Block 11 – or as I like to call it – the Ministers & Missionary Block :)

block 11
 

Block 11

  1. Mary Espy Gordon (wife of Rev Samuel M Gordon, b 10/9/1865, d 3/3/1948, mother of Esther, Harold, Boyd & Kathryn Gordon Bradshaw, daughter of Rev John & Esther Collins Espy, sister of Emma Espy Kennedy, Harry, Angeline & Agnes Espy Merrill)
  2. M Gordon (Rev. Samuel M Gordon, Minister in Westfield 1901-1903, b 10/17/1858, d 7/11/1948, child of Andrew & Mary Foster Gordon, brother of: James, Ella, Clara, Catherine, Andrew, Eva, William, Carrie, Elizabeth, Sissie, Milo & Myrtle; husband of Mary Espy Gordon, father of Esther, Harold, Boyd & Kathryn Gordon Bradshaw)
  3. R F Randolph (Amy Robinson Randolph, 3rd wife of Reuben Fritz Randolph – he was a minister in Westfield 1909-1913 – he died 12/6/1913, they were married on 5/30/1904, daughter of James P & Betsy Rexford Robinson, b 2/10/1858, d 11/27/1939)
  4. Agnes E Merrill (Agnes Espy Merrill, b 1880, d 1958, married Rev Richard Merrill on 10/13/1904, mother of Richard, Jr, John; daughter of Rev John & Esther Collins Espy, sister of Mary Espy Gordon, Emma Espy Kennedy, Harry & Angeline)
  5. R N Merrill (Rev Richard Nye Merrill, b 5/24/1881, d 11/7/1961, minister in Westfield 1916-1919, married Agnes Espy Merrill on 10/13/1904, father of Richard Jr & John, son of Philip S & xxx Merrill, brother of Julia, Charles & Philip Jr)
  6. Edna W Roberts (b 9/18/1879, d 5/2/1976, wife of Rev Dr John E Roberts)
  7. John E Roberts (Rev, Dr John Emory Roberts, minister in Westfield 1916-1919, b 2/3/1873, d 12/18/1960, husband of Edna W Roberts)
  8. Mrs Homer B Potter (Eva Eagles Potter, b 1886, d 4/18/1979, daughter of William & Annie Russell Eagles, married Rev Dr Homer Potter 5/13/1907, mother of Ruth Potter Bill, Esther Potter Dugan & Bruce) Read more…


Africa 360 – April 24 – Education

 
 
Africa_360_Logo_WEB_320_236
 
F

or the month of April, we will be focusing on Africa 360.

Excerpt from the Africa 306 Lenten Devotional

Written by Rev. Bob Kolvik-Campbell

 

I went to Zimbabwe in 1992 as part of an interdisciplinary team. It was a year of great drought. Part of the time, I stayed at Old Mutare, a mission station that dates back to the 1880s. There was a school, a church building, a clinic, and missionary residences. Across the road was Africa University.

I got to know a girl named Grace, who was a student at the school and wanted to practice her English. We walked the garden and she showed me her plot, where she grew vegetables for the school. In that drought year, everything has to be done to preserve water. She brought the water she had used to wash each day to her plot, so that she could water it. We prayed for the gift of water and that the land might be renewed again with God’s presence in the rain.

Across the road was the newly opened Africa University. I visited the library. In this new facility, there were not many books, and I thought about the opportunity I had to read and grow from the libraries in my life and I prayed that the library would grow and expand.

It is God who has given voice to a university and to the elimination of malaria in Africa. It is God who has called us to be part of this great work.

God continues to bless Africa and Africa University, where the dream is alive. God blesses the school children of Africa as they grow, without fear of disease and death from malaria.

 

“Give Faithfully. Give Hope. Be a Global Neighbor.”

