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Christmas, my favorite time of the year, was approaching quickly. This year I had many blessings I was grateful for; my life, my family and friends. The fire brought a new appreciation for God's blessings and strengthened the bonds I shared with my family and friends.
Aaron and Justin continued their steady and skillful work on the house. This week they framed the second floor and started to sheet the exterior walls.
A birds-eye view from the western ridge behind my new home and looking towards the north |
Burnt trees frame the west wall of Phoenix Villa and Emigrant Peak |
As a small boy my parents took my five brothers and I to the First Baptist church in the center of Branford, Connecticut. Rain, snow or with a warm sun shining we walked a mile to church every Sunday just like my Mom did when she was a child. My brothers and I attended Sunday School where we read stories from the Old and New Testaments. Then we met my Dad, and sat with him in the balcony, while the minister preached his sermon and my Mom sang in the choir. I especially remembered Christmas services because we sang many lovely hymns.
From the first moment I passed under the entryway arch, and set foot inside the Livingston Congregational Church, I felt comfortable and relaxed like I did as a child in the First Baptist Church. Warm, early spring sunlight streamed through the beautiful stained glass windows. A soft, red carpet quieted parishioners's footsteps. A high, vaulted ceiling, reached towards the heavens. I felt comfortable and calm.
Today the church was decorated with pine boughs and Christmas flowers. Pastor Durgan delivered a wonderful sermon about the true meaning of Christmas. We rose and sang hymns together. We prayed together and gave thanks to God for the blessings in our lives and asked Him to help others in need. As always, I felt refreshed and renewed, when the service was over and I passed under the entryway arch again.
Stained glass windows inside the Livingston Congregational Church |
Della Tucker |
I flew east to visit my family in Branford, Connecticut for Christmas. It felt wonderful to be back home in the town I grew up in. As a child I often visited the Blackstone Memorial Library. Like the First Baptist Church, I felt comfortable, secure and happy inside this beautiful building. The wide and easy to ascend front stairs provided a warm welcome to all who passed by. Inside, the sun's rays streamed through a high Roman dome and transparent oculus into the open rotunda. The entire library and most of the trim was carved from pink, white and grey, Tennessee marble. Huge, ten foot tall and five foot wide windows, flooded the massive reading room with natural light while the two foot thick walls silenced all outside sounds.
Library reading room with green marble, Ionic columns |
The rotunda dome and transparent oculus |
A new garage rises from the devastated and charred landscape |
A crane gently lifts house trusses into place |
Nick Schnabel of Simkins-Hallin Lumber Company created the trusses for the house and garage. In his words "It was one of the most challenging roofs I ever designed". Today he drove from Bozeman to make sure that his complex creation was assembled as designed.
Keith stayed on the ground and carefully guided each truss into place with a long rope as the crane operator lowered it to the second floor studs. Aaron and Justin, who seem to have no fear of heights, clambered over the six inch wall tops and meticulously secured each truss in place. Nick carefully checked each truss for proper orientation and placement. As the day wore on a giant jig-saw puzzle was perfectly assembled over my new home by a skilled team of artisans.
The sheeted trusses will support over 30,000 pounds of roofing tile and up to 200,000 pounds of deep snow. It will take more than a small blizzard to damage this roof.
Keith steadily guides each truss from the ground via a long cable |
Nick, Justin and Aaron carefully position and secure each truss |
Family traditions connect us to the past and help to guide us into the future. Every year between Thanksgiving and Christmas my Mom and one of my brothers visits the graves of our family members that have passed on. We bring them a beautiful evergreen grave blanket, wreath or potted ornamental plant and place it by their headstone. Then we say a prayer and linger by their grave while we reminisce about the happy times we once shared. Although some of our loved ones are no longer physically with us, they are in spirit. I like to think, that they are smiling down from heaven when they see us placing a gift of remembrance, on their grave.
We placed two grave blankets on my grandmother, great grandmother, great aunt and great uncle's grave |
A warm and bright grave blanket adorns my dad's final resting place |
Since 1943 my Mom opened her presents in the living room of her house on Main street in Branford, Connecticut. Now all her children are grown, so the tradition is a little quieter, but it still continues. Children and cats were always an important part of my Mom's life. Smokey, a grey striped tabby, rests comfortably on the table behind my Mom while two other cats play with the crunched and discarded wrapping paper on the floor. In the afternoon we visited my brother Tom and his family in Branford, opened more presents and ate a delicious Christmas dinner. Everyone had a wonderful time.
Thomas and Brianna Brockett with Great Grandma Brockett |
Grandpa Tom Brockett makes scary faces for Brianna |
Tom and Carol's house and tree were beautifully decorated |
Tim reads a book he received for Christmas |
Brianna Brockett celebrates her fifth Christmas |
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Page 12 Blueprints (plans) and elevations |
Tim's Life Main Table of Contents |
Branford Bike Fire Story Table of Contents |
Page 14 A pediment and roof arise |
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