THFHS News
Hubbell By Choice Wins Prestigious Literary Award
By Carol Hubbell Boggs
The Hubbell Family Historical Society is proud to announce that the book Hubbell By Choice: The Ancestry of Some Early Connecticut Women, (2008) co-authored by Mary Ann Hubbell and Marjorie Hubbell Gibson has won the prestigious Connecticut Society of Genealogists’ Literary Award “Grand Prize for Genealogy” for 2009. The prize will be awarded on May 16, 2009 at the CSG annual meeting at the Hawthorne Inn in Berlin, Connecticut.
Sadly, one of the principal authors, Marjorie Hubbell Gibson, passed away the morning word arrived that the book had been chosen, and never knew that the book had been selected for the award. Her daughters, Anne Gibson and Carol Gibson were informed only hours after her death, and have agreed to attend the meeting to accept the award on hers and the Society’s behalf, as she would have wished.
Begun in 2000, the project involved five Hubbell women descendants or spouses who felt strongly that the “distaff side” of the early Colonial families was given short shrift and their families were sometimes obscured by history and difficult for current day researchers to track. The five also included Bertie Herman in Texas, Barbara Kruse in Long Island, NY, and Carol Hubbell Boggs in North Carolina. Mary Ann and Marjorie lived in Utah and Cape Cod. They conferred at length via email, telephone, and personal visits for years, collecting data, photos, corrections, and permissions for publication of copyrighted material, editing, and discussing various methods of publishing.
During those years the usual life events occurred in each household, but some unusual ones happened as well. Bertie was twice driven from her home for a period of weeks for Hurricanes Rita and Gustav and she and her husband are still living in a FEMA trailer. When the team missed the original 2001 publication target date and 2003 came around Carol stepped aside to become president of the Society. Each year brought more information and more changes.
Because the book evolved over a number of years, the team was able to take advantage of the changes in the publishing industry and made the decision to use Print On Demand (POD) technology to hold down costs and inventory for the Society. Experienced authors might feel that ten years is not unusually long for such research, but for the five team members, it seemed forever, and was a valuable and enjoyable experience for all concerned. Originally there was talk of researching and writing one more generation, but that can be left to others now that the mold has been established. Visit the THFHS Store for directions to obtain your copy from Lulu.com.
The THFHS Board of Directors met in April
By Hilbert Hubble
The THFHS Board of Directors met in April 2008 to preview the 2009 reunion site in Mystic,
Connecticut. Since several of our early ancestors made their living on the sea, it is appropriate that we honor them at this reunion. Dates are 31 May to 4 June. More later.
Your Directors Will Meet in
Frankenmuth
By Carol Hubbell Boggs
The directors of The Hubbell Family Historical Society will meet this June 23rd
and 24th in Frankenmuth, MI, at the Bavarian Inn, site of the
25th Anniversary Reunion in 2007. They will
come together to review the work of all the committees over the past year since
the meeting in Albuquerque, and plan for the direction of the Society over the
upcoming year. Many important issues are on the table for their consideration,
not the least of which is how Hubbell Center will operate in the future.
The Technical Communications Committee (TechCom) has been researching the
digitization of records and will be making recommendations regarding the best
way for us to preserve and submit material to HC. Many records in our world
today are being converted to digital formats for the sake of storage space
economy, ease in transmission, and long term storage capability. Your Society is
doing its best to stay current so that the records you submit to HC will always
be there for you to view, either in person or even possibly on your computer
screen.
Our Trip to Vietnam,
Cambodia and Thailand
By
Barbara Kruse
Other than the heat in Thailand, it was a wonderful trip, led by Lutheran
minister John Krahn, that 29 of us took to Vietnam, Cambodia and Thailand. We
didn’t come across any Hubbell cousins, but one of our colleagues was John
Eichelberger of Ohio who had been in the 2nd battallion, 1st Marines, when he
spent 19 months in Vietnam. In Hanoi, once we got in the Embassy (it took time),
we met with and were impressed by two of the Marines stationed there. They were
indeed a credit to the Corps and to our country.
There was much to see in Hanoi– Ho Chi Mausoleum, the Pillar Pagoda, Temple of
Literature, historic old quarter, the pottery village of Bat Trang, the Water
Puppet show, and so much more. The traffic with all of the motor bikes weaving
in and out and cutting in front of each other was something else. None of the
bikes, cars or busses gives an inch at the rotaries– just keep edging in, and
lots of horn blowing. Of course, rice paddies are everywhere.
