Forum Activity for @harold-powell

Harold Powell
@harold-powell
12/09/12 01:30:01AM
261 posts

A Season of Giving


General Discussions ( Anything Goes )

A long time and very close friend posted this on her Facebook a few minutes ago:

I was really blessed this morning at work to be involved in a random act of kindness. A woman came into the Walmart where I work and asked to pay off 5 random lay-aways. She wanted them to be accounts with toys on them, so I weeded through the accounts in the system and found the ones that had toys. At the end of the transaction, I asked if I could have her name so that I could at least tell the store manager so that he could send her a Thank You note. She didn't want any part of that and wanted to remain anonymous. That kind of generosity is rare and especially without recognition. It caused me to refocus my whole Christmas attitude.

I think this act without recognition exemplifies the Spirit of Christmas.


updated by @harold-powell: 12/12/15 09:29:02AM
Harold Powell
@harold-powell
12/09/12 05:57:16PM
261 posts

The Welsh Diaspora


General Discussions ( Anything Goes )

Well, perhaps we're making progress. The citizens ofMassachusetts did elect Senator Pocahontas during the last election.

I'll check that out on Netflix. When we last saw Foyle he was boarding a ship for America. My wife is hoping he's after the American arms trader who managed to evade the law.

Harold Powell
@harold-powell
12/09/12 01:12:40PM
261 posts

The Welsh Diaspora


General Discussions ( Anything Goes )

Gaynor you are so right. I think here it was the American Indians who were the most ill-treated of all. And my grandfather also said it was the Welsh in Liverpool and South Hampton and New York that you had to look out for! They came to the docks smiling, patting Welsh immigrants on the backs with warm, comforting words (in their own language) and offers to help in an effort to steal their meager savings. Of course the Irish, Italian and German immigrants faced the same treatment from their own.

Harold Powell
@harold-powell
12/08/12 07:48:26PM
261 posts

The Welsh Diaspora


General Discussions ( Anything Goes )

Yes, she was (American, that is). She was a local reporter from our NBC affiliate sent to London to report daily summaries. Quite a gig! I would guess from her age that she was not long out of journalism school. I suspect her on-air faux pas was caused by hyper-sensitivity. IMO being overly sensitive often backfires and makes one look too racially conscience--almost patronizing. I would love to see her face if she were introduced to a white African-American who had immigrated here from South Africa. I suspect her provincial mind would not be able to grasp it.

I remember that episode of Foyle's War. What a great program the whole series was! My grandfather thought--correctly or not--that the Welsh people were often treated as second-class citizens by the English. He said they thought we were good for singing and digging coal but other than that we were regarded as dumb, dishonest and mostly useful as fodder for comedians.

Harold Powell
@harold-powell
12/08/12 05:12:39PM
261 posts

The Welsh Diaspora


General Discussions ( Anything Goes )

During the recent Olympics I noticed a commentator who kept calling black athletes "African-Americans" no matter what their country of origin. She kept referring to African-Americans from the UK, France, etc. Finally another announcer caught it and said, "They're not African-American they're French or Australian..." "Oh," she answered, "What do you call African-Americans over here (meaning England)?" Her colleague paused for a second trying to grasp the meaning of her question. Finally he answered, "Generally we call them yanks." The poor girl still didn't get it.

Harold Powell
@harold-powell
12/08/12 04:01:28PM
261 posts

The Welsh Diaspora


General Discussions ( Anything Goes )

Jack, you make a very good point about using surnames as the sole criteria.

My wife's maiden name is not Welsh although about half of her progenitors are Welsh coming from the Gwynn and Williams line. My own daughter's married name would not be recognized as Welsh even though she considers herself Welsh through and through. The Powell name willeventually disappear from our family tree because all of the "Powell boys" had daughters not sons. My own family tree contains the surnames of Powell, Lewis, Wynn, Evans, Gronow, Jones and Perry (at some point the spelling was changed from Parry to Perry). That said, I can't think of another method the reseacher could have used. I don't even think DNAwould be able totell much more than the broader classification of "European."

