New Hampshire Glossary: Pocket

If you are wondering how a simple word like “pocket” ended up in this glossary….

you are assuming that American clothing always had pockets as we know them today….

Taint true.

According to the “Very Brief History of the Pocket,” the type of pocket that we are familiar with today was not in use until sometime in the late 1700s.

So what did people do before that time?

A colonial “pocket” was a removable cloth bag used for holding “pocket books” (wallets), sewing paraphernalia, and other things that girls and women wanted handy throughout the day. These pockets were tied around the waist with a ribbon, or thin strip of cloth. They were often decorated with embroidery (as shown in the example photograph).

Ah, now the poem you heard as a child is starting to make sense

Lucy Lockett lost her pocket,
Sally Fisher found it,
Not a penny was there in it
Just a ribbon ’round it
.

Note: there are some who claim that the original verses of that poem were:

Molly Ocket lost her pocket,
Lydia Fisher found it,
Lydia carried it to the mill,
And Uncle Noah ground it
.”

If you are now intrigued enough to want to create a colonial woman’s pocket, I’m providing a wonderful pattern, along with a lesson plan for any parents or teachers who wish to share this with their students.

Never take your pockets for granted again 😀

Janice

P.S.: For more words, visit my New Hampshire Glossary page

Posted in New Hampshire Glossary | Tagged , , | Leave a comment

Cow Abduction: Warn A Loved One

It’s a serious problem. Countless cows have disappeared from dairy farms everywhere.

And the numbers of missing cows are on the rise

Click on this link to learn more.

Could this traumatizing experience be the reason behind Vermont’s “massive outflux of young people”?

Janice

P.S.: I’ll be sure to keep my cow indoors at night from now on. 😀

Posted in Cow Stories, Humor | Tagged , , , | Leave a comment

Manchester NH City Hall

Posted in History | Tagged , , , | Leave a comment

The Genealogue Strikes Again: Beat Your Grandmother With a Stick

Just when you think you can’t shed another tear

Chris Dunham of The Genealogue strikes again…

#1 in his Top Ten Spring Genealogy Projects is:

1. Hang your grandmother on the clothesline and beat her with a stick until she comes clean.

Read more….

Janice

Posted in Humor | Tagged , , , | Leave a comment

New Hampshire’s "Lakawaka": Terror of the Isles of Shoals

An enigmatic entry in an 1872 story speaks of something terrible–“self-illuminating, like a glow-worm,” that was “seen for many years near the shore” of the Isles of Shoals

What exactly was a “Lakawka“?

The intriguing chapter is taken directly from “Ancient and modern Isles of Shoals: from their first discovery to the present time” by Dr. M. Tzl. Montegeu; Boston: G.Alex Emery, 1872, page 32.

An Ancient Allegory
An unpublished tale in connection with one of these islands, but which one
is not stated, consists of the following, which seems more miraculous than ancient tales of the Northern Kraken, or even our modern ghost feats:–“LAKAWAKA, who is represented as self-illuminating, like a glow-worm, was seen for many years, near the shore, still holding the lyke-wake of [over] the body of her deceased husband.”  This exhibition to mariners, on the darkest nights, was to their superstitious minds a constant terror, so much so that they invariably gave this island a wide berth after nightfall
.

We can deduce that the Lakawaka is apparently is a female entity since  “it” is holding a “lyke-wake of the body of her deceased husband”…

I had not heard the term lyke-wake before.  Apparently a lykewake is a Scottish term for a wake where family members, friends and neighbors take turns watching the corpse, to prevent it from being occupied by demons before it is buried… Oh?

I grew up in a half-Irish family… so I am familiar with an Irish wake… the only demons I ever saw were the bottled kind.

That the term “lykewake” is Scottish, is not a huge surprise. The Scotch-Irish immigrated in large numbers to this area around 1719, and a few before then.  My Uran ancestors were hardy Isles of Shoals fishermen by the mid 1600s.

White Island certainly has tales associated with it of a Lady ghost, presumably one of Captain’s Kidd’s many wives, left behind to guard his treasure, but not her husband’s body, as is stated in the mysterious book chapter.

So even after quite a bit of research, I haven’t figured out if this “Lakawaka” is a ghost, or a sea creature.    I could find a few stories about the sighting of ghosts, but only one mentioning “glowing” and certainly none about sea monsters.

In her story, Among the Isles of Shoals, (p. 586) Celia Thaxter talks of a male ghost on Appledore Island, that of “Philip Babb, or some evil-minded descendant of his” who haunts the place. One eye-witness of the spectre said the “stripes in the frock gleamed like phosorphescent light, so did the awful eyes..”

I’ve heard of self-illuminating sea creatures, but not the kind that show up at the same spot on a regular basis.

Perhaps it is time for New Hampshire to have its own official state monster… after all we don’t want to be left out.

–  Vermont has its “Champ” of Lake Champlain.
– Maine has its own version of the “Bigfoot” story … or maybe not, I’ve heard rumors that he died..
– Even Massachusetts has its monster shark and monster tax stories..

Now New Hampshire apparently has its very own glowing “Lakawaka.”

If you have knowledge of the Lakawaka, please let me know (or even if you just want to take a stab at figuring what it was).

Janice

Posted in Haunted New Hampshire, History, Irish in New Hampshire, Travel | Tagged , , , , , , , , | 1 Comment