Genealogical Resources available in Special Collections at the University of Arizona 5/10/23

Welcome to the University of Arizona, the University Library and Special Collections!

What I will cover in today’s session:

Today I am going to provide an introduction to the UA Libraries and how to access materials using our online website and other tools. More specifically, I will focus on materials housed in Special Collections. I will also give you the opportunity to get some hands on experience using our materials, and if there is time, we will take a brief tour of the facility. By the end of today’s session, you should be able to know what kinds of information you can find here, as well as how and where to look for and locate materials that will aid you in your genealogical research.

About the University of Arizona Libraries

The brand new University of Arizona Main Library building, 1977.

We are a major research library with a strong focus on Latin America and the Southwest. We’re also a major repository for federal government information. We have millions of items, including books, journals, documents and materials in every format imaginable. For the past 15 years or so our emphasis has shifted from a focus on building physical collections to providing access to collections via regional and national consortia or electronic access. We provide access to newspaper and journal/magazine literature through our subscriptions to various online indexes and full-text journal collections. We invest a lot of funds into Inter-library Loan.

For more information about our library see our “About Us” page and our page on UA Library history.

About Special Collections

Special Collections entrance, Fall 2018

Established in 1958, Special Collections is home to rare books, archives, and manuscript collections, photographs, maps and multimedia materials owned by the University of Arizona Library. We have primary research material in a wide variety of subject areas, including these areas of particular focus: Arizona and the Southwest, with a strong emphasis on mining and ranching, the U.S.-Mexico borderlands, literature, political affairs, the performing arts, the history of science, University of Arizona history, and architecture. We are currently open to the general public Monday through Friday from 9am to 4pm. One need not make an appointment to visit, but it is strongly encouraged that one be prepared with lists of materials to request before arriving. We have limited staffing available at our front desk and prefer to have patrons make appointments with individual specialists in advance if in-depth assistance is required. To find a specialist in your area of study, contact us using our online research request form, available here.

Community member access to the UA Libraries

Our libraries provide a wealth of information and for the most part, as tax-paying, community members you have access to all of it.

Community members can:

Community members can also apply for a library card ($50 per year) to check out up to 25 books, journals, and documents at a time and use additional computers at the library. You can also place holds on materials.

Community members cannot remotely access databases, borrow laptops and technology, or reserve rooms and spaces, even with a library card.

The UA Libraries Website (https://lib.arizona.edu/)

The UA Libraries website is your gateway to the world of information. The more comfortable you are navigating it, the easier it will be to find materials in our collections and beyond. The key to mastering how to navigate this site is practice. (Think of Family Search or Ancestry.com. It probably took you several bouts of trial and error searching before you were able to use these sites effectively. The same principle applies to the UA Library website.) There are many links and layers to this website. It provides access to books, journal literature, full text material and a wide array of other products and services. I will provide a quick overview for you today, but it will be up to you to go back to it and explore it further. I encourage you to take time to learn how to find books and journal literature. There are a variety of easy-to-use tutorials embedded within the site that can help you learn how to be an effective researcher.

I will quickly review the various sections of the site for you, but we do not have time to go into a lot of depth.

Sections:

At the top: Services by category. Find Materials/Borrow and Request/Study and create/Research and Publish/About us/Ask Us-Chat

In the middle: searching tools (books, articles etc). Information about Library hours

Next: News and information about our public programs and exhibitions

Information about our branches. Information for specific populations, including alumni and visitors.

A closer look at access to primary research materials and newspaper access.

Local newspaper access is spotty. Online databases available through the UA Library only cover selected years of the Arizona Daily Star and the Tucson Citizen. There exists a paper index to the Arizona Daily Star that also only covers a specific time frame. The best source that I have found for finding information in these newspapers is Newspapers.com, a commercial database available via subscription. I pay about $140 a year out of my own pocket for access to it because it is an indispensable resource. One can get a 2-week trial subscription to it before the service is cut off or payment is made to continue.

The UA Libraries have digitized a number of local Spanish-language newspapers including El Tucsonense. The search platform for these newspapers is not the best, however. The Arizona Memory project also provides access to El Tucsonense, I prefer using that one.

