Monday, February 11, 2013

Thursday, February 11, 1965 The Frances Hubbard Diaries

February 11, 1965
Thursday, partly cloudy but warmer.  Still working at ceiling.  I went to prayer meeting at Madelyn's.  Richard Dason,(Realtor)  had two people here in afternoon to sell old place up back.  He came back again at night and had made a sale to Herman and Judith Rother from N.J.
Comment:  The "Old Place" was the original farm owned by Gamalia and Anna Hubbard and was on the way up the mountain to the tower and we kids were up there very often either on our way to the tower, hunting something, or after the cows.  Dad sold around thirty acres for $3000.00.  I remember him talking about how when he walked the property with  Rother, Rother was totally amazed how much land thirty acres were and Dad thought he probably could have sold him three acres for the same price....here is a story and some history of Anna and Gamalia based on a news article from the Gilboa Monitor in 1886..a damned horse could have killed her......


A Horse Story Posted by Hello

Conesville—Mrs. Gamalia Hubbard met with a singular accident not long since, which might have proved very serious.
She was reaching in the horse manger after eggs, when the horse caught her hood and hair between it’s teeth and jammed her head against the manger with such force that her eyes were badly injured; so much so that for a short time she supposed that she had lost the sight of one eye; and they are still badly swollen and discolored.
..Gilboa Monitor, April 8, 1886

This was Margaret Ann Christiana, (1849-1933), married to Gamalia Hubbard, (1852-1883), who died of appendicitis when he was 31 or so. She was called Anna.

They met while both worked for Col. Zadock Pratt in Prattsville, of Pratt's Rocks fame. He started a leather tanning business in the area.

On April 24, 1882, they bought land on what is now known as Hubbard Hill. The middle part of the our homestead was the original log cabin that Gamalia and Anna lived in. Previous to that, they lived further up the mountain on the old foundation behind David's campsite.

Their children were Elmer, my grandfather, and John, who had no children. Gamalia and Anna are buried in Grand Gorge Cemetery.

She was apparently a much loved grandmother of Elmer's children and I remember my Dad talking about his visits to her.



This incident happened about 3 years after her husband's death, when she was about thirty seven years old. Elmer, born in 1882, was about one year old when his father died and about 3 years old when this incident occured. It also must have occured on Hubbard Hill.

Interesting that she outlived her husband by fifty years....... Also interesting to think about how many of the current generation would have died of appendicitis had we been unlucky enough to have been born a hundred years earlier.

Thanks To Bea Haskin For The Information

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You're always young in your mind it is said, No matter the face in the mirror, That you see with surprise then say to yourself, "What is that old man doing here?"