Africa 360 is the Upper New York Conference’s holistic plan for health and education initiatives in Africa. Uniquely, Africa 360 is about dreaming God-sized dreams, ambitiously eliminating preventable deaths from malaria and equipping the next generation of leaders.

www.unyumc.org/mission/Africa -360

 

The church has set a goal of $500. Let’s see if we can surpass that goal!

Envelopes for donations are available at the Welcome Centers and by each door.

 

Loose change containers will be in Fellowship Hall, the narthex and the welcome center outside Gibbs on Sundays

 

 

 

April 24: Education

 



Africa 360 – April 17 – Agriculture

 
Africa_360_Logo_WEB_320_236
 
 

For the month of April, we will be focusing on Africa 360.

Excerpt from the Africa 306 Lenten Devotional

Written by Martin Reimer, member at Watertown First UMC

 

This passage in James tells us that if we have faith in Jesus Christ, it should be manifest in actions that demonstrate love and care for other people.

Zimbabwe is a beautiful country and its people have a cultural tradition of being friendly to strangers. It once was a country that did well economically, especially in producing agricultural exports. Now it does not produce enough food to feed its own population. A couple of reasons for this may be that many landowners have reverted to inefficient ways of farming, and a lot of land has been let lay untilled.

The Faculty of Agriculture and Natural Resources at Africa University is providing students with knowledge and hands-on training to enable them to farm in economically effective and productive ways. We met one graduate, Justin Zimunya, who has been hired to manage the farm at Mutambara Mission Centre. With him as farm manager, agricultural land has been put back into production, large hog-raising and broiler-chicken raising operations have been established, and a dairy program has been started.  (Cont…à)

Africa University’s Faculty of Agriculture and Natural Resources can make a difference for Zimbabwe’s languishing farms. Support for Africa University through the scholarship program can aid in this.

 

“Give Faithfully. Give Hope. Be a Global Neighbor.”

Africa 360 is the Upper New York Conference’s holistic plan for health and education initiatives in Africa. Uniquely, Africa 360 is about dreaming God-sized dreams, ambitiously eliminating preventable deaths from malaria and equipping the next generation of leaders.

www.unyumc.org/mission/Africa -360

 

The church has set a goal of $500. Let’s see if we can surpass that goal!

Envelopes for donations are available at the Welcome Centers and by each door.

 

Loose change containers will be in Fellowship Hall, the narthex and the welcome center outside Gibbs on Sundays

 

 

 

April 17: Agriculture


Africa 360 – April 10 – Medicine

 
Africa_360_Logo_WEB_320_236
 
 
For the month of April, we will be focusing on Africa 360.
Excerpt from the Africa 306 Lenten Devotional
Written by Dr. Sylvia Reimer, member at Watertown First UMC

 

When we served at the Mutambara Mission Hospital in Zimbabwe 15 years ago, 90 percent of our beds or floor mats were filled with patients ill with one or a combination of these diseases: HIV/AIDS, tuberculosis, and malaria. Of these, malaria was the swiftest killer, and those most at risk included pregnant women and their unborn babies, and children under 5 years of age – the women because malaria parasites invade the placenta and multiply there efficiently; young children because they do not have the resistance achieved simply by living longer.

What a difference as we return there now with mission teams! A massive education promotion and the availability of antiretroviral (ARV) drugs for AIDS have changed a lethal diagnosis into a chronic disease. Preventive measures, including the “Nothing but Nets” project, has cut the number of people dying from malaria in half! Now the busiest unit in the hospital is maternity, where healthy mothers are delivering healthy babies. Glory to God! Indeed, this is good news. Having seen these changes first hand, I am an  enthusiastic supporter of the

Africa 360 initiative, especially its connection to Imagine No Malaria

. Working together with partner agencies, I am convinced that we can erase this preventable disease, saving thousands of lives annually. I am also convinced that Jesus would agree that preventing the sick is even better than curing them!

 ************************************

“Give Faithfully. Give Hope. Be a Global Neighbor.”