We
continued to Halong Bay, Hue and Hoi An, and visited the Cham museum, China
Beach and Marble Mountain before going to Saigon. It was very emotional seeing
the remnants of the Vietnam War and the Cu Chi tunnels. At Mekong Delta, we took
a boat trip along narrow canals, passing rice fields and lush orchards.
In
Siem Reap, Cambodia, we saw the incredible temples of Angkor Wat and Angkor Thom
as well as the “Jewel of the Jungle”– ruins of an 800 year old temple with
tremendous 300 year old spund trees growing among the ruins. A boat trip took us
to see the fascinating floating village before leaving for Bangkok. There we saw
fantastic temples with so much gold, gems and marble– taking off our shoes
before entering each one. Before leaving Bangkok, we found time to visit the
Embassy and meet two more young Marines and purchase Marine polo shirts.
Then we had to fly to Seoul, South Korea before flying home and two things we
learned: we didn’t have to change our watches for there was a 12-hour time
difference, and you want to get to the airports early, before the Koreans get
there. When a Korean takes a trip, it’s not unusual for as many as 50 friends
and relatives to go along to see that person off– and lots of Koreans are
flying, and they are all crying. They rub tiger balm on their cheeks, under the
eyes, to make it easier to cry. Oh yes, the Korean Airlines serve excellent
food, putting the American airlines to shame.
It
was a wonderful trip but it’s so good to be back home.
Barbara Currier Kruse is a Contributing Member of THFHS.
“Carrie’s
Quilt” Found in NC
By Carol Hubbell Boggs
In
September 2005, I retrieved a message from the answering machine that was to
lead me to a Hubbell connection far away in Indiana. The caller, Linda Browner,
lived in nearby Carrboro, NC, but didn’t know me, but when she decided to try
once more to find the origin of a friendship quilt she had purchased in the
1970s, she mentioned some of the names on the quilt to a friend of hers. He
happened to be a member of the Durham-Orange Genealogical Society, and directed
her to me to learn about Carrie Hubbell, whose name was prominent on the quilt.
Her phone call was particularly intriguing, because of my interest in the
Hubbell Wives, so I went to the computer to locate Carrie through census records
in Lewis Township, Clay County, Indiana. It did not take long to find nearly all
the women whose names were on the quilt, and I contacted Hilbert Hubble to ask
which of our Hubbell men was likely to be Carrie’s husband. He said he thought
he was A&R 9605, Roy L. Hubbell, an Indiana coal miner.
Linda
was astonished at my success, and explained she had purchased the quilt in an
antique shop in Kentucky while on a camping trip there, and was taken by the
charm of it and the fact that it contained a piece of history. In the center one
of the blocks contained the words, “Community Flower Club September 21 1933”.
The antique store owner told her she thought it was probably a local quilt, or
might have been from nearby Ohio, so for years Linda had tried off and on to
locate possible quilters in Ohio without success. In 2005 she decided it was
time to finally place the quilt in the hands of the descendants of the stitchers.
She had asked various people about several of the names on the quilt, and one
had even used the Internet to try to locate the stitchers, but Linda had not
mentioned the name Hubbell and so had no luck.
Now
that she had a location she called the Clay County (Indiana) Genealogical
Society and explained her quest to the volunteer working there that day who was
Lila Stienstra, the grand-daughter of two of the stitchers, and
great-grand-daughter of a third. She immediately said she knew of the quilt and
the women whose names it bore. She said, “Gramma let me go to some of their
meetings. They would have a short meeting, then quilt for a couple hours, then
have refreshments. They met at each others homes.” She was very touched and
happy to hear of the quilt’s survival.
Lila said she had known of a contemporary Iva Hubbell [possibly wife of 12066
Ray Hubbell, ed.], but most of the families mentioned were no longer in the
region. Soon she will have the familiar quilt in her hands, all because Carrie
Hubbell signed her name, never suspecting how important it would become in the
search for the home of a special Depression quilt.
