with Sun in Gemini:
It is a great pity that Charles II was so dissolute, and so reckless of the duties of his high station, for his life was an interesting one in many respects; and, after all, the national joy attending his restoration, and his cheerfulness, wit, and good-nature, give him a rather pleasant association with English history. His parents, Charles I and Henrietta Maria (daughter of Henry IV of France), who had been married in 1626, had a child named Charles James born to them in March 1629, but who did not live above a day. Their second infant, who was destined to live and to reign, saw the light on the 29th of May 1630, his birth being distinguished by the appearance, it was said, of a star at midday.



It was on his thirtieth birthday, the 29th of May 1660, that the distresses and vicissitudes of his early life were closed by his triumphal entry as king into London.



All of which allows a (somewhat contrived) segue into a ramble about the trees, past and present in our yards. Yards, by the way, is the term used in the USA for lawn areas or gardens in front of, and behind the house. In the UK "yard" usually refers to a concreted area, often called "the backyard" behind modestly sized, older style homes.

When, in early 2005, we moved into the house where we now live a big part of the attraction was its location. It's on the edge of town, necessities within easy reach, yet countryside lies just beyond the backyard fence, as husband's photograph (above), taken from the kitchen window, shows. Some lovely old shady Cottonwood trees stood inside the back fence, as well as two big Maples at the front of the house. I suspect that before a road and houses were constructed, the three huge trees in our backyard formed a semi-circle with three others in the pasture beyond our fence. Perhaps they were planted as part of the concerted effort, led by the government, to protect and change the face of a barren Oklahoma after the dust-bowl era of the 1930s.


Sadly, "old" often gets the better of "shady".

In 2009 one of the three huge Cottonwoods had to go. Cottonwoods, in old age, are apparently prone to atttack by borer beetles and disease. We resisted the loss for as long as seemed safe, but the thought of a wild winter and next tornado season overtook any sentimental meanderings. Last year another Cottonwood, badly damaged by an ice storm had to be taken down as it had become dangerous to the house, and the house nextdoor.





There's bad news this year too. One of the two tall Maples in front of the house was killed off by last year's drought. It'll have to go. We'll plant a young Cottonwood later to replace it.

A rotting Mimosa tree had to be removed from the back, then an old decaying fruit tree. Three years ago we planted a Crape Myrtle to replace the lost Mimosa tree. At the same time we also planted a small Smoke Tree in the front yard - very pretty little tree, I can't find our photograph of it. Both survived ice storms and other wild weather events, but last year's protracted drought and record high temperatures for weeks on end killed both, in spite of frequent watering.

Both Crape Myrtle and Smoke Tree had to be cut down, but have left us with some hope. New shoots appeared, and are now growing. The heat had killed only what was above-ground.












We hope for less extreme temperatures this summer, or at least for no extended period of drought, to give the new growths a chance.

Sunday, January 10, 2010

Sunday Supplement (Astrology-free)

BACK-TRACKING

Tracing one's family history can become addictive, though at times frustrating.

While organising a narrative and plan, tidy enough to send to a cousin in England yesterday, I noticed a possible error in my work. On checking further I discovered that I had indeed mixed up a couple of people who bore the same name, and who were married to wives also of the same first names, all born around the same dates, in roughly the same area of Yorkshire. Two Jonathans married to two Margarets. Matching exact places of birth and of residence was the only sure way to keep myself moving along the correct line.

Having made the necessary amendments I felt rather disappointed. The incorrect line had led back to a family (with 6 sons, 4 daughters) who emigrated to the USA in 1821, and had letters on the topic, available for interested parties to read at ancestry.com. One letter detailed the cost of setting up a farm in Pennsylvania at that time.

25 acres.... of first-rate land at 24 dollars an acre....... We have built a house on it, and live in it. We sowed 8 acres of buckwheat; it looks well. We have two orchards of apple trees. It grows 300 bushels a year, the best I ever ate. It is a pleasant place, there were 12 acres of rye which fell to me. I bought 2 cows, two oxen, 2 heiffers and a lot of swine. I have bought 160 acres , 8 miles from us, 10 acres cleared, the rest is wood. It is light clearing, a man may chop an acre in 3 days. It is level land and good. We are going to sow 5 acres of wheat, the rest with rye. It is 4 dollars an acre. We intend building next spring there. I intend this for two farms ..... etc.
However, as it turned out, they were not my ancestors. Setting out on the correct track, and with the help of much work done in past years by other researchers, I discovered something else, equally fascinating.

The maiden name of the wife of my correct ancestor (the pair would be my great great great-grandparents) was Vasey, born 1784, and she came from a village called Allerston in Yorkshire. Her great great grandfather was a Matthew Vasey, born around 1600. His life-span included the time of the English Civil Wars, and The Restoration of the Monarchy. After a bit of Googling, not really expecting to find much, I found this: an extract from a book published in 1892, written by John Leyland The Yorkshire Coast and the Cleveland Hills and Dales (page 241):




Hmmmm. Well, the Restoration of the Monarchy, after Oliver Cromwell's time in power, occured in 1660. Prince Charles (King Charles the Second)whose father had been beheaded, had supposedly been in exile until 1660 - but who knows what went on undercover? I guess he could have slipped in from Europe to a quiet port on the Yorkshire coast, for there were many, and made his way inland across the area near Allerston.

So, if that snippet is anything to go by, it would appear that a distant ancestor of mine was a Loyalist. As it happens, King Charles the Second was always my favourite king when studying history at school. On mature reflection though, he was not a Good King - but then, Royals are not my favourite people, none of 'em was a lot of good! I'd doubtless have been supporting t'other side.