Wednesday, July 18, 2001

Derek ~ Missionary Prep

 This will be backdated to July 2001
Pre-mission photoshoot for Derek ... similar to Shane's, with picture poses around the house and yard. Originally, I only found about five "photoshoot" photos. Then I went out to the folks and glanced though some boxes and saw a bag of pictures - new ones I hadn't seen in Dropbox. So I grabbed them, scanned them, and redid my collage to feature more photos!

Inside ... and out! Showcasing Mom and Dad's lovely yard!

Honestly, this one might be my favorite!


Derek had turned 19 on May 5, 2001. He was finishing up his first year at BYU,  when his mission call arrived at the house. Derek had shared this memory ...

I was at BYU when my call came. It came a week early and I wasn't expecting it. I got home at the end of the day and my roommates said "your mom has called like five times." :) Mom had never called before so I was worried something was wrong! I was told that my mission call was here and that I'd better get home to open it. I didn't have a car, so I had to wait for my friend Blake to get home (this was before cell-phones). 

Blake drove me back and I just opened it late at night with Mom and Dad, Shane and Alicia and Blake. I remember being slightly disappointed when I saw Brazil. At the time (for some reason) I was hoping to go to Asia, or be called to a sign-language mission (I was taking ASL at BYU). I was very excited for Brazil within about 30 minutes though. I do recall strongly wishing I had been called to a different Brazilian city though. There was something about saying "Campinas" to everyone who asked, and having them say "is it really pronounced just like that?" that I didn't like. :)

The openhouse after the farewell ...

Departure day was July 3, 2001. 

We got some more family photos the day he headed out.


Adeus Elder Westra!
He's off!
 

Sunday, April 15, 2001

Easter 2001

Easter 2001 ... Easter Sunday was on April 15th. The Westra party was on a Sunday this year (Landon and Callahan are in their church clothes, and these pictures come after Easter morning in the negatives). Looks like we were missing both Chris and Wendy's families this year. Just Jen and Scott still provide a pretty good group of grandkids, even if it is only half of them. The classic plastic Westra buckets were used for the hunt. Eggs up high on the ledge. Looks like Scott really wants those eggs - he's hoisting Kemery up, up, up!

After the eggs, everyone dogpile on Uncle Derek! While you can ...
Uncle Derek would be leaving on his mission in July. 
Shane and Alicia would be getting married in just a few weeks!

The EARS were introduced in 1996.
Here they appear again. Still on a Blackham Boy.
You can check out more of the Blackham Easter 2001 on their family blog.
The Easter Bunny came to the house! The Easter Bunny is pink!

Jen was very into scrapbooking at this time.
She made this page featuring the funny photo of Uncle Shane.



Monday, December 25, 2000

2000 Christmas Letter

Merry Christmas 2000 and Happy New Year! 

Dear Family and Friends, 

It’s hard to believe that another year has flown by already! We hope it has been a good one for you. It has been for us. Zion is growing—2 new grandchildren, bringing our total to 13 (9 boys, 4 girls).


  • Scott and Amy Westra: Live in Draper. Scott is a CPA, still working at Worker’s Compensation Fund of Utah. Three daughters and one son: McKenna, 7 ½; Alyssa, 5 ½ ; Kellen, 4; and Kemery, 2. Scott is a Stake Missionary and Amy is Primary Chorister. Amy helps at school a lot and in PTA.
  • Chris and Sandy Westra: Live in Fayette, Utah, where Chris works as a Substance Abuse Counselor at Gunnison Prison. Their three sons are Conner, 8 ½ (who was baptized in a warm spring in the area—a beautiful setting--a tradition in the town); Kadan, 6 ½ , and Corin 3 ½. Chris is Elder’s Quorum President and Sandy is teaching Primary. They are going to build a new home in Gunnison come Spring. 
  • Wendy and Rick Jensen: Live in St. George area (Ivins). Rick teaches Seminary at the Tuacahn School of the Arts. Wendy teaches sign language (ASL) at Dixie College 2 evenings a week and does some free-lance interpreting. Rick teaches occasional computer classes at Dixie College and for an internet company. Rick is in the Elder’s Quorum Presidency and is Choir Director and Wendy is in the Primary Presidency. They have a daughter Janika, age 5, and a son Jase, age 3, and a new son Jared born March 8. 
  • Jeni and Grayson Blackham: Live in West Jordan. Grayson is a General Contractor,  building with Hamlet Homes.  Gray is a Counselor in the Bishopric. A new son, Keaton, born Aug. 31 joins big brothers Landon, 5, and Callahan, 1 ½. Jen is still totally immersed in her hobby of Scrapbooking! She’s very creative and has won several contests with the cute pages she creates. She also writes columns for an on-line scrapbooking magazine and is on Provo Craft’s scrapbooking “Dream Team” and teaches classes for a Craft Store. She has been using her singing talent a lot lately in various wards and programs. 
  • Shane: is 24 ½ and became engaged this month to Alicia Green from Sandy. They will be married in the Salt Lake Temple on Wed. May 9. He is working at Onyx Graphics in Quality Assurance (Computer work). He is Executive Secretary to the Bishopric in his Singles ward and in a temple sealing group. 
  • Derek: is 18 ½ and a Freshman at BYU. He took a trip to New York and will going on his mission when he turns 19 in May. 

