Week 11: Lucky

In loving memory of Maria Helena Schneider Bastos Vieira

(21 May 1925 – 1 Jun 2023)

Originally published 15 Mar 2023.

Bingo!

My maternal grandmother Maria Helena ´is typically the one to shout it out first. Now aged 97, she has not been attending any social functions anymore, but she used to be active in many organizations such as my hometown’s Lions Club and several church groups, one of which promotes a great yearly bazaar where expertly crocheted doilies and table runners are sold, all proceeds to help people in need in the local community.

Grandma has been an organizer in several of these initiatives, and I grew up watching her embroider and crochet beautiful pieces. She taught me to make a basic chain stitch, but I sorely lack any skills for needlepoint work. She used to have a closet where she would collect, organize and price tag the handiwork of several of her group’s volunteers, each piece carefully ironed and starched, so they would make a good display at the bazaar. Not many went unsold, and those leftovers she would buy herself. They were highly coveted as Christmas presents for me and others in the family, and they are today treasured items in my home. You can never have enough kitchen towels with crocheted borders!

The house where she lives also has a couple of other nooks where other interesting items are stored: the many prizes she won on raffles and bingo games throughout her life. Silverware, porcelain tea sets, serving trays and dining table accents, she won several sets of housewares, to the point that some of her friends would playfully “withdraw” from the game whenever she went in. No cheating, no hijinks, Grandma is just very lucky. I don’t know if she has ever played the lottery, but since she is no millionaire, I would assume she hasn’t. There’s still time!

Grandma, or Vovó Lena as we call her, was born in Vitória on 21 May 1925, the firstborn child of Godofredo Schneider and Noêmia Travassos Serrano. At that time, her father was a public defender in Benevente, modern-day Anchieta, Esp´írito Santo, but the children were born in the state capital. In 1929, the family would move to Vila Velha, to be near Godofredo’s parents, on the place that is dearest to me, Inhoá, named for the rock upon which my father’s family home was built and where they have lived for over a century, starting with Bernardo Schneider and Maria Luiza Furtado (Aiquinha), my grandmother’s paternal grandparents.

Circa 1927

My grandparents Maria Helena and Rinaldo got married on 14 Dec 1946, my father Rinaldo arrived nine months later, followed by my late uncle Orlando, who was my godfather, in 1949. My grandfather worked at a bank and the family moved to Santa Tereza, in my home state, then to Jaboticabal in São Paulo, where my aunt Ligia was born, the third child. They would be back to Vila Velha when grandma was expecting my youngest uncle, João. The house where she still lives was under construction, finished sometime around 1956, and she never moved again.

Grandma and me, just a turn of the clock ago, in 1973

Vovó was a very active woman, intellectually and physically, and even as an almost-centenarian she still remembers entire poems, songs, historical facts and general trivia. She used to swim in the ocean and go horseback riding, she could write beautifully, speak eloquently in public, she could sew, she learned Orpheonic singing in school and up until not too long ago could hit impressive notes.

As another way to keep her mind sharp, she loved making lists of all kinds. Next to the recliner in front of the TV, where she also did her needlework, there was a small notepad. In my young years, spending a lot of time with her in that now empty den (she can’t use stairs anymore), she would have her aha moments and ask “let’s remember surnames that are also plant names”, or animal names, or songs named after women. Anything would do, she would jot down anything we came up with, the lists would go on for months. This is all from a pre-Google era, and after the world became a big digital beehive we still could not, or should not, pull out the cell phone to cheat. The same goes for anytime she is trying to remember anything, a movie or song title. The only search engine allowed is your brain, and she would likely beat you to it.

My grandparents’ house was my playground as a kid. The house sits on a pristine plot with native woods and a diverse fauna. I used to spend weekends there on sleepovers, hang out with her, go on walks after dinner to help with digestion as she would say, and on Sunday we would attend Mass together. Sometimes, during the rainy season when we have spectacular thunderstorms, the power would go out. Grandma would light a candle, and we would talk as the wind blew and made the wooden shutters moan and creak. I was a scared kid, but she would let me sleep either next to her, or in the bedroom right across the hallway, both of our doors open.

She still spends her nights in that same room. Her brain is a bit foggy these days, wandering in and out of the ten decades that span her life, remembering names, dates and people involved in events at any point in that lengthy timeline like they were just happened. Sometimes she mistakes a TV presenter from her favorite Catholic channel for someone she knows and strikes a conversation. It’s all good, she feels connected and strong in her faith, that’s what matters. Grandma is a religious woman and used to be very active in her parish until mobility became limited, keeping her from attending in-person services. She lives her faith in the ways that truly matter: she has helped countless people, she taught us not to judge others and to be purposeful and kind in our words and actions.