All of our newspaper databases: https://libguides.library.arizona.edu/az.php?t=38638

Historical Research: https://libguides.library.arizona.edu/type/historical

The Special Collections web page. https://speccoll.library.arizona.edu/

As with the UA Library website, the Special Collections site has various sections, drop down menus, and a lot of information embedded underneath the surface. I encourage you to explore this site, as once you can navigate it well, you’ll be able to find just about everything housed in Special Collections here. We have a number of digital collections and exhibits that I encourage you to view and explore, including many digital photos of the University and southern Arizona.

The top portion of the website provides access to information about our collections (including digital collections), services, news and events as well as information about Special Collections.

The middle portion of the site is where one can find information about our collections by broadly arranged topics.

The next two sections feature information about our exhibits and events and news from our department.

About our manuscript collections and other specialized materials

There are a variety of ways to access our archival collections, including using our online catalog, doing a google search, using our Special Collections page, or other sources like Arizona Archives Online. Collections of manuscript material and personal papers are what are known as primary research resources. These are usually unique items like photographs, letters, diaries, draft manuscripts of publications, business ledgers and other materials.

When we receive a collection, there are several steps involved in the process. We first assess the material to determine if it fits within our collecting scope. If it doesn’t, we politely decline the material. If it does, we go through a lengthy process of preparing the material for public use. We sort the material, disposing of duplicates and other materials that are not “unique”. Then we determine how to arrange the material. We usually try to preserve the donor’s original order of material, but sometimes the material has to be organized by a staff member. We categorize, re-house the material into acid-free folders and boxes, inventory the materials, and keep track of what is in a collection, using ArchivesSpace. We do this by creating what is called a finding aid or collection guide. Nearly every archival/ manuscript collection in Special Collections has a corresponding collection guide. Here is a description of a typical collection guide: Using Collection Guides.

When you visit Special collections, there are various protocols that we ask you to follow. A list of do’s and dont’s is available here:

Tools we use to provide access to finding aids/collection guides:

Arizona Archives Online

According to the website: “The mission of Arizona Archives Online (AAO) is to provide free public access to descriptions of archival collections, preserved and made accessible by Arizona repositories, including libraries, special collections, archives, historical societies, and museums. Through the collaboration of the Arizona repositories we strive to inform, enrich, and empower the researcher by creating and promoting access to a vast array of primary sources across the state of Arizona”.

About AAO (for more information).

AAO Contributing Members
There are currently 14 institutions throughout the state of Arizona that contribute content to Arizona Archives Online:
The Arizona Historical Society: Northern Division
Arizona State Library, History and Archives Division
Arizona State Museum
Arizona State University Libraries, Department of Archives and Special Collections
Embry-Riddle Aeronautical University Aviation Safety and Security Archives, Prescott Campus
Heard Museum Billie Jane Baguley Library and Archives
Lowell Observatory Library and Archives
Museum of Northern Arizona
Northern Arizona University, Cline Library Special Collections and Archives
Peggy J. Slusser Memorial Philatelic Library
Sharlot Hall Museum
University of Arizona Library Special Collections
University of Arizona Libraries. Arizona Health Sciences Library

ArchivesSpace :

The UA Library starting using this product just a few years ago. It is similar to Arizona Archives Online, but a bit more cumbersome to use. It includes some information, such as materials in our backlog, not found in Arizona Archives Online.

Specific Collections that we will explore today:

This list is but a sampling of the various collections where one can find information about people for one’s genealogical research. Samples from these collections will be used in the next section of our session, where you will get hands on experience using our holdings.

Alianza Hispano-Americana Records, 1894-1965, 1920-1950 MS 663. Papers relating to the Alianza Hispano-Americana, which offered low-cost life insurance, social activities, and other services to primarily Mexican/Mexican-Americans living in the United States and Mexico. Founded in Tucson in 1894, Alianza was one of the first organizations to offer life insurance and burial policies to Mexican-American citizens. This collections includes photographs, financial files, correspondence between lodge secretaries, convention files, published materials, scrapbooks, and ledges pertaining to the daily operations of Alianza. Many of the ledgers include membership enrollment information, including members, their addresses, and lodge information.