Please visit the Clay County Genealogical Society online at
http://www.ccgsilib.org/
Hubble Space Telescope:
The Future of Hubble and
Astronomical Observation and Discovery
March 07, 2006
–
Williamstown, Mass. – Steven Beckwith, former director of the Space
Telescope Science Institute (STSI), will discuss saving the Hubble Space
Telescope. The talk will take place on Thursday March 9, at 8 p.m. in
Brooks-Rogers Recital Hall on the Williams College campus.
The Hubble Space Telescope is one of the most successful astronomical
research endeavors in the history of astronomy. The telescope has
provided quintessential evidence for the Big Bang, given astronomers a
look at early formations of our galaxy and the universe, and helped lead
to the discovery of hundreds of planets.
Recent technical problems with the Hubble and lingering safety issues
with the manned spaceflight program have prompted NASA to strongly
suggest that the telescope no longer be serviced and simply guided into
the ocean when it dies, most likely sometime in 2008. The James Webb
Telescope and other future projects would fill the role of Hubble.
Beckwith, who worked to engineer several possible maintenance missions
to Hubble will discuss why we should continue to support the Hubble
project in addition to new telescopes. He has advocated and engineered a
robotic maintenance system that could be implemented to service the
Hubble safely and efficiently. Such maintenance, which includes the
robotic addition of new instruments, would extend the life of the
telescope for another four to six years.
Beckwith served as director of STSI for six years before leaving in
September of 2005. He has also served as director of the Max Planck
Institut fuer Astronomie (MPIA) and taught astronomy for 13 years at
Cornell.
He received his B.S. in engineering physics from Cornell University in
1973. In 1978, he received his Ph.D. in physics from the California
Institute of Technology.
Off-site links:
HubbleSite
Main NASA
Hubble Page
Astronomy
Resources at Space Telescope Science Institute
Hubble Finds “Tenth Planet” Slightly Larger
Than Pluto
For the first time, NASA's Hubble Space Telescope has seen distinctly the "tenth
planet," currently nicknamed "Xena," and found that it's only slightly larger
than Pluto.
Though previous ground-based observations suggested that Xena's diameter was
about 30 percent greater than Pluto, Hubble observations taken Dec. 9 and 10,
2005, showed Xena's diameter as 1,490 miles (with an uncertainty of 60 miles).
Pluto's diameter, as measured by Hubble, is 1,422 miles.
"Hubble
is the only telescope capable of getting a clean visible-light measurement of
the actual diameter of Xena," said Mike Brown, planetary scientist at the
California Institute of Technology in Pasadena, Calif. Brown's research team
discovered Xena, officially cataloged as 2003 UB313, and its results have been
accepted for publication in the Astrophysical Journal.
Only a handful of images were required to determine Xena's diameter. Located 10
billion miles from Earth with a diameter a little more than half the width of
the United States, the object is 1.5 pixels across in Hubble's view. That's
enough to make a precise size measurement.
Because Xena is smaller than previously thought, but comparatively bright, it
must be one of the most reflective objects in the solar system. The only object
more reflective is Enceladus, a geologically active moon of Saturn whose surface
is continuously recoated with highly reflective ice by active geysers.
Xena's bright reflectivity is possibly due to fresh methane frost on its
surface. The object may have had an atmosphere when it was closer to the sun,
but as it moved to its current location farther away this atmosphere would have
"frozen out," settling on the surface as frost.
Another possibility is that Xena leaks methane gas continuously from its warmer
interior. When this methane reaches the cold surface, it immediately freezes
solid, covering craters and other features to make it uniformly bright to
Hubble's telescopic eye.
Xena takes about 560 years to orbit the sun, and it is now very close to
aphelion (the point on its orbit that is farthest from the sun). Brown next
plans to use Hubble and other telescopes to study other recently discovered
Kuiper Belt objects that are almost as large as Pluto and Xena. The Kuiper Belt
is a vast ring of primordial icy comets and larger bodies encircling Neptune's
orbit.
Finding that the largest known Kuiper Belt object is a virtual twin to Pluto may
only further complicate the debate about whether to categorize the large icy
worlds that populate the belt as planets. If Pluto were considered to be the
minimum size for a planet, then Xena would fulfill this criterion, too. In time,
the International Astronomical Union will designate the official name.
Source:
http://www.nasa.gov/mission_pages/hubble/hst_xena_20060410.html
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