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I just love history

~ Local and Family History

I just love history

Tag Archives: Family History

Why is February 14 so important?

11 Tuesday Feb 2020

Posted by Susie Zada in #FHDU, Events, Family History, Important news

≈ Leave a comment

Tags

#FHDU, DNA, Family History, Genealogy, Research, Sunshine Coast, Valentine's Day

If you answered – “It’s Valentine’s Day” – you’re WRONG.  There is something much more important AND better than a bunch of roses for Valentine’s Day.

What is it I hear you ask?

It’s the LAST DAY you can get a massive $200 discount off the full price for FHDU – Family History Down Under – 22-26 March 2021, Sunshine Coast, Queensland.

Are you going to be boring and follow the pack?  Buy a dozen red roses that will be dead within a week and forgotten within 2?

Buy your Valentine a ticket to:

Family History Down Under
22-26 March 2021
Sunshine Coast, Queensland

The excitement and anticipation will grow from this Valentine’s Day until next year’s Valentine’s Day when your sweetheart will have to start thinking about packing.

And it will last a LIFETIME – your Valentine will learn so much that it will be part of the rest of their lives researching both of your families.

Even better – it’s an event you can both enjoy – lots do to for partners but even better if shared between both of you, you will learn twice as much.  Amazing overseas speakers, massive exhibition – the benefits are endless.

BUY TWO TICKETS

BOOK NOW!!
HUGE DISCOUNTS END
FEBRUARY 14, 2020

DNA – the perfect ‘marriage’? #DNADU #DNADOWNUNDER

15 Thursday Aug 2019

Posted by Susie Zada in #DNADU, DNA, Events, Family History

≈ 2 Comments

Tags

DNA, DNA Down Under, Family History

This blog has nothing to do with MY DNA but it’s definitely part of the DNA fever that is flying across Australia at the moment – I’m talking about the DNA Down Under roadshow.  Blaine Bettinger, Louise Coakley, the Unlock the Past crew and a cast too huge to mention have just left Brisbane after a hugely successful DNA day and by now should have landed in Perth.

They’ll then be heading to Adelaide, followed by Melbourne where I get to join the crew, and on to Canberra and Sydney.

So what is the ‘Perfect Marriage’???  The image tells part of the story – it’s nothing to do with me but I can give myself permission to use my name and my photo! – but it’s definitely to do with DNA and MyHeritage.

This morning I had just finished at gym when I got a phone call from a really good mate – Jan in Yarrawonga – who had just got a new DNA match for her hubby.  Jan is family history from the top of her head to her toes – and those who know Jan know that is a long way!  Jan is the current President of the Yarrawonga Family History Group and VAFHO and former / current (?) President of the Cobram Genealogical Group.

And guess who the DNA match was with?  Louise Coakley – the DNA guru of Australia and New Zealand – currently on tour with Blaine Bettinger for the DNA Down Under Roadshow.

So combine one devoted family history researcher with one DNA guru and THAT’s what I call the PERFECT MARRIAGE in Family History!

Blowing up the Milo tin !

12 Tuesday Dec 2017

Posted by Susie Zada in Events, My Family, Personal History

≈ 5 Comments

Tags

Drumsticks, Family History, Games, Peters Ice Cream

What?  What has that got to do with history?  Well a lot more than you think but you’ll have to be patient.  I have to set the scene, explain the background, then we’ll get to the blowing up bit.  The big problem is where to start.

I think it has to start with my darling late Dad.  He would have been 95 tomorrow – 13th December 2017.  I think about my Dad often – and ‘chat’ to him regularly.  He died far too young – back in 1989 – but in my mind he is as alive today as way back when those Milo tins were getting blown up.

But I digress – a bad habit I have.

My brother and I had a totally decadent upbringing – Dad was Production Manager of Peter’s Ice Cream and we were the official taste testers of EVERYTHING that came out of that factory.  There’s a special photo of Fussy and me in an earlier blog.  Fussy is my brother – two years older – and he was called Fussy because our surname was Fussen (French) but as a little tacker I couldn’t say ‘Graham’ – Fussy was MUCH easier to say!  And more than 60 years later he’s still called Fussy!  And of course he answers to it.