Arizona and Southwestern Biographical File. The Arizona and Southwestern Biographical File contains biographical sketches, clippings, articles, and miscellaneous documentation of various people from the late 1800’s to the present. Individual files vary in content and size and do not contain photographs. Access to the material is through an index guide arranged alphabetically by surname. Single items on individuals will be found in the general folders for each letter while people with several items have their own folder.

Arizona Copper Company Records, 1882-1922 AZ 146. Business records of the company pertaining to administration of its copper mines which included the Longfellow Mine, Coronado Mine, Metcalf Mine, Clay Mine, and Humboldt Mine. Records include financial journals, ledgers, cost statements; payroll records, including accident reports and industrial compensation; production and sales records and inventories. Also included are records of the Arizona and New Mexico Railway Company; Clifton Hospital; and Metcalf Hospital; which were owned by the company.

Bloom Southwest Jewish Archives Arizona Reference Files, ca. 1850-1998 (bulk 1870-1970). SJA 004. This collection contains wide-ranging types of material regarding Jewish individuals and institutions in Arizona, principally southern Arizona. This material is especially reflective of the late-nineteenth century and the role of Jews in the Arizona Territory. The files consist primarily of newspaper clippings, scholarly and popular articles and excerpts, obituaries, auto-biographical reminiscences, copies of historical records, and correspondence. The bulk of the collection consists of secondary source material.

Catholic Church Diocese of Tucson Diocese Records, 1721-1957 MS 296. The bulk of the records in this collection are holographic sacramental registers that document baptisms, marriages, burials and confirmations of individual church members from 1863 until 1903, from parish and mission churches under the supervision of the Vicariate Apostolic of New Mexico (1850-1867), the Vicariate Apostolic of Arizona (1868-1896) and the Diocese of Tucson (1897-present). Two earlier registers from the Spanish Colonial Period document baptisms, marriages and burials from the missions of Tubac and Calabasas-Tumacacori under the administrative supervision of the Diocese of Durango (1620-1778) and the Diocese of Sonora (1779-1829).

John W. Murphey Records MS 603. This material demonstrates the day-to-day operation of Murphey’s many business ventures. The records contain construction job files, leases and mortgages, promotional and advertising materials, flooring and paint samples and schematics, correspondence, and financial ledgers. Most of the materials pertain to individual construction or renovation jobs between 1926 and 1957, or document the establishment of Catalina Foothills Estates. Also included are payroll records, which may be of interest to genealogists doing research on families in Tucson.

Pima County, Arizona Records 1864-1923 (bulk 1867-1904) Financial accounts, petitions, bonds, reports, leases, deeds, abstracts of titles, tax lists, bids, and correspondence related to Pima County operations. Chiefly records of the Board of Supervisors, such as letterpress copies of correspondence, petitions for appointments to county office, and financial demands and warrants. Other Board records include 1879 orders to incorporate the villages of Tombstone and Arivaca, and papers related to the construction of the first and second County courthouses. Assessor records consist of correspondence and a 1900-1907 block book. School records include financial records, correspondence, and reports. Teachers’ monthly reports indicate number of students enrolled; reports for Florence, 1873, and Tres Alamos, 1874-1875, give student names. School census reports, 1874-1904, list student names, race, whether native or foreign born, and parents’ names. Records of other county offices are from the Justice Court, District Court, Coroner, County Hospital, Jailer, Sheriff, Treasurer, and Election Office. A Probate Court docket dates from 1883 to 1885, and an Arizona tax list is for 1879.

University of Arizona Biographical Files The University of Arizona Biographical File has both photographs and printed materials of numerous UA faculty and staff, dating from 1867 to present. Individual files vary in content and size, containing biographical sketches, resumes, clippings and photographs. Since the photographs are interspersed throughout the collections, not every folder will have images. Access to the material is through this index guide arranged alphabetically by last name. Most individuals have their own folder, otherwise, the information will be found in the general folders for each letter.

Additional resources:

Special Collections Research Guides Subject specific guides created by our curators and student assistants.

Video tutorial for those new to Special Collections . An introduction to our holdings and information about how to use our resources.

