Sometimes doing too good a job of sorting is a
bad thing! Why? Because documents or photos that should be together get put in separate places. By reuniting these things, I'm piecing together a trip that my parents took the year after they were married.
For better organization, I had sorted all my photos and family memorabilia into family archive boxes (one for Mahler, one for Burk, etc.) Today I was looking at a
Schwartz box and noticed the postmark on this postcard folder sent by Daisy
Schwartz Burk and her new husband, Harold
Burk, to Daisy's parents (my grandparents), Theodore
Schwartz and Hermina
Farkas Schwartz. As usual, the grandparents were staying for a week or two in upstate New York to escape the summer heat of New York City. The postmark on this mailer says July 24, 1947.
Now look at the b/w photo above, taken at the Au Lutin qui bouffe in Montreal, dated July 16, 1947. It shows Daisy Schwartz and her husband, Harold Burk (center), with a mystery man at right. That mystery man is also in my parents' wedding photos on the
Mahler side of the family, which is why this was in my Mahler box. Daisy has a wrapped gift on her lap (is it for the mystery guy or from the mystery guy?).
**
Clearly both of these are part of the same swing through Canada at the New England border. Neither of my parents could drive a car, which means they took the train--easy enough from New York City. Who is this mystery man? Did he live in Montreal or did he arrange to meet my parents while all were visiting the city?
I'm going to put each item back in its family archive box but with a note about the trip, for cross-reference purposes
Never give up on mystery photos! You just never know when a new cousin connection will result in an "a ha" moment for unidentified relatives.
**UPDATE: The mystery man is my father's first cousin on the Burk side, whose family lived in Montreal.
That family has a copy of this photo, as well, so when I connected with them a few years ago, we were able to piece together a lot of the story!