Lillian Archer (Yates) and Maurice Holland

my great-grandmother and her second husband

As I have noted, my second-great-grandfather, James Archer, married Harriet Bell in the 1850s and had two sons before the Civil War, Morgan and James. Then James fought in the war.
He returned, and the couple had two more children, Lillian and Frederick.  Lillian Archer married Edward Yates (b. c. 1850) in the early 1890s. After their first daughter died young, they had four children (F, M, M, F) between 1897 and 1908, living at 13 Maple Street in Binghamton, NY.  The eldest surviving child was Gertrude, who became my maternal grandmother. But Edward Yates died in March 1911, coincidentally around the time that James Archer passed away. 
Maurice Holland
Less than five months after Edward died, the widow Lillian Archer Yates married Maurice Holland, b. 1856. I know very little about him, except that he was likely Mexican, according to the 1920 Census, and that his native language was Spanish. The 1930 Census said he was from Texas, and that he spoke English.  
In the 1940 census, he was an 85-year-old stationary engineer for a cold storage plant. He died in 1943, five years after Lillian, even though she was about a decade younger than he was. 
How does that happen that a guy marries a widow with four children under 14 the same calendar year that her first husband died? I dunno.
Tintypes
Lillian Holland tintype
The images came from the tintypes I found in my baby sister’s living room in Charlotte, NC, in May 2026. What’s that?
From Wikipedia: A tintype, also known as a melanotype or ferrotype, is a photograph made by creating a direct positive on a thin sheet of metal, colloquially called ‘tin’ (though not actually tin-coated), coated with a dark lacquer or enamel and used as the support for the photographic emulsion. It was introduced in 1853 by Adolphe Alexandre Martin in Paris…
“Tintypes enjoyed their widest use during the 1860s and 1870s, but lesser use of the medium persisted into the 1930s, and it has been revived as a novelty and fine art form in the 21st century. It has been described as the first ‘truly democratic’ medium for mass portraiture.”
A photography studio created the before-and-after images of Lillian and Maurice.
Maurice Holland

FFAPL book reviews for late June/July 2026

July 7 reviewer is MOI

The Circuitry We ShareHere are the Albany Public Library book reviews for late June/July on Tuesdays at 2 pm in the large auditorium at the 161 Washington Avenue branch, sponsored by the Friends and Foundation of the Albany Public Library.  

June 23 | Book Reviews | Money, Lies, and God: Inside the Movement to Destroy American Democracy by Katherine Stewart and The Shadow Gospel: How Anti-liberal Demonology Possessed U. S. Religion, Media, and Politics by Whitney Phillips and Mark Brockway.  Reviewer:  Frank Robinson, JD, philosopher, author, & blogger. Frank plugged his review, happening today. 

June 30 | Author Talk | Molly Dunn discusses & reads from her psychological thriller, The Circuitry We Share.

The Circuitry We Share is a disorienting psychological thriller exploring the magnetic pull between people wired to feel deeply and those who only mirror emotion. It will resonate with anyone who has fallen in love, only to realize the person they trusted was a perfect stranger.
The Pattersons

July 7 | Book Review | African-Americans in the Wyoming Valley, 1778-1990, by Emerson I. Moss.  Reviewer:  Roger Green, MLS, business librarian retired from the NY Small Business Development Center. I picked this book because I have an ancestor, and indeed, a whole family to whom I am related, mentioned substantially in this book.   

July 14 | Book Review | The Omnivore’s Dilemma: A Natural History of Four Meals by Michael Pollan.  Reviewer:  Hailey Hamias, FFAPL board member & community development professional..

July 21| Book Review | Shadow Ticket, a detective novel by Thomas Pynchon.  Reviewer:  Dan Wilcox, peace activist & noted local poet.

July 28 | Book Review | The Left Hand of Darkness, a sci-fi classic by Ursula K. Le Guin.  Reviewer:  David Brickman, photographer & FFAPL treasurer.

Allergies and Ask Roger Anything

in the contract

I thought I was sick. But then I decided the stuffy head/runny nose/cough/sneezing was probably allergies. It’s primarily because my daughter and I traveled to Charlotte, NC, in mid-May, and then to Prospect Park in Brooklyn TWICE in the first week of June.

They are, of course, south of Albany, NY. And, oh yeah, my daughter has similar symptoms. And I’ve been so busy/tired/loopy that I haven’t even written WHY we went to Brooklyn twice. 

When I told my Wordle buddy Matthew how I was feeling, he sent me a link to the song “Allergies,” a fairly obscure tune by Paul Simon, which had been running through my head as well. 