Archive Tucson is a project of the University of Arizona Libraries and Special Collections to preserve the stories of our neighbors in Tucson and Southern Arizona. Most of our interviews focus on the second half of the twentieth century. We believe that a knowledge of local history matters: it confers a sense of place, community, and uniqueness. Our goal is to record interviews with a diverse cross-section of Southern Arizonans and ensure that their stories are shared today and preserved for tomorrow. Many of our interviews are online right now, and we’re adding more every month. All interviews are conducted by our resident Oral Historian, Aengus Anderson. If you have suggestions for interesting Tucsonans to interview, you can contact him here.

About me:

My name is Bob Diaz. I am a librarian and archivist here in Special Collections. I coordinate our department’s online reference service and am the curator for our collections in the areas of architecture and the performing arts. I will be celebrating my 31st year on the job here at Arizona on June 1. Prior to starting here back in 1992, I was employed at the University of Michigan Undergraduate Library as a reference and instruction librarian for over 5 years, and I started my library career as a children’s librarian at the Nogales/Santa Cruz County Library in early 1987. I received my Masters of Library Science degree from the University of Arizona in 1986 and my Bachelor of Arts degree in Psychology in 1982, also at the University of Arizona. I was a volunteer disc jockey for KXCI radio, where I hosted a weekly program called the Chicano Connection for nearly 20 years. I put away my headphones in early 2020, just as the pandemic hit. Some of my radio shows can be accessed here. You can learn more about me and my work by exploring these sections of my website:

My Life Story

My Work: Exhibitions, Presentations, Programs, Publications, etc. etc.

While I do not consider myself an expert in genealogy, I have, for the past several years, been doing research on my own family history. I have focused specifically on my paternal and maternal grandfathers’ families, and have written about them on this website. You can learn more about them by clicking on the captions underneath each photo.

Our Boston vacation, October 31-November 11, 2022, Part I…

Ruben and I love to travel, but because of the Covid-19 pandemic, we hadn’t taken a vacation since 2019. This year, however, we decided it was time to get out of town and go somewhere, so we decided to visit Boston again. I’d been there twice in the nineties, once to give a presentation at a conference at Harvard, and another time to visit a friend. Most recently, Ruben and I spent a week there in 2018, and we both really liked it, so we decided to go back. This time we stayed for 10 whole days, and had a great time immersing ourselves in learning more about the history of Boston and its role in the colonial period in US history. It’s never really interested me much before, but this time I decided it was time to pay closer attention to such things. I’m glad I did. Boston has a fascinating history and is a city rich with architectural treasures and historic monuments.

A vintage postcard of Boston.
Boston has one of the best skylines in the country. Our point of reference whenever we got lost was the Custom House clock tower, which is front and center in this photo. It was once the tallest building in all of Boston. Things sure have changed.
There is so much to see and do in this city that it would take several weeks to do it all. We didn’t get to do everything we wanted, and I’d really like to go back again.

MONDAY, OCTOBER 31, 2022

It took all day to get from Tucson to Boston. We arrived at the Tucson International Airport at around 7:30am. Our flight was delayed by two hours so we didn’t take off until 10:45am. We had a layover in Dallas and finally got to Boston at around 10pm. It was a very long day.

NOTE: CLICK ON ANY PHOTO TO SEE A LARGER VERSION OF IT.

We flew on American Airlines this time around. It isn’t our favorite. They charge for everything, it seems, and their planes are often completely booked and cramped. They don’t serve any food except for snacks, but I guess that’s pretty much the norm nowadays. They also changed our flight, with less than 24 hours notice that the flight we had originally booked had been cancelled and that we’d have to take a later one.
We stayed at the Embassy Suites in East Boston. It was just a hop skip and a jump from the airport and free shuttle service was provided from the airport and back. Unfortunately, there were very few places to eat in East Boston so late at night, and after calling around, we found nothing. We ended up walking about half a mile to a Walgreens near a very busy restaurant a few blocks away. We bought frozen pizza, snacks and water. The pizza wasn’t all that great, as we only had a microwave in which to heat it up, but it was something. Oh well. We hoped things would get better in the food department the next day, and they did. Little did we realize how expensive it would all be, however.

This was the view of the city of Boston from our hotel room. We really lucked out.

