Two
Photos, Two Decades
Walter
Macbeth’s Children and Grandchildren
Walter Macbeth: 1860-1955 (Great Grandfather)
I am
fortunate to have a couple of photos of Walter Macbeth’s family gathered at the
Macbeth farm in the early part of the 1930s and another dated 1946. It is
interesting to compare the clothes, the faces and the surroundings in the two
photos of Macbeth family reunions.
Some
family reunions are very large events that require immense planning and a large
venue, while others are more intimate — a gathering of a matriarch and
patriarch and their children and grandchildren. That’s the type of reunion
captured in these two photos. It is unclear if the family was gathering in honor
of a holiday or one family member’s birthday or other significant occasion, or
if they just selected a summer day to gather back at the old homestead and
spend time with one another. My grandmother, Nora Hoffman Macbeth and my
great-aunt Annie Macbeth Schostag both labelled the photos “Macbeth Reunion”
but provided no further details. The photos both depict the Walter and Lucy
Macbeth family: Walter, Lucy, and some of their children and grandchildren.
Sadly, I
haven’t seen enough photos of my grandfather’s siblings, nieces and nephews
that I am able to identify everyone in the photos. I can pick out my
grandparents, my mother, her brother/my uncle Rex, and my great-grandfather
Walter. Great-aunt Annie and her husband are also easy to identify, along with
my mom’s cousin Joanna (daughter of Harold Macbeth).
I’m not
sure of the location of the first photo. I don’t recognize the trees in the
background, and no buildings are visible. The bush in the foreground looks like
a peony, but is not blooming. In addition, one person in the front row is
wearing a jacket. This seems to indicate a spring or early fall date—warm but
not hot. My grandmother is at the far right, holding my mother, who appears to
be a toddler. My mother was born in April 1928, so I am guessing that this
gathering was fall 1930 when she was two to two and a half years old. The
cloche hats the ladies are wearing are appropriate for 1930.
My
grandfather, Ivan Macbeth, is in the back row, the second man from the right.
His father, my great-grandfather Walter Macbeth, is at the far left, and I
think the wide lady in the white dress near the center is his wife Lucy. Gus
Schostag is next to her. I believe the man in the front row holding the baby is
my great uncle Ray Macheth, holding his son Wilfred, who had just been born in
May 1930. If the photo was taken in September or October 1930, that would make
little Wilfred about four or five months old. I don’t recognize anyone else
with any surety.
The second
photo was from an album owned by Annie Macbeth Schostag. She identified it as
“Macbeth Reunion--1946”. I recognize this location: my grandparents’ farm,
which was the Macbeth homeplace where Walter and Lucy raised their family. My
grandparents are at the far right of the photo, and my mother is right below
them, kneeling. I love the dress my mom is wearing, with the bows at the
shoulder and the dark buttons and belt. My Uncle, Dwight/Rex Macbeth, is on the
left in the front row.
Annie
Macbeth Schostag is standing, second from the left. Her husband Gus is next to
my grandparents at the right. I believe the woman in the center, standing next
to family patriarch Walter Macbeth, is daughter Gertrude Macbeth Laird. Harold
Macbeth may be behind them, right at the center, but I could be wrong. He might
be the second person from the left. Harold’s daughter Joanna is in the center
row, kneeling, and is third from the left.
I think most of the other younger family members would be members of the
Laird or Ott families—Gertrude Macbeth Laird or Ethel Macbeth Ott’s children. I
wish I could identify them all with confidence. Lucy Dane Macbeth and Ray
Macbeth are not in this photo—both had died years earlier.
I love
reunion photos. They provide opportunities to identify extended family members,
and give me a glimpse of their lives on a specific date. These two photos,
taken about sixteen years apart, show a changing Macbeth family—there were
joyous additions as children were born, but also some sad losses of some family
members and the aging of the remaining parent and siblings. I treasure these photos.
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