LaMar and Margie: LaMar is still working at Unisys, but hopes to retire before too long. He is still serving as the Stake Family Search Director. Margie is the ward Family History Coordinator and mans the FHC in our stake center on Wednesday mornings and volunteers at the Cottonwood Hospital Surgical Center Friday mornings 

We hope all of you have a wonderful and healthy and happy year 2001! Write and tell us all about your growing families and what you are all doing. We love hearing from you! Or you can e-mail us at:
westra@softcom.net 
Gospel Topics and Missionary Helps Homepage: www.softcom.net/users/westra/Margie.htm

Sincerely, 
The Westras

Christmas 2000

 


The Westra Christmas Eve Nativity was featured in the Christmas 1999 post ... but only video, no pictures (although the video shows some camera flashes. Where are those photos?) This year, there was a plethora of pictures of the nativity ... but not really anything else from that night. Video from this year also only showcases the nativity.

No journal entry from Jen this year (her 2000 journal seemed to stop around the time Keaton was born in September ... busy with baby!) Anything in Dad or Wendy's records to remember? Jen does recall that this was Keaton's second time playing the baby Jesus this year. Jen performed in a stake musical showcase. She was Mary and the director wanted a live baby Jesus in the scene. Jen didn't volunteer Keaton as he wasn't newborn, but in the end, she was called and asked if she had a baby and was willing to let him be in the production ... ironically the caller didn't realize Jen was playing Mary, it was just a random request! There had been some concern that a live baby might cry, but Keaton did great. Both times!

Here's video ...

https://youtu.be/DB4ivtgpiEY

Jen created the scrapbook page shown at the top (featuring Provo Craft products, she was working as a brand ambassador on their Dream Team at the time) but there were even more pictures that didn't make it on the page. Some are repeats of those showcased above, and all are in the Dropbox folder (2000/Christmas).



... in the top left photo, you can see Jason and Kiki's little boy in the "sheep costume" for a moment before taking off (was it his parents, or the shepherds, that chased him down as he took off?)




Wednesday, September 27, 2000

Dapper Derek ... School Dance





Cottonwood High School Homecoming 2000. When asked if he remembered which dance this was, Derek said he did. "I was homecoming king that dance and my date was homecoming queen. :) I remember, because I was sick and throwing up in the bathroom when they called my name and I had to put on a brave face and act like nothing was wrong! "

This looks like a different tux (different dance), but doesn't Derek look dapper?
These photos were found in Dropbox - Year 2000

... For a little Homecoming History ...

Here's Homecoming from a few years before that - 1986. Jen was a sophomore, and this was one of her first dates. Jen remembers "Wendy and I had found some dresses we really liked, but they had spaghetti straps. To make them more modest, I found matching fabric and sewed puffy sleeves to add on."  Back in the olden days, before wrist corsages were the thing to do.


Adria was crowned Homecoming Queen in 2022, and Jaiden was in 2021. Check out all the HOMECOMING posts on the Jensen Journal, with all the Jensen kids and Wendy's good blogging skills, there's a lot! On the BlackhamBlog,  Homecoming 2016 (Kate was Homecoming Queen. Cal's "ask" is included, the guys spent weeks making a fun video). They actually did take the official group dance picture ... but that trend is fading as kids today generally do a full "photoshoot" instead of the one paid picture at the dance. Colton wrote up his memories of  Homecoming 2022 and he was up for Homecoming King his senior year. 

Saturday, June 3, 2000

Graduations at a Glance ~ Six Siblings


Six Siblings - Grouped Graduations

There are several photos from Wendy's graduation, and quite a few featuring Derek (as cameras moved to digital, and his graduation was a little more recent ... and he's the baby!) but I thought it would be fun to look at all the Westra Siblings together at their respective high school graduations. A compilation post to compare and contrast.