TUESDAY, NOVEMBER 1, 2022

We walked through East Boston Memorial Park every morning to catch the train to the downtown area. It was a short, five minute trek down a paved path that curved around the park’s soccer field. The train stopped at the Aquarium station in downtown Boston, which was an area we were already familiar with, close to Faneuil Hall and the Quincy Market. The weather was perfect the whole time we were there.
We shopped in the Quincy Market area and bought some t-shirts and postcards. We also wandered through downtown on our first day, but didn’t stray too far. We’d eventually venture out beyond the historic area to other parts of town.
I bought these unconventionally shaped postcards in one of the shops in the Quincy Market area on our first day. The round ones are about the size of coffee coasters.
We decided to splurge on lunch and had lobster rolls at a restaurant on State St. called Provisions. We had been there the last time we were in Boston and it was really good, so we tried it again. The lobster rolls, while expensive, were delicious, and were served warm on a buttery, toasted, delicious bun.
These are some of the interesting buildings we saw on our first day. We bought some souvenirs in the Old State House museum store, including the postcard below.
The Old State House building has a museum featuring life in revolutionary Boston. Ruben and I had seen it on our previous trip.
This little green space was called Post Office Square. Ruben and I stopped here for some coffee. The Fall colors were breathtaking!
The evening sky was clearer on the second night of our stay.

WEDNESDAY, NOVEMBER 2, 2022

We had complimentary breakfast in the hotel every morning. Here we are showing off our new clothes. We ended up buying lots of t-shirts and sweatshirts on this trip. Our second day in the city was about to begin. We decided to walk the entire length of the Freedom Trail.
Our first stops of the day before we hit the Freedom Trail were Commonwealth Books, City Hall and the Boston Common Visitor Center, where the Freedom Trail begins. A very nice lady helped us find our way to the Boston Common, as we were hopelessly lost. I could never figure things out in the downtown area. The streets were all crooked and curved.
I bought these two books at the Commonwealth Bookstore.

Even though we had already visited many of the monuments along the Freedom Trail, such as Faneuil Hall, we decided we would walk the whole thing after we finally we made our way to the Visitor’s Center. From there we tried our best to follow the red brick path that took us to each monument along the trail. It was a 2.5 mail trek. We had no idea it would be such a strenuous journey. It kicked our butts. We even missed visiting the Bunker HIll Monument because we were so tired.

Below are a hodgepodge of photos we took while walking the freedom trail. They are in no particular order. We did see all the buildings and monuments shown above, except the Bunker Hill Monument, but I didn’t photograph every single one, and I also photographed other stuff along the way.

We had lunch at Ye Olde Union Oyster House, the oldest restaurant in the country. We were a little bit disappointed, unfortunately. We probably would have been better off ordering something different off the menu than what we had, which I can’t even remember.
We made it across the bridge to Charleston, but just barely. The walk in the North End up to the bridge was all uphill and we were dead tired by then. We saw the USS Constitution and went on board for a bit, but we didn’t make it to the Bunker Hill monument. We bought a few things in the gift shop and caught a ferry boat back to the downtown area. Thank goodness we didn’t have to walk all the way back.

Ever since childhood, I’ve had an intense fascination with sailing ships and stories about pirates. The above photo of the USS Constitution doesn’t really capture it in all its glory, so I’ve added a few images of the ship at sea. I just love these.

Looking back, it was a great experience, and we could not have wished for better weather. It was a lovely, but exhausting, day!

Once we got to our room, we crashed and didn’t go anywhere else. We wound up ordering dinner via room service. It was way too expensive, but we had no energy left. We were done for the day.

THURSDAY, NOVEMBER 3, 2022

The following day, we were still very tired and worn out from having walked the Freedom Trail, but we did manage to get out for a little while. This time around, we ventured into Little Italy for lunch and to look at some of the churches. Unfortunately, the one church I really wanted to visit was closed. We had a delicious lunch at a place called Limoncello and walked around some before heading back to our room. It was a short day, unlike the day before.


Vintage postcards of Little Italy at the turn of the 20th century. According to one source, “by 1920, Italian immigrants and their children made up roughly 90 percent of the North End’s population and owned more than half of its residential property. The bustling neighborhood became known as Little Italy during these years and had one of the highest population densities in the world.”

