Welcome to Legacy Stories. I hope you will join me in finding pleasure in digging into the past and revealing our buried treasures in picture, video, audio and words as my legacy to you.
While growing up, Ruth and her siblings often visited their grandparents who had immgrated from The Netherlands in 1922. One of the traditional foods that Grandma Folkers liked to prepare and share was "Roode Kool". Here is her traditional recipe to pass on to her posterity. Ingredients: 1 medium sized heart...
1877 Views
0 Comments
1877 Views
Ruth's grandmother, Hilje Mulder Folkers, had a favorite recipe of hers that Ruth loved with kale and potatoes, rather than sauerkraut (zuurkool). This is a quick and easy recipe for cold winter months. Instructions: Use equal parts of sauerkraut and potatoes boiled separately. Drain potatoes and mash. Drain sauerkraut and combine...
1917 Views
1917 Views
This recipe was contributed by Gloria Schneider (Ruth's youngest daughter) for THE THIESSENS FAMILY REUNION COOKBOOK - 2000. She writes "This recipe is one that my mother - Ruth Meacham - often made for Thanksgiving and Christmas when we were growing up. I can't help but think of the good memories...
2108 Views
2108 Views
I was just turning sixteen when Ralph Green and Golden Adams, two good-looking Airmen, spent a couple of hours flirting with me in the Union Pacific elevator (I was the elevator operator) and Golden asked me for a date that very night. Golden had a car, so we drove around the...
2268 Views
2268 Views
When I was fourteen, I was out looking for work. My Dad wasn't able to work and mother was cleaning houses. It seemed like, as a family, we had sturggles to make ends meet and food on the table and clothes on our backs. So I thought if I could go...
1562 Views
1562 Views
(Continued from Part 1) CLICK HERE The family moved to Bryan Avenue in 1937. That Christmas, Joseph pumped Ruth on bicycle to town and they went Christmas shopping. She carried the packages while he pumped them home again. When the family moved, Joseph was set back one year in school. He...
3040 Views
3040 Views
(As told to Golden Virgil Adams Jr. by Mrs. H. Thiessens & Ruth T. Adams about 1962) It was a nice clear winter day in January. The snow that was lying on the ground glistened as if it were manna from heaven. This was the day a blessing from heaven was...
3086 Views
3086 Views
Ruth reminices about how her oldest brother, Ted, would get old clunkers with a rumble seat to fix up, and when they were in the backyard on Seventh East and later on Bryan Avenue in Salt Lake City how they would "stargaze" at night (and in the summer daytimes she and...
1556 Views
1556 Views
Ruth tells of her mother bottling fruits and vegetables and storing them in the cellar on Seventh East in Salt Lake City, Utah and how she caught the family member that was "snitching" the food since it was disappearing.
1405 Views
1405 Views
Ruth remembers, as a young girl, how she and her brother, Joseph, loved to climb apples trees and eat green apples but after one such experience, Joseph became very ill and almost lost his life.
1553 Views
1553 Views
Ruth tells of activities of her brothers Ted and Hank who were in their teens when she was in her early childhood, and how she worried about their involvement with the streetcars that ran in front of their home on Seventh East in Salt Lake City, Utah.
1337 Views
1337 Views
Ruth tells childhood memories of cold winter nights in unheated bedrooms and keeping warm when sick as a child.
885 Views
885 Views
As a child and growing up, because we lived in the busy city and times were difficult through the Great Depression, I never had a pet of my own. But my brother, Hank, was very fond of cats. In fact, Hank was in to cats. He had one that had a...
1784 Views
1784 Views
Ruth remembers how she and her older brother, Joseph, would walk to Nibley Park, Salt Lake City Utah and fish in the lake at the golf course when she was about eight years old. Joseph was three years older.
1888 Views
1888 Views
It cut her head wide open and she went screaming to her house. When I saw all that blood, I ran into my house to hide
1523 Views
1523 Views
Streetcar: I can remember that as a young girl, we had the streetcars that went along in front of our house on Seventh East in Salt Lake City, Utah. There was one streetcar driver whose name was Bill. He was a friend of my father, and Daddy made arrangements for him...
944 Views
944 Views
This week's story prompt: Do you believe in miracles and if so, have you ever witnessed one? Describe-- brought to mind two different situations that I consider to be miracles. Miracle # 1: When I was a little girl we were living on Seventh East in Salt Lake City, Utah, and...
1610 Views
1610 Views
My second son, Lloyd was diagnosed with rheumatic fever and the doctor recommended that we move to a warmer, dryer climate for the winter. In November 1951, our family of four children (Goldie, Lloyd, Steve, and Janice) moved to Mesa, Arizona. One day, Lloyd came home from kidergarten crying his eyes...
1610 Views
1610 Views
As a young girl, I loved to visit my grandparents. I would ride my bicycle to their house. We lived on 7th East in Salt Lake City, Utah and they lived on Leland Avenue, about three or four blocks away. I remember that my grandfather [Folkert T. Folkers] often sat in...
2699 Views
2699 Views
Grandpa Folkers would sit hunched over in his rocking chair. He was quite a heavy man. He stood a head taller than grandma Folkers who was quite short. It was wintertime, and he was sitting in the chair. There was no heat in the bedroom, and the kitchen had the cookstove,...
1801 Views
1801 Views