All six siblings graduated from Cottonwood High School. For these siblings (those who have had high school graduates) I don't think any have had all their kids graduate from the same high school - of course Mom and Nelva didn't either. There was the move from Hermitage to Havenmoor, but that didn't affect the boundary school. The first five photos were taken at the Hermitage house ... the big blue spruce in the front/side was a common backdrop, as was the lava rock fireplace. Derek got the pretty backdrop of the Havemoor house for his graduation picture. 

Black, White and Gold will be victorious ... that's the start to the school song for Cottonwood High (probably the only line I actually know). This is reflected in the cap and gown over the years. While the boys seemed to stay consistent in black, Wendy's group got gold, while Jen's class looked angelic in white. All had some of the "extra" cords, sashes, etc that indicated academic prowess and other ideals.

Scott paved the way, and he and Chris overlapped their high school experience, as did Chris and Wendy. Graduations on the even years, 1982, 1984, 1986. Jen followed close enough that teachers definitely remembered the older siblings - Shane and Derek will have to comment if they felt as if they were living in a sibling shadow** during the school years. Jen's was the only "odd" graduation (year-wise). 


Check out the New Year's Babies for a similar side-by-side-six!


**We did get some comments from Derek and Shane ...

Derek: "I didn't feel like I was in anyone's shadow (6 year gap between me and Shane so we didn't share a lot of the same teachers) EXCEPT in Mr. Bill's AP Art and AP Art History classes. I think Mr. Bill always wanted more from me being Sterling Scholar Shane's little bro. In fact, I didn't get an A my senior year - I think I got a B+. But the night before the last day of school, Brian and I had already started our Summer lawn mowing business. As a last day of school prank, we drove Dad's blue truck over to Cottonwood, late one night before the last day of school the next day, unloaded our mowers and set them to the lowest setting. Then we moved "Bye Bye Bye" into the front hill of the school (REALLY short so it was a different color and unmistakable). The next day people were talking about it (it was right outside Mr. Bill's classroom windows). He gave me my grade (B+). I said with disappointment "Mr. Bill, I expected I'd do better after you saw my final art project." "What final project?" He asked. "That one." I pointed out the window. He smiled and said "That was you?" Brian and I confirmed that it was. He then changed my grade to an A-."

Shane: Speaking of living in the shadow of siblings, two experiences come to mind. One is also with Mr. Bill...on the first day of my first class with Mr. Bill, he says "Westra, huh? Any relationship to Jeni Westra?" I said, "Yes, she's my sister." Mr. Bill just stands silent for a minute and then says "How is she liking the Women's Penitentiary?" I laughed inside but kept a straight face, and said "She's dealing with it fine" (or something like that).  The other one was that I got into AP US History because the woman in charge loved having Jeni as a student. I normally wouldn't have got in because my grades weren't good enough, and I probably shouldn't have taken that class, as I didn't do well and I didn't pass the AP test.  

Jen: Ironically, I don't remember Mr. Bill that well. I know I took several art classes, but can't recall which were from him. I definitely remember Claudia Wright, the AP History teacher! I took AP American History my Junior Year, and AP European History my Senior Year. Tough classes, but she taught in such a way that it was interesting and engaging.  

Tuesday, April 25, 2000

My Great Grandma ~ by Wendy


 Wendy had an assignment for school to write about one of her ancestors. We are very lucky in that there are some very thorough autobiographies to help with such a task. Wendy chose to write about her Great-Grandmother Hannah Lucinda Howell Hurst Bohne. Hannah wrote a very detailed autobiography, 30 pages long (see it HERE). Wendy focused on Hannah's early life, and used some of the excerpts from her history in her paper.  You can read it below ...

My Great Grandma - Hannah Lucinda Howell Hurst Bohne

Written by Wendy Westra Jensen



Now, at ninety, my Great Grandma Bohne, with her soft gray hair and wrinkled skin, has trouble even remembering my name. But as she tells us the stories of how she got the scar on her wrist, and other stories of her growing up, her memory becomes vivid and sharp . . .

“ . . . My mother often told me how she used to sit me in one of those big half-bushel tubs when I was just a baby. This particular day, when I was just a young toddler, mother was peeling peaches. I began to become restless, so she sat me in the tub right outside the door of our small house, with a peach in my hand. Other families lived nearby, and some of them had pigs running loose. Mother was very busy with her work until she heard a frightened cry. Upon looking up, she saw that a large sow had grabbed me by the wrist while attempting to get the now slightly squished peach. It had tipped over the tub, and it was still dragging me by the wrist. My uncle was just coming around the corner of our small bunk house and rescued me before my mother could get to me. I am still carrying the scar from that pig’s tooth . . . “

The small town of Dublan, where my grandmother lived while growing up, had many buildings around, but not as many houses. They had moved into a small brick house with a fairly large farm. As nice as they thought their home was, they still had their problems. Their home was the farthest North in town, and they were in the Mexican district. My grandmother remembered when she was a young girl, and Mexicans would come to the Carletis ranch and from the San Jose district to trade at the Diblan stores. They would gather in groups in front of grandmother’s house to eat their lunches and drink their tequila, which was a poor grade of Mexican alcohol. They often became so intoxicated, it worried my grandmother’s mother.

