Showing posts with label Amundsen. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Amundsen. Show all posts
Wednesday, February 4, 2026
Thursday, January 8, 2026
GRANDMA RIGBY'S QUILT CLUB ~~~Shared by Greg Rigby

Our Grandma's are Hettie Amundsen and Sylvia Anderson. (Layne and Myself)
LuAnn Hamilton Greenwell, Milburn.
Sade Rigby (Sarah) is Kathy Rigby Hafen's Grandmother. (She is the tall lady in back and center). I don't see Aunt Mary Jensen. She was grandma Rigby's sister and was also a member of this club.
Note: Sade Rigby is listed as Sarah Rigby on Grandma's handwritten note.
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A Real Treasure!
I tell my very tall grandchildren that this is where they get their tall genes.
Monday, October 5, 2020
GRANDMA'S QUILTING CLUB
Our Grandma's are Hettie Amundsen and Sylvia Anderson. (Layne and Myself)
LuAnn Hamilton Greenwell, Milburn.
Sade Rigby (Sarah) is Kathy Rigby Hafen's Grandmother. (She is the tall lady in back and center). I don't see Aunt Mary Jensen. She was grandma Rigby's sister and was also a member of this club.
Note: Sade Rigby is listed as Sarah Rigby on Grandma's handwritten note.
Monday, January 23, 2017
Home of Lee Ross Christensen and wife Eva Lenora Parke ~ Researched and Compiled by Tudy Barentsen Standlee ~ Comments by son (Lee R. Christensen)
KATHY: We started construction on the house we
latter called “the white house” mid Spring 1934 and hoped to be in by school
starting time or mid-September.
Construction was delayed during the summer when our two carpenters,
Charles Jacobsen and Ferry Peterson took time away from our job to help build
the CCC camp. The Wright family did the
cement work. Oscar Amundsen and Charles Christensen (Minnie Rutishauser’s
father) did the brick work and the Bohne’s the plumbing and electrical. And we moved in just before Thanksgiving
1934.
Our architect was a Mr. Young from Salt Lake
City and rumored within the family as a major architect on a number of LDS
temples. He was unhappy with what he
considered three major mistakes by our builders. The outside brick wall was to have been
constructed with “weeping mortar” giving it a very rough look. While the mortaring
is thicker than usual it is not weeping.
The exterior 2nd floor walls went into the roof line by about 8 inches
and had been curved up to meet the roof.
That curving was to have been carried out thru out the 2nd
floor on the interior walls even though they did not need it to meet the roof.
And the roof shingling was to have been given a wavy effect (I never knew how).
Our family lived here for 10 happy years
with these artistic mistakes until we sold in 1945 to the incoming Superintend
of Schools. lee
Sunday, April 17, 2016
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