See – I said I have a bad habit of digressing!  Back to Peter’s Ice Cream.  That’s the factory in Adelaide although Dad started at Peter’s in Taree, then Grafton before the family moved to Adelaide.

The two-storey part at the front was Dad’s floor – his office, laboratory, cool room, and a view and access to the factory floor below.

Getting back to that decadent upbringing – Fussy and I would get home from school, grab our homework and run around to the factory and upstairs to Dad’s area.  What new exciting concoction had Dad created that he needed an honest opinion on?

Of course the BIG one was the Drumstick – yes, our Dad created Drumsticks.  And lemonade ice blocks and all sorts of other things.  Every kid’s fantasy!  And of course the workers at the factory also believed in spoiling the boss’s kids.  Can you image a birthday party when a team of men jogged around from the factory with a special ice cream cake for me.  Remember the little plastic dolls with a fancy ice cream skirt?  Well, the reason for the special trip from the factory – that doll was bigger than ME – I think it was my sixth birthday.

There I go – digressing again.  Drumsticks – some years ago I met my brother in Mount Gambier.  He lived in Adelaide, and still does, and I was living in Ocean Grove at the time – Mount Gambier was about half way and he was there at a Rotary Conference.  He stayed on so we could have a bit of time together.  We went down to Port Macdonnell doing the tourist bit.  We remembered we had been there on a holiday with Mum and Dad when we were quite young.  We were about to walk out on the very long jetty when Fussy yelled … WAIT!  Why?  He ran across the road and bought two drumsticks – we couldn’t reminisce about Dad without having a Drumstick!

In the early 60s we moved from the house around the corner from the factory to the house that Dad built – and he really did build most of it.  He hired the tradesmen and worked side-by-side with them every weekend until we were able to move into our first ‘real’ home in Adelaide.

OK – I’m getting to the Milo tin but this is an important part of it.  It was a two-storey house – my bedroom was the dormer window on the left and Fussy was in the one on the right.  We had our ‘wardrobes’ in the eaves of the roof and for two little tackers it was so easy to crawl from one room to the other via the built-in-wardrobes.  We rigged up a string on hooks just inside each cupboard door and attached a small cardboard letter box which we could send to and fro simply by pulling the right string.  And of course we rigged up a small bell to signal when there was mail.  Just like on your computer these days – You’ve got mail!

Back then there weren’t as many obstacles in the front yard and there was no roller door blocking the driveway – it was important to be able to run quickly from the back yard to the front yard.  YES – this is ALL relevant!

Although we’d moved further away from the factory we were still regular visitors to the tasting laboratory a number of times each week.  Dad was also the ‘ice-cream’ man for our school fetes.  He would pack up the big green canvas bags with the obligatory dry ice in the bottom.  The walls of the green bags were a good four inches thick – heavy insulation.  On top of the dry ice was a thick wad of newspaper, then the bag was chock-a-block full of Dixie Cups (ice-creams) to be sold at the school fetes.  Dad had a trailer that was loaded up at the factory with a number of canvas bags that he would then deliver to the schools.  He’d also collect the bags to go back to the factory and sometimes there were a number at home in the carport or on the back verandah.  The ice cream was all gone but that dry-ice lasted forever.

OK – I’M GETTING THERE!

Because we spent so much time roaming around the factory, in and out of the freezer rooms, and helping Dad load up the big green canvas bags, it was essential that we were taught about the dangers of dry-ice and how to handle it without burning the skin off our fingers.

OK – ARE YOU READY?  Back in the 60s we didn’t have computers and the electronic games etc that are so prevalent today.  We made our own fun and games and unless it was bucketting down we spent weekends outside.  The neighbourhood kids gathered at our place because we had the best game – and their parents were happy – as long as they could hear the explosions they knew where their kids were!

