Item

A Gift From the Past

Title (Dublin Core)

A Gift From the Past

Disclaimer (Dublin Core)

DISCLAIMER: This item may have been submitted in response to a school assignment. See Linked Data.

Description (Dublin Core)

The first person I visited when restrictions in Tasmania were eased the first time was a ninety-year old lady, a family friend and distant relation who knows all the stories everyone else has forgotten. I sat in her house for two and a half hours and listened to her talk about our family and all the people they knew, and I learned about a past that is rapidly disappearing as the people who remember it age. After my visit, she gave this glass to my mother. It was my great-grandfather's preferred glass at the local pub, and was gifted to this woman's husband after he died, as he was a great friend to my great-grandfather. She chose to give it to us thinking it would mean more for us than it does her.
I had intended to visit Mrs Howlett for months, but life kept getting in the way. The pandemic afforded me the opportunity to explore my own past and the history of many other people in a way that I usually can't in everyday life, and this glass is a physical, tangible example of that experience.

Date (Dublin Core)

May 25, 2020

Creator (Dublin Core)

Chloe Bailey

Contributor (Dublin Core)

Chloe Bailey

Event Identifier (Dublin Core)

HUM402

Partner (Dublin Core)

University of Tasmania

Type (Dublin Core)

Photograph of an over-sized shot glass from the 1990's

Controlled Vocabulary (Dublin Core)

English Food & Drink
English Recreation & Leisure
English Home & Family Life

Curator's Tags (Omeka Classic)

heirloom
Tasmania
Campania
oral history
pub glass

Contributor's Tags (a true folksonomy) (Friend of a Friend)

heirloom, history, Campania, familyhistory, oraltradition, localhistory, nostalgia

Collection (Dublin Core)

Personal Voices

Linked Data (Dublin Core)

Date Submitted (Dublin Core)

05/28/2020

Date Modified (Dublin Core)

06/09/2020
10/23/2020
2/16/21

Item sets

This item was submitted on May 28, 2020 by Chloe Bailey using the form “Share Your Story” on the site “A Journal of the Plague Year”: https://covid-19archive.org/s/archive

Click here to view the collected data.

New Tags

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