Africa 360 is the Upper New York Conference’s holistic plan for health and education initiatives in Africa. Uniquely, Africa 360 is about dreaming God-sized dreams, ambitiously eliminating preventable deaths from malaria and equipping the next generation of leaders.

www.unyumc.org/mission/Africa -360

 **********************************************

The church has set a goal of $500. Let’s see if we can surpass that goal!

Envelopes for donations are available at the Welcome Centers and by each door.

 ***************************************

Loose change containers will be in Fellowship Hall, the narthex and the welcome center outside Gibbs on Sundays

 

 

 

April 10: Medicine

 



Africa 360 – April 3 – Education

Africa_360_Logo_WEB_320_236

For the month of April, we will be focusing on Africa 360.

Excerpt from the Africa 306 Lenten Devotional

Written by Pastor Nancy Pullen, retired

 

I first visited AU in August 1993. I was on my way to a Volunteers-in-Mission project in Mozambique, but we detoured to Zimbabwe to see the new university that United Methodists were building. At that time there were two studies underway: Animal husbandry and theology. We visited the farm, the library, and classrooms housed in the old farmhouse and buildings – pretty basic facilities. A quarter-mile or so away a dormitory was being readied for its first residents and a chapel was being built. AU was those buildings and a dream.

 By 2013, when we went to celebrate 20 years of graduating students, the campus was a full-fledged university. There are six areas of study, several state-of-the-art class buildings, a student building housing a cafeteria, the beautiful chapel, a new library, and dormitories. Nearby were single-family homes that serve as staff housing. The most remarkable part of all of this was everything is paid for. No new building is started until it is funded. The donations came from all over the world and some from Methodists who aren’t part of The United Methodist Church. The chapel was funded by the Korean Methodist Church, for example.

The campus was bustling with students from 26 African countries. Some of those students had been enemies before arriving here and learning to live together. That reminded me of why I support AU. I believe Africa’s best chance for peace and prosperity is in educated leaders. I want to be part of that future for the sake of Africa and of the world. This is one of the ways I try to follow Jesus’ calling to work for peace.

 

 ***************************

“Give Faithfully. Give Hope. Be a Global Neighbor.”

Africa 360 is the Upper New York Conference’s holistic plan for health and education initiatives in Africa. Uniquely, Africa 360 is about dreaming God-sized dreams, ambitiously eliminating preventable deaths from malaria and equipping the next generation of leaders.

www.unyumc.org/mission/Africa -360

 *************************

The church has set a goal of $500. Let’s see if we can surpass that goal!

Envelopes for donations are available at the Welcome Centers and by each door.

 **************************

Loose change containers will be in Fellowship Hall, the narthex and the welcome center outside Gibbs on Sundays

 

 

 

April 3: Education



Block 10

Block 10
 
block 10
  • Frances Howard Sloan (Frances “Frank” Wratten Howard Sloan , b 10/14/1871, d 2/10/1935, daughter of Albert & Anna Rickenbroad Wratten, sister of: George, Laura, Katherine, Frances, Mabelle, Nina & Saville, , married 1st – xxx Howard, married 2nd – Arthur Sloan)
  • Dorothy K Wilson (Dorothy Kinner Wilson, b 1906, daughter of James & Saville Wratten Kinner, married Robert S Wilson on 6/16/1928)
  • James E Kinner (Husband of Saville E Kinner, b ~1874, son of James & Mary Kinner, brother of Josephine, Margaret, Effy, Mary, father of Dorothy Kinner Wilson)
  • Saville E Kinner (Saville Wratten Kinner, daughter of Albert & Anna Rickenbroad Wratten, Wife of James E Kinner, b ~ 1879, married ~1900, sister of: George, Laura, Katherine, Frances, Mabelle, Nina & Pauline, Mother of Dorothy Kinner Wilson)
  • Pauline W Harrison (Pauline Wratten Harrison, b 1891, married Charles Harrison on 9/21/1915, daughter of Albert & Anna Rickenbroad Wratten, sister of: George, Laura, Katherine, Frances, Mabelle, Nina & Saville, mother of Charles Allan, Richard & Rodney)
  • Charles Harrison (b ~1885, married Pauline Wratten Harrison on 9/21/1915, son of George Edward & Mary Ann Allen Harrison)
  • Roy R Pelton (b 5/22/1876, d 10/27/1939, husband of Laura Wratten Pelton – married 1905, father of Anne, George, Frank Rowland & Ruth[Chase], Brother of Frank, Joe, Ruth & Jay, Grant & Ward; son of Edward L & Henrietta Ferguson Pelton) Read more…