Sacred Heart Church
The church was closed when we visited. The photos of the stained glass, the saints and the altar were all found on the internet. I wish we could have seen the inside.
We ate lunch at a nice Italian restaurant called Limoncello. The food was delicious. The bread was amazing.
The mural on the wall in Ristorante Limoncello was breathtaking.
We saw this vintage convertible parked in front of one of the restaurants, and this lovely home with flowers everywhere in Little Italy.
This guy sang quite well, and performed a couple of Paul Simon tunes when we were in the Quincy Market area. The two birds on either side were taking a break from fighting each other for the food inside the styrofoam container. They’re mean little guys.

We went back to our room and called it a day a bit earlier than we had planned. Again, the trek through Boston along the Freedom Trail wore us out. We also wanted to be well rested for our trip to Salem the following day.

FRIDAY, NOVEMBER 4, 2022

A map of Salem. We spent all of our time on Essex St in the tourist area.
Once we arrived, we both needed to use the restroom. The only place we could find a bathroom was at City Hall.

SATURDAY, NOVEMBER 5, 2022

We decided to visit Cambridge again. Below are some photos we took. Harvard yard was full of people, and it literally felt like it was raining leaves. The wind was blowing them all over the place. The leaves were gorgeous, floating in the air like feathers.

Such gorgeous scenery!
We got to experience Fall in Boston!

We had lunch at a place called Bartleys. It was pretty good. I had clam chowder.

When we got back to Boston, we stopped at Macy’s where Ruben bought a new jacket. We also bought dessert and took it back to our hotel room where we gorged out on it.

To Be Continued…

Christmas, 2022.

Covid has messed stuff up for everyone, and the holidays, especially in 2020 and 2021, were a really rough period for people. We lost my buddy Richard in 2020 and Ruben’s dad in 2021. A lot of other friends and family also passed away these past few years. When Christmas came around last month, however, things were looking better, and I was determined to make this holiday season a more enjoyable experience for me and Ruben. And indeed, it turned out to be a much more pleasant holiday than the last few have been.

My favorite Christmas song…

Thanksgiving turned out well. Ruben and I took his mom with us to have dinner at his brother Robert’s house. The occasion put us in the mood to start decorating the house for the Christmas season. I got the outside lights up the first weekend in December and Ruben started working on setting up the tree at that point too. It felt good to have this stuff done and out of the way. We kept the both the tree and the outside lights up through early January.

Ruben and I spent Christmas eve at home together. He made us a big stuffed baked chicken. It was delicious. The following day, we drove to my sister Irene’s house to pick up a dozen tamales and some gifts (socks etc.) she had for us. We then drove over to my other sister Becky’s house and dropped off some tamales for her. From there we went to Ruben’s mom’s house. We shared the tamales with her and Ruben’s brother Jerry and his partner Petra. Here’s a photo of Ruben’s mom with her two sons, and Petra. It’s been two years since Mr. Jimenez passed away, and we all miss him terribly, especially during the holidays. Mrs. Jimenez is 91, but active and as sharp as can be.

Petra, Mrs Jimenez, Ruben and Jerry.
It took me a few hours to get the outside lights up. The older I get, the more difficult this task becomes.
It’s a good thing I had extra strings of lights on hand. Several strands were burned out and needed replacement this year.
Getting the lights up above the awning is always a difficult task. The awning sticks out at least 3 to 4 feet, making it difficult to hang the ligths.,
We bought some new decorations this year, including the lit up Santa that’s in this photo. Ace Hardware on 22nd St had an amazing selection of holiday decorations.
Ruben and I have had this little Christmas village since 1993, our first Christmas together. Friends of his went to Germany this past year and found more little people for us to add to the village. They were the perfcet size.
The statue of the holy family on the left and the little snowman were more new items that we purchased this year. The statue is quite heavy..
Tamales and menudo, gifts from my sister Irene. An annual tradition during the holidays.

This year, I decided to send Christmas cards to my friends and family. I hadn’t done it in years, but just felt like it this year. Below are a sampling of cards Ruben and I received this year.

