Another Favorite Photograph
This
is the house in Moline, Illinois where my mother's Swedish
grandparents lived with their six children. My great-grandmother
Stina Ellstrom Ahl proudly poses with her brood in front of the
house. If you zoom in on the photo you can see a ghostly figure in
the window peering out on the proceedings. That would be Stina's
husband, John Albert Ahl. Judging from the few things my mother ever
said about her grandfather, that would seem to be in character. From
my mother's perspective, he was kind of a loner, sat in his chair a
lot reading his Swedish newspaper. It would be like him to literally
take himself out of the picture.
My
grandmother Ellen is the frowny little girl on the left. Next to her
is her younger sister Lillie. The other girl on the bench is Aunt
Phoebe, the oldest of the Ahl children. And the little one in the
long white dress standing in front of the bench? That's my mother's
Uncle Herbert! On the porch in a high chair is baby Aunt Mabelle.
Uncle Leonard has not yet been born, placing this photo in about
1895.
I'm
guessing that this house may have become the Ahl family's home
shortly before the picture was taken. The newly planted sapling to
the left, the somewhat make-shift wooden walkway from the street to
the front door, and what might be the beginning stages of a fence—all
the kind of projects that new homeowners might undertake.
In
2015 I took a trip to Moline to do some family research, and I
located the house at 1029 17th Avenue. It was still recognizable in
spite of having been turned into a duplex. The center window on the
second floor had evidently been sacrificed in the remodeling. Gone
also was the detailed trim of the porch and the roof, replaced with
skimpier, more utilitarian material. And I'm pretty sure that that is
aluminum siding in place of the wooden clapboards on the original
house. The sapling either never
matured at all and died, or it grew too big, cast too much shade, and
was felled. The wooden walkway was replaced with a cement sidewalk.
Still,
the basic appearance of the old Ahl home is nearly the same almost
one-and-a-quarter century later.