Block 9

Block 9

  • Roger V Wolfe (b 11/12/1913, d 5/30/1996, son of Frank & Maude Peabody Wolfe, brother of Paul)
  • Paul H Wolfe (b 9/14/1911, d 12/1982, son of Frank & Maude Peabody Wolfe, brother of Roger, husband of Frances)
  • Frank P Wolfe (Franklin Peter Wolfe, b 2/1867, joined 6/24/1916, d 1/24/1957, married Maude Deete Peabody Wolfe 6/30/1909, son of Lawrence & Catherine Hoitnik Wolfe, brother of John & Henry, father of Roger & Paul)
  • Glenn Blanding (Glenn Greeley Blanding, b 1/20/1890, d 2/1964, son of Merritte & Vica Greenley Blanding, brother of Emmett, Minnie, Edna, Clyde, Mary, Harold & Lan, husband of 1) Madge Aldrich Blanding [9/25/1916] deceased, 2) Ruth Wing Blanding [7/14/1934], father of Allen)
  • May H Phillips (May Hamilton Phillips, b~1870, married J Winsor Phillips on 11/21/1893, mother of James& Marjorie)
  • Mrs Charles Groat (Minnie C Groat, b 12/16/1873, joined 6/9/1909, d 10/15/1962, wife of Charles Groat, mother of Emma Groat Maxson, & Marie Groat Kath)
  • Alida Tenpas (Alida Tenpas Lewis, b 5/8/1894, joined 4/4/1915, d 8/21/1998, married Kenneth H Lewis on 9/16/1960, child of John & Anna Hoitnik Tenpas, sister of Louis, Jay Alberta, & Mabel Tenpas Babcock) Read more…


Block 8

block 8

Block 8

  • Edna Volker (Edna Volker Happ, b 12/4/1897, d 2/1974, daughter of George M & D. Sophia Wilken Volker, sister of George E , Donald, Marion, Lillian & Florine, married Corwin Lewis Happ on 8/16/1934)
  • E Margaret Cooper (b about 1891, daughter of Samuel L & Anna Cooper, sister of Harold & William)
  • Rose H Finlay (Rose Hintz Finlay, b 8/2/1898, joined 4/11/1926, d 2/21/1986, married Merle Finlay on 12/15/1921, daughter of Albert & Anna Borehart Hintz)
  • Lena Miller (b 9/1881, daughter of Henry C & Helen Miller, sister of Charlotte & Lewis)
  • Mabel Wallace (Mabel Wallace Hohman 3/23/1908, d 10/28/1999, daughter of Floyd & Addie Broadbent Wallace, sister of Ivan Raymond, Robert & Shirley, wife of xxx Hohman)
  • Genevieve Waterman (Genevieve Alice Waterman, b ~ 1901, daughter of Edward & Hattie Finlay Waterman, sister of Edith, Harold, Irene, Ireta, Florence & Hubert)
  • W T Nicol (William Thomas Nichol, b 1881, joined 5/13/1920, d 12/1/1945, husband of Charlotte May Nichol) Read more…


Hope…..