From Fran Gordon
From Albert and Sarah Elias
From Doreen Simonsen
My good friend Doreen’s annual Christmas letter. We met when I worked at the Undergraduate Library at the University of Michigan. She was a student intern. She’s been sending these to me since the early 90’s, and I still have all of them too!
From Emily Elias
From Shelly Black
From Carla Stoffle, my old boss at the UA Library.
From my sister Irene and her husband Phil. Irene sends me a Christmas card and a birthday card every year.
From Belisa and Frank. Belisa also sends me a Christmas card every year.
Vintage color lithograph from 1898 showing Father Christmas and his reindeer flying through the sky. I used this as my Facebook background photo this year.
I don’t remember where I found this card, but I just love its vintage look. Reminds me of Christmas when I was a little kid.
I used to decorate my trees with vintage Christmas ornaments. I found this ad and posted it on Facenbook. The colors are gorgeous.
Another Internet find.
Ruben and I were in Boston in November, and this was posted on Facebook this year. I had to keep a copy of it.
Love it! She reminds me of Patsy Stone on Absolutely Fabulous!
When I was six or seven, maybe eight years old, my parents went out and bought a silver tree and a color wheel, just like the ones shown here. I would sit and stare at the changing colors on the tree for what seemed like hours at a time.
This was my Facebook banner this year.

Ruben and I bought our families kringles again this year. They seem to really enjoy them. We didn’t buy each other anything. We stopped doing that a while back. We figure that we can buy anything we want for ourselves any time of the year, so why bother with the crowds and the congested roads at Christmastime? He gets lots of gifts from his customers at work. This year, I bought myself a brand new turntable. I consider it my Christmas present to myself.

I purchased this Sony turntable at Best Buy. It’s pretty basic, but it works and I don’t have to adjust the tone arm! It sounds great!

It was a great Christmas!

My 64th Birthday–January 15, 2023

Sunday, January 15, 2023…

Here it is. 64. I feel great today. No aches or pains or worries. I have Ruben here with me and we are content to be at home. I love my home, and my work. I am a pretty lucky guy. I don’t need anything. I’ve had a lot of fun in my life, and am content now. I am clear headed and healthy for the most part, and I am rich with music, clothes, books, a nice home, family and friends.

The first thing I did this morning was play the song “When I’m 64” by the Beatles, and then I posted it on Facebook. It brings back some very fond memories. Way back around 1967 or ’68, my brother Freddie and I would love to play my brother Rudy’s copy of Sgt. Pepper’s Lonely Hearts Club Band on his little record player in the back bedroom at home. We were just kids. Freddie was 10 and I was 7. When this song would come on, we’d dance around like Dick Van Dyke, twirling our dad’s cane around, singing every word, and getting all silly. This was one of the few times when we actually got along and had fun together. The Beatles had that kind of effect on us.

My sister Irene sent me this birthday card a couple of days early. Then this morning, one after the other, she, my friends Ernie and Nancy, and my other sister Becky all called and serenaded me with “Happy Birthday to you” over the phone. It was so touching. Armando Cruz from work sent me an online birthday card too on behalf of the Library.

The only paper birthday card I received this year was from my sister Irene.

Ruben re-arranged all his appointments so he could stay home with me. I told him I wanted to go antiquing today. He also suggested that we go to the Desert Museum, but it’s likely going to rain, so maybe not. We agreed to go for a drive and out to eat. I’ve been wanting steak.

This was a Facebook gif sent to me by my great niece Estrella.

We ended up going to the 22nd Street Antique Mall. It was a fun adventure, as always, but very crowded. I found a few things, including a Ken doll dressed up as a not very convincing pirate. I also found some old postcards and a couple of books, including a cookbook filled with recipes from local restaurants and a calendar of African American events, plus a Jackie Wilson 45 rpm single titled “To Be Loved,” which was one of his big hits.

Tucson has a handful of antique malls. This is one of my favorites.

I found a bunch of postcards of cities and states I had been to before for just $1 apiece, plus a couple of books, a record, a bank bag and a Ken doll. Neither the clerk at the shop nor Ruben liked my little pirate, but I thought he was cute. That was the problem. He was too cute. There was no eye patch, no scars or any other blemishes anywhere on his body. A long-haired pretty boy…

At around 2:30, we then went and ate at the Longhorn Steakhouse out on Broadway just east of Craycroft. I had a porterhouse steak, salad and macaroni and cheese. Ruben chose asparagus as one of his sides. Yuck. The steak was big, but a bit dry. In hindsight, I would’ve preferred the ribeye. Oh well. Next time.