Of course these days we wouldn’t be able to blow up Milo tins – for LOTS of reasons including:

  • We wouldn’t be able to get hold of dry-ice
  • Milo tins aren’t real tins any more – they’re foil lined cardboard or thin tin – not nearly sturdy enough for our needs
  • Our game would be deemed too dangerous – no-one EVER got hurt!

It was SO MUCH FUN and we got HEAPS OF EXERCISE.

This is how the game worked.  Only Fussy and I could set up the ‘bomb’ as we were trainined in the use of dry-ice.  We knew exactly how much water to put in the milo tin and exactly what size piece of dry-ice.  We pounded the lid on so that only a really good explosion would blow it off.  We also had a little mound of sand to tilt the Milo tin at the right angle.  This was all done in the back yard so all the kids in the front yard couldn’t see what we were doing.

Then we ran like blazes to the front yard (with no roller door blocking our path), and then we waited, and waited, and waited, and then BANG.  That’s why it wouldn’t work these days – the Milo tin was STRONG so that only the lid blew off and the tin stayed intact.  The lid went flying up in the air, OVER the two-storey house, and into the waiting arms of the excited mob of kids in the front yard.  The winner was the one who caught or grabbed the lid first.  Lots of cheering and shouting.  And then we did it all over again … and AGAIN, and AGAIN, and AGAIN.

We never tired of blowing up that old Milo tin.  We sometimes stopped for lunch – a picnic lunch that Mum or one of the other mothers supplied – then it was back to blowing up the Milo tin.  All the other kids understood that you needed special training to set up the ‘bomb’.  There were never arguments about it, just the excitement of waiting to see the lid come flying over the roof of the house.

By the end of the day we were exhausted but happy and safe.  The explosions stopped and the other Mum’s knew their little darlings were on their way home.

Now do you understand why Dad’s birthday tomorrow reminded me of blowing up Milo tins?  Oh, and of course tomorrow I will be eating a Drumstick and ‘chatting’ with Dad.  And YES – this is all important history that should be recorded.  These days I have diabetes but one of the first things I worked through with my Diabetes Educator was how I could eat an occasional Drumstick without causing havoc with my blood sugar levels.

It’s a bit like making a toast with Champagne or Whiskey – in our family we make a toast with Drumsticks!

Happy Birthday Dad – love you lots.

VAFHO 2015 Expo

01 Tuesday Sep 2015

Posted by Susie Zada in Events, VAFHO

≈ 2 Comments

Tags

Expo, Family History, Seymour, VAFHO

VAFHOThis is shaping up to be a great expo and SO CONVENIENT to get to.  I’ve already checked out V-Line timetables and I have a couple of options for getting to Seymour in the morning from my nearest station at South Geelong.

All the details are in the Expo Flyer but a quick summary:

  • WHEN: Saturday 17th October, 2025 – 10.00 a.m. till 4.00 p.m.
  • WHERE: Seymour Club, 1 Elizabeth Street, Seymour – 5 minutes walk from the Railway Station and the main street
  • HOW MUCH: $15.00 per person – exhibitor or General Public
  • DISPLAYS & TRADING TABLES: Heaps – see the flyer
  • GUEST SPEAKERS: Neil Smith (Military History); VicGUM; Ben Mercer (Ancestry)
  • SPONSORS: Archival Access; Ancestry; Findmypast – don’t miss out on some great prizes

BONUS: If your other half isn’t into Family History – the TASTES OF THE GOULBURN is happening that weekend.  Wine-tasting and food stalls in the main street – yep, just 5 minutes walk from the VAFHO Expo and only 1 minute from the Railway Station!  You could literally pick them up on your way home back to the Railway Station.

ENQUIRIES: email Jan Parker

TIP: Use your Seniors travel option!