Her parish is Nossa Senhora do Rosário, the third oldest in the country, facing the small bay where the Portuguese settlers arrived to colonize the region in 1535. For a while she attended Mass at the little Navy School chapel next to her house, she was friends with the chaplain and with a good reason. His services were never dull, he was a funny man and celebrated two of my uncles’ weddings. We called him Padre Herbert, he passed away in 1994, shortly after receiving the honorific title of Monsignor Herbert Burns.

Even though she has lived almost her entire life in the same place, my grandmother got to travel many times. In the 1960s, when she and my grandpa were members of Lions Club, they traveled to events on the regional and national level. There is a shelving niche in her house displaying the many miniature plates and other souvenirs they brought from those trips. Every year, their local club would set up a stand selling refreshments as a fundraiser during Festa da Penha, a traditional religious festival honoring the patron saint of my home state, on the foothill of where there is a convent dedicated to Nossa Senhora da Penha, or Our Lady of the Rock on a free translation.

The festival happens, you guessed it, right where Grandma lives, the same area where we all revolve around. The local Lions Club had a food stand, and there she sold her famous hot dogs made with sliced franks cooked in a tomato and ground beef sauce, served on a bun. I know chopping up a hot dog sounds horrific to an American, but come to think of it, the whole thing is not too far from a chili dog. And yes, it was delicious and sold well. I was in charge of picking up the soda in the chest cooler and bringing it to the customers to help wash down the food.

Later in life, she traveled by herself, my grandfather was more of a homebody. Sometimes her brother, my great-uncle José Luiz and his wife Maria Carmen would accompany her. Grandma also came to the US a few times to be with my Aunt Ligia during the years she lived here from 1974 to about 1982. Grandma was present when both my cousins were born in Buffalo, NY and faced the weather with aplomb, for someone who tends to be cold at the slightest drop of temperature when the South winds turn in Vila Velha.

She was also a very important presence and part of the support team when my parents got divorced, also in the early 1980s, and throughout the following decades, until my siblings and I were on our own. Grandma drove a Fusca, as we call the VW Beetle, and that car took us everywhere. There were actually more than one, same model, same color. I do not know how many they actually were. She would come over and whisk me away to go to her place, for an ice cream treat, or for shopping trips at the co-op affiliated with the bank Grandpa worked for. At the time we did not have the newer bridge that goes from Vila Velha to Vitória, we had to go around the longer way, and that was a journey typically planned days in advance. The same trip today takes 20 minutes, and has none of the excitement anymore.

My brother and I by Grandma’s ride.

I have a lifetime of memories to share about my grandmother. As it was with the post about my mother, it feels strange to write about a living person. I am not eulogizing her, I just want to have some of my impressions out there, so a family history researcher coming from somewhere further down the space-time continuum can find her, find Inhoá, and by extension find all of us.

Morro do Cruzeiro, Inhoá – Circa 1950

There is another way in which she is very lucky, and it must be shared: She had all of her three siblings up until she was 95 years old, when one of her sisters, great-aunt Carmita, born one year to the day after Grandma, passed away in 2021. José Luiz and Laurita are still around and in fairly good health. In keeping with the week’s theme, I should say we are the lucky ones to have them around for so long. How fortunate am I to have enjoyed her in my life for more than a century and counting? It is also monumental just to realize she is almost double my age. Hard to fathom, when I think about the span of my own lifetime, to think how much more she has seen, felt, lived.

Grandma always says we do not lose anything we age, we only accumulate all the experiences. There is no dismay in thinking that I will be 51 in a few weeks. If I can sail through the second half of my century with just a fraction of her wit, her memory and vitality, I can count myself as a very lucky person, though I hardly ever win any material prizes of any sort. I am, as we call it in Brazil, a “pé frio”, literally a cold foot, not very lucky on games or drawings. If you ever see me at the bingo, you do not need to do like Grandma’s friends. Pull up a chair, grab your card, you may have a shot at winning.

1 May 1945 – Prainha

Week 6: Social media

This post will deal with the future, the present and the past. In that order.

If you are someone down the road of time from me, a relative or someone who is researching the families I write about, hello! One big reason I blog is to add my small contribution to genealogy, or family history as I prefer to call it. I hope you find some useful information here. The thought that a descendant may be reading is surreal right now as Izzie is 15 and Alex is 10, but if you are one, and wonder why you can’t find so much in the old social media platforms that people of my time use, the answer is simple: I’m not a fan. I used to post a lot of updates, then I got over it. Fake news, trolls, the wastelands of the comments section everywhere, Flat-Earthers and other science-denying types, people posting pictures of their meals, cat memes. Actually, I am OK with the latter. I hope by the time you read this, most of those problems have been resolved, but the kitties are still around.

