"My Family" PHOTO ALBUM
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I am a part of a very large maternal family from Maryland's Eastern Shore. Both sets of my family are mostly from the Deep South ... such as the Carolinas (North and South). I thank God, every day, for the parents he gave me--even if they were mid teens. My father is older than my mother.
 
Former Marriage Years: My then-husband, and four biological kids. High-school couple and 16 yrs. of marriage relationship. In Aug. 2005, I, a home-schooling mom/teacher college student/gov. employee, was given 15 min. to leave my kids and him for the local societal-experience script. The social norm and economy WAS to disconnect the kids from their parents until I interrupted the pattern. All the while what I didn't know the social norms, God is awesome, I was in college absorbing all the knowledge that I could gather to open this business and to work with my local employer (hired someone else to replace me ... a woman). -The Script in My Box: A Journal of Forgiveness.
 
Who are these four? My kids. Keeping them together, respecting each other, was challenging. We did it; now they're young adults. They call me Mom.
 
Oldest daughter (Lanene)
 
Middle daughter (Je'Lynn)
 
Youngest daughter (Aliza)
 
My first grandbaby born in 2024. Oh, Boy!!!
 
This is my for-real mom. She is a cook, and a former hairdresser.
 
Baby Me
 
Me Again
 
 
Me, again. It was unpopular for children to style their eyebrows when I was growing up. It was thought that if styled too early, brow hairs wouldn't grow back.
 
This is my multiracial American maternal grandmother (5/8/1939 - 10/1/2016): British ancestry.
 
Many in the community called her Aunt Nora or 'Momma Nora.' The 2nd youngest daughter (8 girls including two deceased several months after childbirth and 7 boys) of my great grandparents. During her teen years, her black-Indian hair was so long she would sit on it. This is the hairstyle/length that I've always known her to have. She said "her long or medium-sized hair length felt too heavy around her neck (sweat) and false teeth". She was a consistent United Methodist church member for over 65 years, a former wife of a preacher's kid for a short time. She often told her off-springs to think; It's okay to be a faith believer with its rituals, use the sciences and nature in your being, too. So many jobs she worked, including State of Maryland Health Dept. for many years until retirement. She was not my for-real mom, but my grandmother. I called her Mom.
 
This is my step-grandfather & custodial father (3/11/1932 - 4/21/2019). His real name is William. Many people in our community, including his mom, called him 'Uncle Joe.' He was a veteran of the Army, and a former long-standing line supervisor at Campbell Soup Company. He loved tending to his vegetable garden, eating fried fish that he would scale himself or pig hock, listening to the southern oldies, and watching the old sitcoms on TV. He loved baseball (local game or Baltimore Orioles). He was a tall man w. big strong hands and feet (size 13/14). He was multiracial and a Native American of Color, too, like my grandmother. Others called him Uncle Joe, I called him Pop (Pop-Pop).
 
My published memoir. (2012).
 
These are the generations from my multiracial maternal grandmother's work. She is wearing the green shirt. Just some of my immediate family. I have four siblings on my maternal (mother's) side and three siblings on my paternal (father's) side. Of all, I am still the oldest!
 
Immediately after my 15-year-old mom gave birth to me, in 1971, I went to live here in my custodial father's home. Queen Anne's County, MD.
 
This is the home presently (2020). It's a wide home, over 900 sq. ft. Ewingville, MD.
 
After my for-real mom had me, age 16/17, she rented this home for a few years. Kent County, MD.
 
Former Family Church, Aaron Chapel (United Methodist Church). Between Edesville and City of Rock Hall, Maryland
 
My Youth Church Choir Robe
 
My Great Grandparents' Wedding Anniversary: From this union came 15 children. Pa Pa (Oscar) 4/8/1899 - 9/22/1989; Grandma (Ethel) 11/1/1900 - 9/20/2004.
 
My [Maternal] Great Grandfather (Native American, white British heritage, and maybe African American). His grandmother was of biracial identity.
 
My maternal great-grandfather who was a fisherman entrepreneur became blind later in life. He was never able to physically see his great-grandchildren. Of all of the family, outside of his wife, I spent the most quality time with him during his later years (my childhood years).
 
Ethel (Rochester) Hicks. My great-grandmother worked hospitality jobs. Her paternal family was originally from the Rock Hall or Kent County, MD area (Piney Neck for People of Color), over 100 years.
 
My maternal family's foundation: My great grandmother's 96th birthday. What makes my family so unique is that:1) everyone worked, 2) most were very healthy and lived long lives, and 3) each had land deeds and home structures including their kids. They lived in their house just as long as their marriages. We all have different skin tones, as part of America's mixed-race/multiracial group.
 
I am my maternal family's public PR for the more recent history of the estate of Ethel Hicks and Oscar Hicks. Copyright of all local documentaries, stories, and other entertainment of the large Hicks family set must be approved by written request.
 
 
My paternal grandmothers (left - great grandmother; right - grandmother w/ her style of an afro. Smiles.)
 
The Hicks House was purchased in the late 1930s, I believe. Originally, it was a country store owned by a white couple. The original community was a group of people-of-color homeowners. I lived here while in my mother's womb, and enjoyed visiting/care taking as a child and power-of-attorney assistant. After my great-grandmother's death, I was the last to live in the family home before being sold (two years).
 
6498 Rock Hall Road, Rock Hall, MD: This home was once a country store for neighbors before it was our family home; over 100 years old. In the back, near the small white building, was orginally a big 2-story barn where my great-grandfather stored his handyman tools, and farm animals. The land extended and other family members owned and lived nearby, as neighbors who were people of color. Edesville, Kent County, MD.
 
This side of the home probably seems basic to you, but this is where we had our large, outdoor, family reunions. During reunions/gatherings, we held hands and prayed together and for each other, and for our neighbors' concerns. Also, on that lawn were public faithbased picnic gatherings for people of color. The yard was also known as the Community's Black Yard for the neighborhood's school children (after school and weekends). Beside this home, used to be the community's all-black schoolhouse.
 
This picture of the remolded version of the home was taken before official homeownership takeover. This is one of many historic home structures located in Kent County Maryland.