“I remember how my mother would lock the doors and not allow any of us children to take a step outside”, my great grandmother told us.

By 1910 they were considering building a new home. There was one major drawback however; the Mexican revolution was doing its worst. The whole country was in an uproar and everything was unsettled. My grandmother wrote about what happened one particular day.

“I remember one Sunday late afternoon, a Rebel army marched through our town. They were a pitiful looking group as far as poverty was concerned. Some of them were barefoot, and their clothes would hardly hang on them. They were headed for Casus Grandes, which was a distance of twelve or thirteen miles from our town. At four A.M. the next morning the ferocious battle raged until the middle of the day. I remember I was working in the candy shop that day. Many places of business were closed because people were so upset they couldn’t concentrate. I have often described the noise from that battle as sounding like a community of lumber buildings, all falling down at the same time.”

Conditions went from bad to worse. Things went on this way until the July of 1912. The colonists could see that they were in grave danger. The church and the U.S. Government came to the rescue. Word circulated that they should evacuate the colonists, and railroad cars would be there Sunday to take them. They worked all night Saturday and Sunday to leave the best way possible.

They were only allowed two mattresses, a few quilts, pillows, and their best clothing. They had to turn loose their animals and leave the only life they ever knew. They fled to Utah with the other colonists and made a new life there. Here is the story in my grandmother’s own words.


“The whole town was there at the station at ten P.M. Sunday evening. We all stood there and waited until six A.M. the following morning. When the train finally came, it wasn’t nearly large enough to take all of us. It was finally decided that all of the women and children under seventeen of age would leave, with barely enough men to take care of us. The remainder of the men were left.

No more had the train pulled out, than a mob of Mexicans came into town. The men grabbed their horses and firearms and fled to the hills, with the Mexicans firing on them. My father, and the rest of the men found a place in the hills where they could march around a hill and make it look like there were a great many more than there actually were.

They fled to Colonia Juarez. Here they felt quite safe because they could ward off quite a large army. Many privations were experienced due to the fact that they didn’t have a chance to gather food or clothing, or bedding of any kind. Someone did take a sack of flour however. I heard Father tell how they stirred flour and water together and made hot cakes, and cooked them on a piece of tin over the coals of their campfire. It was two weeks before they were able to cross the border into El Paso, Texas, where they joined their families

In the meantime, we (the woman and children) that had left on the train the morning of July 29, 1912, landed in El Paso the same afternoon we left. I remember how terribly tired we were as we hadn’t slept since Friday, and this was Monday!”

When my Great Grandma Bohne and her family, plus the other women and children, had reached El Paso, they were given a small division, like a stall for horses. It was large enough to lay the two mattresses down, but there wasn’t enough room to walk around or between them. Their food consisted mostly of bread, milk, prepared cereals, and canned foods.

It was about the 19th of August before the men arrived from Mexico. How very glad my great grandma and her family were to see them. Her poor dad looked so pitiful and terribly worn out. They hadn’t as much as had a chance to shave or change clothes! Her dad didn’t even have a saddle on his horse most of the way

“Oh how glad I was to see my poor Dad after all that!” my great grandma replied, remembering everything that had happened that day.

Later, on August 21, 1912, Great Grandma Bohne’s family set out for Utah. They went to Fairview to live with relatives until they could maintain a home themselves. They had so many ordeals trying to keep a home and family. It was on May 16, 1949, that my great grandma’s mother passed away at the age of seventy four, followed by her father on February 6, 1956. He was buried next to his sweet and wonderful wife.

My great grandmother is now ninety, and will probably soon pass away too. I look at her now, with her wrinkled hands and small body, walking along slowly with her cane next to her, and try to picture her as a baby, being dragged by a pig -- a young girl living in Mexico -- and a young woman fleeing from her hometown to Utah. It’s hard to picture her this way, looking at her now, but we have learned much from her, and love to read and listen to the stories of what life was like for her when she was a little girl!



In 2022, Christopher found a hard copy of Wendy's paper with some other printed histories. Unsure if Wendy had a copy, he retyped it so it could easily be included here and on FamilySearch.com. 

Also check out the blog post featuring Hannah here on the blog. Lots of pictures and a condensed history.  The Life Of Hannah Hurst Howell Bohne