So, if you are looking for me: besides this little corner, I have an even smaller soapbox on Twitter, that old platform that the rocket guy bought in 2022. I use that mostly as a news aggregator. Speaking of him, when did electric cars finally become affordable? Are those batteries still catching fire? Moving on, here are two little pieces of advice: First, in online interactions, never say anything that you would not say to someone face-to-face. Be kind and polite, always. Second, check your sources. I don’t know what the consequences will be of my contemporaries’ lack of critical thinking skills and basic source vetting, but I want to apologize to you for whatever messes we got the world into because of the spread of fake news and wack job theories. Those two issues are why I am (almost) off of social media.

RIP Tardar Sauce, a.k.a. Grumpy Cat (2012-2019)

Now that we talked present and future, let’s go to the past. My favorite way to research the social media of way back when is accessing the Brazilian National Library online. They have a great collection of digitized periodicals and, lucky for us, our ancestors were keen on writing to their local newspapers, which I hope still exist when you are reading this. I have a few examples of how their writing helps me flesh out our family history and go beyond the classic BMD of genealogy (birth, marriage, death). The same way we look up a new contact on social media, whether they are a new friend, a potential new employer or employee, we can look up our ancestors.

In the times when we did not have digital, before the radio and television, most small towns had a local print news outlet, or more. In Brazil, up until the first half of the 20th century, those would be affiliated with political parties. They offered a mix of local interest like police blotters, voter rolls, birth, wedding and funeral announcements, sympathy notes, public health advisories, party and church group meetings, boat and train schedules, arriving and departing visitors, hotel guest lists, undeliverable mail, local business ads, and of course editorials that allow us to see what issues were at the top in the political environment.

All of these things offer great subsidies to family history. There is a good bit of gossip, normally signed under a pseudonym, and the indispensable arts. We find poetry and fiction, typically published in installments. Students’ grades, and tax collector’s lists were also printed, because public shaming works (not). This is all ancestry jackpot. In my family, we had newspaper writers, and several that were the subjects of stories. When you put it all together, it’s the social media of the olden days. Also, there was typically the other newspaper, owned by the political opponents, which also adds to the research as you read the opposite side of certain stories. So, without more ado, here is a little sampling of what we have:

Diário da Manhã (ES) – 4 June 1924

The social column giving interesting details about my great-grandparents Godofredo Schneider and Noêmia Serrano’s wedding. The bridal party gives us a good idea of whom they were closest to, some of them from out of town, that will provide leads of where to look next. I was able to get a great outline of Godofredo’s life from newspapers spanning decades. His academic performance in a preparatory school, college, passing the exam to become a lawyer, a short-lived first marriage with the premature loss of wife and child, the move back to the home state, his marriage to Noêmia, incursion in politics, becoming the mayor in my hometown during a period of turmoil, and many other facts up until his death in 1971. My father and late uncle appear as pallbearers in a very poignant last picture.

Another common function of social media is the rants. People will go on about all sorts of issues, with politics being typically the hottest topic, a solid engagement generator. So, how did you achieve this before social media and cell phones at hand to record everything? A public space? Perhaps a busy train station? That is exactly what my second-great-grandfather Anésio, Godofredo’s father-in-law, did. He went on a thunderous tirade against Brazil’s then-president Floriano Peixoto, nicknamed “Iron Marshal”, in the middle of a busy railway platform. Some bystanders who were Floriano’s supporters did not like it, and Anésio went viral more than a century before TikTok.

O Parahybano – 23 Feb 1892

It is not all about cats. Babies are a hit, too. Here’s my grandmother, Maria Helena, probably past her nap time.

1925

Influenced by Queen Victoria after Prince Albert’s death, mourning became an elaborate (and strangely fashionable) tradition, newspapers offered several art choices to embellish funeral announcements. I am absolutely fascinated by this trend, and I will come back to it at some point.

Take note of every person mentioned in those announcements. They’re family history gold.

My great-grandfather João Bastos published poetry, short stories and signed a column as an art critic for A Gazeta, a daily newspaper from Vitória – ES. My aunt Lígia’s name came from the poem Salamandra, which I find beautiful:

Vida Capichaba – 18 Sep 1927

There are many other pieces I would like to add, and I don’t want this to be a tl;dr post. I’m sure during this year of weekly blogging there will be plenty of opportunities to share more old-timey social media, but I would like to ask, did you ever have something really important go on your spam folder? One of my main research lines was saved by a letter that was not delivered to the recipient. After several tries, the postal service would publish a list of pieces of undeliverable mail. This is a story I’m saving for sometime in the future, but a note in tiny print, tucked away several pages deep into a Rio newspaper, solved the mystery of where my 4th great-grandfather was living in 1879, all thanks to his brother-in-law who wasn’t home to receive a letter.

Jornal do Commercio – 12 Feb 1879

See you next week! 😊