Why it’s Susie and not Suzie

12 Sunday Jul 2015

Posted by Susie Zada in Personal History

≈ 4 Comments

Tags

Baby names, Coles Funny Picture Book, Family History

Susie and FussyMore people spell my first name wrong than get it right! I can understand that because I generally sign off my emails as ‘Susie Z’ and of course my surname starts with a ‘Z’ [Zada] so people have ‘Z’ in their mind.  I’m a forgiving person and as my adored Grandpa used to say … “as long as they don’t call us late for dinner”.

But people spelt it with a Z in the 20 years before I acquired that name by marriage so the ‘Z’ in the surname might be an excuse but not the reason.

I thought if I explained HOW I got the ‘S’ and not the ‘Z’ in my first name might help people understand.

It all began way back in 1944 when my Mum’s baby sister was born.  Jan [Janette] caused quite a stir in the family because there was 20 years between Jan and Mum – in other words she wasn’t quite expected.  Subsequently things happened a little differently.  No name had been planned for the new baby so Mum and her older brother were given the task.  How did they choose it?  From the list of girls names in Cole’s Funny Picture Book.  Blindfolded and armed with a pin – it landed on Janette – and Jan cursed them throughout their lives as she wasn’t at all keen on her name!

Coles Funny Picture BookFast forward to 1950 when my older brother was born – out came the Cole’s Funny Picture Book!  Mum & Dad agreed that if it was a boy Dad’s pin would be the first name and Mum’s the second name.  And if it was a girl it was reversed.  So that’s how Graham John and Susanne Marie came about – well their names at least!  Oh – they’re the cute pair at the top of this blog!

Sadly we don’t have the book anymore and I have no idea which edition / number it was – there were many editions published over the years.

As an avid family historian I was devastated to learn that I wasn’t named after any of my ancestors – that was until I did a lot more research!  My Mum’s maiden name was NIALL and here’s what I’ve found for the oldest girl in four generations:

  • Susanne NIALL born c.1728
  • Susanna Maria NIALL born 10 Sep 1752
  • Susanna NIALL born 13 Oct 1780
  • Susan NIALL born 12 Apr 1812

My Family Tree and my Ancestor Arrivals Web site and Blog

So who was really guiding Mum’s pin?

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Recent Posts

  • More VIC Wills and Probates online! September 18, 2020
  • Beyond 2022 – Irish research July 5, 2020
  • Catch up with Else Churchill and Alec Tritton at Beyond BMDs March 4, 2020
  • Guess what we’ll all be doing in March 2020? February 28, 2020
  • Why is February 14 so important? February 11, 2020

Upcoming Events

  • GFHG Meeting March 31, 2021 at 7:30 pm – 9:30 pm Belmont Library, 163 High St, Geelong VIC 3216, Australia Speaker: Topic:
  • VAFHO Expo - Yarrawonga May 15, 2021 at 10:00 am – 4:00 pm Yarrawonga Shire Hall, 100 Belmore St, Yarrawonga VIC 3730, Australia
  • GDHA Meeting May 15, 2021 at 10:00 am – 1:00 pm Winchelsea & District Historical Society Geelong and District Historical Association quarterly meeting
  • GMA Talk June 27, 2021 at 2:00 pm – 4:00 pm National Wool Museum, 26 Moorabool St, Geelong VIC 3220, Australia Geelong Hospital and Benevolent Asylum: an absolute treasure trove of records for Family History research . Speaker: Susie Zada
  • GDHA Meeting August 21, 2021 at 10:00 am – 1:00 pm Geelong Family History Group, Belmont Library, High Street, Belmont Geelong and District Historical Association quarterly meeting
  • GDHA Meeting November 20, 2021 at 10:00 am – 1:00 pm Apollo Bay & District Historical Society Geelong and District Historical Association quarterly meeting
  • GFHG Meeting January 19, 2022 at 7:30 pm – 9:30 pm Belmont Library, 163 High St, Geelong VIC 3216, Australia Speaker: Topic:

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  • More VIC Wills and Probates online!
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  • Guess what we’ll all be doing in March 2020?
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