From there, we drove out to the Tucson Mall to walk off some of the food, and I bought a pair of pants, a shirt and a sweater at Dillards. Oh boy. I love buying clothes. I need to start dressing up more often. I think it’s time.

Dillard’s was having a big sale, so Ruben and I both bought clothes.

Walking in the mall usually wears me out. I think it’s the concrete flooring that does it. When we got back home, it was time to take a nap!

Another Facebook graphic

Throughout the day, I spent time thanking everyone individually on Facebook for their kind birthday wishes. Altogether, nearly two hundred people sent me a birthday greeting. Some friends, like Jane Cruz and Teresa Jones and my tocaya sweethearts Emily Elias and Katya Peterson (our birthdays all fall on the same day), sent me special messages, and others simply said happy birthday. It was all so overwhelming. I feel so blessed and lucky. I need to remember this day when I get to feeling blue. I really am very fortunate!

Margo Cowan and Barbea Williams both posted this on my Facebook wall today. The photo is from a program I produced at work in 2018 in conjunction with the 1968 in America exhibit that I curated. Included in the photo are Ted Warmbrand, Barbea Williams, Lupe Castillo (Margo’s life partner), me and Greg McNamee. It was a night to remember and the last event I ever produced as curator of exhibits and events for the UA Library.

Later in the evening, Ruben went to Sprouts and bought us cake and ice cream. It was a great way to end a wonderful day.

Ruben ran to the store and got us cake and gelato. It was delicious.
Yet another Facebook gif that was sent to me.

Before I went to bed I posted a video of Rodney Crowell singing “It Ain’t Over Yet” on Facebook. I love this song because it speaks perfectly to how I feel about my life. It’s been three years now that I have been completely sober and substance-free. I finally got my act together, and life is GOOD! I am eagerly looking forward to the coming year. It is going to be a great one. I can just feel it!

I love this song.

Lyrics

It’s like I’m sitting at a bus stop waiting for a train
Exactly how I got here is hard to explain
My heart’s in the right place, what’s left of it I guess
My heart ain’t the problem, it’s my mind that’s a total mess
With these rickety old legs and watery eyes
It’s hard to believe that I could pass for anybody’s prize
Here’s what I know about the gifts that God gave
You can’t take ’em with you when you go to the grave

It ain’t over yet, ask someone who ought to know
Not so very long ago we were both hung out to dry
It ain’t over yet, you can mark my word
I don’t care what you think you heard, we’re still learning how to fly
It ain’t over yet

For fools like me who were built for the chase
Takes the right kind of woman to help you put it all in place
It only happened once in my life, but man you should have seen
Her hair two shades of foxtail red, her eyes some far out sea blue green
I got caught up making a name for myself, you know what that’s about
One day your ship comes rolling in and the next day it rolls right back out
You can’t take for granted none of this shit
The higher up you fly boys, the harder you get hit

It ain’t over yet, I’ll say this about that
You can get up off the mat or you can lay there till you die
It ain’t over yet, here’s the truth my friend
You can’t pack it in and we both know why
It ain’t over yet

Silly boys blind to get there first
Think of second chances as some kind of curse
I’ve known you forever and ever it’s true
If you came by it easy, you wouldn’t be you
Make me laugh, you make me cry, you make me forget myself

Back when down on my luck kept me up for days
You were there with the right word to help me crawl out of the maze
And when I almost convinced myself I was hipper than thou
You stepped up with a warning shot fired sweet and low across the bow
No you don’t walk on water and your sarcasm stings
But the way you move through this old world sure makes a case for angel wings
I was halfway to the bottom when you threw me that line
I quote you now verbatim, “Get your head out of your own behind”

It ain’t over yet, what you wanna bet
One more cigarette ain’t gonna send you to the grave
It ain’t over yet, I’ve seen your new girlfriend
Thinks you’re the living end, great big old sparkle in her eye
It ain’t over yet

It’s been a great birthday. One of the best. Thank you, Ruben. I love you!

R and B, Summer, 2022.