“In His great mercy he has given us new birth into a living hope through the resurrection of Jesus Christ” (1 Peter 1:3)

 

 snowdrops - blog

I must say that I wasn’t looking forward to Winter this past Fall when I considered the Winters of the previous two years. What with record low temperatures, lots of snow and wind, freezes and thaws, Alberta Clippers and Polar Vortexes all combining to keep us on our toes. That brought a record number of water main breaks and many folks had to deal with frozen pipes in their homes. As Autumn gave way to Winter a few months ago, I thought to myself, “Could it be Winter again so soon?” When the projections came in for a milder Winter, I couldn’t have been more hopeful it would be true.

 

We got away pretty easily this past Winter. It played out just as the computer models said it would. And now Winter is giving way to Spring! Hurray! Spring is just another gift of God’s grace that lifts my spirits in wonderful ways. Spring never ceases to amaze me as the days get longer and the trees bud out and new life springs forth all around. And in the midst of it all, hope abounds.

 

As I left the parsonage the other day to make my way to the office, the above pictured flowers greeted me. I stopped to take a closer look. Less than two days before, the ground was still covered in snow. Although the snow had melted, the ground is just covered with matted down leaves and sticks and debris placed there by various storms. Even still, the mighty little snow drops pushed their way through it all, standing tall amongst the debris making a statement about life itself. The word that came to mind was hope.

 

As I gave thanks to God for the beautiful day and the moment of insight, I couldn’t stop thinking of Jesus, the Resurrection, and the hope that it brings. That even in the midst of what seems to be certain uncertainty, we have hope. When conventional wisdom tells us it isn’t so, we have hope. When we find ourselves in that place, feeling piled on by the debris of life, in Christ, we have hope. Hope to rise again. Hope to rise above it all.

 

Hope to stand tall in the midst of the challenges of life.



Block 7

block 7
 

Block 7

  • Mrs A J Macer (Irma Stebbins Macer, b 8/26/1893, joined 5/9/1920, d 9/10/1948, wife of Arthur J Macer, mother of Arthur Jr & Marjorie)
  • Arthur J Macer (b 9/23/1892, joined 3/4/1906, d 10/9/1970, child of Joseph & Sarah Wratten Macer, brother of William & Mary Macer Finley, husband of Irma Stebbins Macer, father of Arthur Jr & Marjorie)
  • Mrs H E Wratten (Hattie E Webber Wratten, b 7/1858, wife of Henry Wratten, mother of Clara Wratten Miller & Elsie Wratten Weaver)
  • Margaret Lindsay Bratton (Margaret A Lindsay Bratton, b,daughter of William & Doris Klee Lindsay, married John W Bratton on 6/9/1924, sister of William, Esther Lindsay Wilson )
  • Mrs Henry Hunt (Verna Hyde Hunt, b ~ 1880, daughter of Andrew & Fidelia Hyde wife of Henry Hunt, parent of Albert, Duane & Alice Hunt Cali)
  • Mary Macer Finlay (Mary Elizabeth Macer Finlay, b3/1/1902, joined 4/4/1915, d 8/8/1992, married Edward Grant Finlay,6/2/1925, child of Joseph & Sarah Wratten Macer, sister of William & Arthur)
  • Mary M Dinsbier (Mary McCutcheon Dinsbier 2/6/1899, d 3/21/1989, daughter of Frank & Anna Metz McCutcheon, married Paul J Dinsbier on 7/31/1918, mother of Craig )
  • Edward G Finlay (b 12/6/1896, joined 4/4/1915, d 1/1984, married Mary Elizabeth Macer Finlay 6/6/1925, son of Asa George & Nellie Daniels Finlay, brother of Alice, Elizabeth & Merle)
  • Hugh W Thompson( b 10/2/1858, d 11/18/1943, son of Hugh & Eliza(Elizabeth) Carr Thompson, , husband of Adella Hutchins Hall father of Herbert, brother of Jennie)
  • Mrs Joseph Macer (Sarah Wratten Macer, b 6/1859, joined 1880, d 7/28/1935, wife of Joseph Macer, parent of William, Arthur, Mary Macer Finley) Read more…