The ask

So I find it more efficient/lazier to ask y’all to Ask Roger Anything. Like the Sunday Stealing prompt, I generally find it easier to respond to prompts when I’m sick/tired/overwhelmed than to create complete sentences. 

If you would be so kind as to ask me whatever. Because it’s the contract, I will answer almost any question, no matter how off the wall. Moreover, I’m likely to respond fairly quickly, since the reserve of posts has been dwindling this month.
I would like to answer the Colbert Questionnaire – yes, I know that’s not how he spelled it – if someone were to ask. (Unsubtle hint.)

You can leave your questions in the comments section of this blog, in my email, referenced elsewhere on this blog, or on my Facebook page (Roger Owen Green); always look for the duck.

  

57th Ordnance Ammunition Company

Father’s Day

I had written about my father’s military history in the past, notably here and especially here, but because some records of the war were lost, I never knew where he was other than in the European theater of operations in 1946, beginning in February.

Well, not until May 2026, when I found this picture at my sister Marcia’s house in Charlotte, NC. I have actually used a copy of this picture in the past. 

But I had not seen the other side. By his own hand, he describes that he was a Provost Sergeant of the 57th Ordnance Company. Here’s a history of the unit, whose “duty was the procurement, storage, and distribution of ammunition.” Further, “the 57th Ordnance Ammunition Company remained in Germany until 10 December 1946, when it was officially inactivated.” That month was also when my father was mustered out of the military.  

NYPL

This item from the New York Public Library intrigued me:

Harris, Charles E., 1923-1996
Schomburg Center for Research in Black Culture, Manuscripts, Archives and Rare Books Division | Sc MG 767
0.25 linear feet (1 box)
During World War II, Charles Edward Harris was in the all-Black 57th Ordnance Ammunition Company, whose duty was the procurement, storage, and distribution of ammunition. The Charles E. Harris World War II memorabilia collection includes two handwritten and typed histories of the 57th Ordnance Ammunition Company, love letters, two handkerchiefs, and a booklet.

 

This means that at some point I need to go to the NYPL to see whether Les Green appears in the documents. Or more specifically, MY Les Green. There are a lot of WWII soldiers named Leslie Green who are NOT the right fellow, such as this guythis guy, and this guy.

This is my Father’s Day post, with one more nugget to explore.

Les Green

Sunday Stealing Goes to the Mall

Welcome to Sunday Stealing. Here we will steal all types of questions from every corner of the blogosphere. Our promise to you is that we will work hard to find the most interesting and intelligent questions. Cheers to all of us thieves!

This week’s meme is inspired by Melanie at This Ain’t New York. We’re indulging in a little retail therapy. Tell us what you would pick up at each stop. Sunday Stealing Goes to the Mall.

Shopping Day. What’s on your shopping list from …

First, let it be known that I HATE most shopping. I remember one winter that my wife was going to buy me a coat. We went to J.C. Penney, and I tried on two coats. The second one fit and looked fine. “I’m ready.” She wondered, “Don’t you want to keep looking?” “NO!” Did I mention that I hate most shopping?

1. Target or Walmart, or other superstore?

My disdain for Walmart is well-documented here from 2013; it’s too big, as I was reminded the last time I went there. It is the largest supercenter in the United States. Target has been subject to a boycott, described here.  A Costco is coming to the area on August 6, and it will have a massive footprint.

2. Dollar Tree or Dollar General, or poundstretcher/99p store?

Dollar stores tend to creep me out, with a bunch of stuff that I don’t really need. If I really need to shop, I’ll go to Lodge’s, a downtown Albany store that’s been around for nearly 160 years! I wrote about it here in 2018. The last time I went there, I bought socks, shirts, and sunglasses.

NOW we’re talkin’!

3. Best Buy or any other electronics/appliance store?

I have gone to Best Buy for electronics and, more pressingly, to get stuff fixed. The last thing I bought there was a boombox with a two-year warranty; it works better than some cheaper ones.

4. Book/music store?

I used to LOVE to go to record stores in Albany. Blue Note, Strawberry’s, World’s Records, et al. Last Vestige is the only one left, as far as I know, because I ain’t going to Walmart et al.

I went to several bookstores as well, but my favorite has long been The Book House in Stuyvesant Plaza. Oh, I was reminded that my good friend Norm Nissen, who worked there and provided great book selections, died ten years ago this very month; I miss him a lot.

Bonus question! Where do you want to stop for lunch? 

There’s a stretch of places less than two blocks from my house:  Junior’s (especially between 11 am and 2 pm),  Cafe Madison, and others. Also, across from the Washington Avenue library, the Iron Gate Cafe.

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