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Both Huldah’s daughters that I just mentioned were presidents of their local and county chapters of the Grand Army of the Republic Auxiliary groups for women.
Huldah’s 1891 obituary gives us a glimpse into her life with its quaint wording, “In her history are several coincidences among them the fact that her birth, each marriage and death occurred in April.”
Since so many of the major events of Huldah’s life happened in April, I didn’t want to miss the opportunity to feature her this month.
Why honor this woman whose name is virtually unknown? While Huldah was not a “founder” in the sense of the word I’ve been using for the last two weeks, I thought it proper to honor her for a couple of reasons. Being a generation removed from the actual founding of our country, women like Huldah Johnson saw so much in their lifetimes that we could learn from. Every generation is a link that “founds” something or “lays a foundaton” for the generation that will follow it. By featuring the interesting facts of Huldah’s life, I hope you will look at your own life, (I think most of my readers are not famous personages!) and realize that what you do is a link in a long line of “founding” things for those who will come after you. If those in Huldah’s generation, the sons and daughters of the actual “founders,” “signers,” and “revolutionary war soldiers,” had not built upon their parents’ and grandparents’ visions, our country would not have lasted for even the 234 years that it has. We are all “founding” something. It is obvious that some of the vision of Huldah’s predecessors was still carried on in her lifetime by sons and daughters that were active in serving their country, even her daughters in their auxiliary group activities. Future generations of Huldah’s family married soldiers that fought in both World Wars.
Right now in our country we are facing a crisis. We are literally at a turning point in our history, I believe. Will we in this generation stand for the principles of the founders and framers or will we systematically throw away and chip away at what they worked and fought so hard to deliver to us? Each of us has a choice—daily. Will anyone remember our names after we pass from this earthly scene? Maybe, maybe not. So who is Huldah C. (Town?) Rice Hill Johnson? Is she a forgotten name in history? No, she is my great, great, great grandmother, at this point, my earliest link in a long line of patriotic people. She is the link that will tie me to the revolutionary war if I can confirm the name of her father. Rhiannon recently learned that she is probably the daughter of a revolutionary war soldier from Vermont or New York, most likely by the name of “Town.” We are in the process of connecting the family tree to include her father’s name and history. It’s very exciting to find out that you may have an ancestor who fought for the original freedom of this nation. It kind of puts into perspective your own life and really how close you are to what happened so long ago. It makes you consider the “link” that you are in your own generation concerning what is to come.
So hats off to “Grandma Johnson,” a daughter or granddaughter of the founding generation! We are all “founders” in a sense! Thankfully, we Americans have a foundation that was based on the Bible—let’s work to keep it! “For no other foundation can anyone lay than that which is laid, which is Jesus Christ. Now if anyone builds on this foundation with gold, silver, precious stones, wood, hay, straw, each one’s work will become clear, for the Day will declare it because it will be revealed by fire; and the fire will test each one’s work, of what sort it is.” 1 Corinthians 3:11-13 Blessings, LORI
I loved this post! I was wondering who she was related to! I kept thinking she was either related to you or someone that's famous now! (The picture cracks me up!)
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