Personally, I refuse to answer offiicial questionnaireswheneverthey ask aboutrace: Caucasion, Hispanic, African, Asian and so on. If I am absolutely required to answer I check "Other"then write in "Homo Sapien." I believe that all humanity is of the same race. Many religionsand even modern day geneticists concur that the entire race is descended from one woman. Of course, there had to be a guy involved but geneticistshave only mitochondrial DNA to work with so far.

Harold Powell
@harold-powell
12/06/12 03:19:21PM
261 posts

The Welsh Diaspora


General Discussions ( Anything Goes )

Our family has always considered itself part of the Welsh Diaspora--or economic refugees, if you will, driven from home by what it perceived whether real or not as a lack of opportunity. It retained fervent devotion to the homeland and kept in contact with loved ones left behind.

The link below is to an official study of the Welsh Diaspora complete with maps of its concentration around the world. I had always heard about the colony in Patagonia but was surprised to see my own home state of Missouri high on the list. I guess I shouldn't have been surprised because my state was once a major source of coal.Ray County, Missouri, where our family lived, had over 50 coal mining companies operating during the first half of the 20th Century. Several of those companies operated multiple pits

The study: http://tinyurl.com/atpbsxm


updated by @harold-powell: 11/11/15 10:38:31PM
Harold Powell
@harold-powell
11/13/12 03:25:33PM
261 posts

Don't Look Up


General Discussions ( Anything Goes )

Million geese flock to mid-missouri

The link above is to our local television station.

Harold Powell
@harold-powell
11/13/12 03:23:51PM
261 posts

Don't Look Up


General Discussions ( Anything Goes )

I was awakened Sunday night by a familiar sound from my childhood. It was a sound I hadn't heard in several decades. I got up and went to the front door and opened it to make sure I wasn't just dreaming. Nope.Unmistakably, it was the sound of migrating snow geese. The sky was so dark that I couldn't see them but their incessant "honking" was a dead "giveaway." And I wasn't the only one awakened by the sound. It seems that the local fire department and police were being flooded with calls. Curious thing, that, "I hear a goose so let's call the fire brigade!"

Snow geese migrate across Missouri twice each year but they usually are confined to a corridor considerably west of where I live--perhaps seventy-five to one hundred miles west of here. As a child I lived in that corridor so the sound was familiar--yet different. The sound seemed much larger than when I was a kid which is generally the opposite of what happens when I revisit my childhood; the old school, the old house, the old playground all seem so much smaller now than they do in my childhood memories.

Snow geese are social creatures sending "honks" instead of tweets as they travel together in a perpetual, feathery, rush hour traffic-jam. They migrate in the thousands--in the tens of thousands and I've seen the sky almost darkened as they set out in the early morning light. They sometimes fly throughout the night and when they do decide to rest it may not be a lake, a river, a marsh or otherwise aquatic, "bed and breakfast" establishment. Sometimes it's just an open field, large enough to accommodate fifteen or twenty thousand.

The picture above was taken near Squaw Creek on the western side of Missouri and near the western edge of their normal north-south corridor.

Anyway, back to Sunday night. We awoke Monday morning to learn that local bird experts were perplexed by what we had heard and seen during the night saying that it was unprecedented. Using local radar experts estimated that as many as 800,000 or 1,000,000 (one million) snow geese had flown overhead during the night. What's more, radar indicated that they weren't just a tad off course but that the skies were crowded all the way across the western half of Missouri. Perhaps there were so many this year that they were forced to widen the road--so to speak--pushing as many as a million geese eastward to pass over our unsuspecting heads.

Our local TV station posted a couple of Facebook snapshots of the sound and "flurry."

What does it mean? I don't know. But I'm sure my grandmother would have read some kind of meaning into it particularly regarding the approaching winter season. "Animals know..." she would say.


updated by @harold-powell: 11/11/15 10:38:30PM
Harold Powell
@harold-powell
11/06/12 05:28:37PM
261 posts

How many Welshmen have been Lord Mayor of London?


General Discussions ( Anything Goes )

Thanks Gaynor. That's very informative. I've heard it said, whether true or not I don't know, that the British Monarch must secure figurative "permission" from the Lord Mayor of London to enter the old Square Mile.

  14