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|    Message 6,351 of 6,701    |
|    Noahide Videos Bible to All    |
|    The Life of Mary Philomena Daly (1/4)    |
|    28 Jul 18 04:13:55    |
      From: noahidebooksforever@gmail.com              The Life of Mary Philomena Daly              A biography by her son Daniel Thomas Andrew Daly              with thoughts from my own life intermixed              Mary Daly was born in Kingston upon Hull in England in the United Kingdom on       the 7th of July 1937. She was the third child of Tom Baker and Gladys Baker,       her two older brothers being Terrence and Gerald. Mum and Terrence didn't get       along terribly well        she tells me, but she and Gerald seemed to get along better. Mum remembers the       war years. Hull was bombed a fair bit when she was a wee little one. She saw       real war devastation, but seemed to come through unscathed emotionally. She       liked music a bit, and        some of the stars she liked were Lonnie Donnegan and Val Doonican. She tells       me she was a bit too early for the Beatles, and doesn't appear to have had       much of an inclination for the music of the 1960s or later. We always had the       radio on in Berridale,        and she listened to that, but I don't think she really ever became much of a       fan of latter music artists, although in latter years there have been some       bands she likes, like 'The Priests' and she is fond of the lads 'The Justice       Crew' but is not really        into their music as such. More of a Father Chris Riley fan who was       instrumental with the lads. She studied at a Girls Catholic School, taught by       French Nuns, in Hull, and then worked in various jobs, before meeting my       father Cyril Daly on a Lourdes        pilgrimage in the mid 1960s. They married and Matthew, my older brother, was       born on the 21st of October 1969. They lived in Jindabyne to start with in New       South Wales, but then moved to Berridale, not far from there. My mum and dad       are big parts of my        childhood memories. There was one time when I was outside of 7 Bent Street in       Berridale were we lived and I wanted to get onto the roof. I had explored the       entire perimeter of the House and deduced I needed a ladder. Dad had a heavy       metal blue ladder (       which is currently rusting in the back yard of 29 Merriman) which I attempted       to unfold to put against the house. But I was too little and got caught in       between the folds of the ladder. I screamed and screamed for mum for a number       of minutes, before she        finally appeared. I was so thankful to her for it. She tells me that one of       her memories is me coming home from school on my first day and saying ‘Thank       God for That’. Mum has a definite English accent, still does, and has not       yet taken out        Australian Citizenship, but is a permanent resident. But she calls herself and       Aussie Pom because she has lived in Australia longer than she lived in       England. In Berridale we went to the Catholic Church from my earliest       memories. Mum and Dad would take        us in the car, the family, and I would sit there, staring at the cross, not       thinking much except that it was boring. Mum and Dad prayed the rosary at home       in those days and we occasionally had people over to pray at nights. Mum was       in the kitchen a lot        and the radio seemed to be perpetually on. I remember hearing the new songs       and learning them quickly, and liking them. Mum likes some of the old artists       from around the 1950s, but doesn’t really listen to them at all. She listens       to classical music        mainly when she listens to music. There was a time when Grandma Gladys in       England sent us a big box of stuff from England. We got lots of surprises. Mum       would visit Mrs Luchetta in Berridale a lot and some of the other Berridale       residents. She always        seemed to be very chatty, and we would stay behind after church was finished       for mum to chat to her friends, which she has never stopped doing after church       and still does. I remember that Mum went into hospital a while after Greg was       born, and she had a        miscarriage. I figured that out in time. When Greg was little I remember       wanting to hold him, but mum said Brigid would, because she was older or       something like that. We travelled to Cooma via the bus when we started school.       I remember one time, coming        home, we had missed mum at the bus stop in Cooma and came home alone. There       was a big doll she had made, and I was ever so grateful to her and hugged her       for it. It meant the world to me and I really loved my mother for it. I       remember riding my first        bike out the front of 7 bent street on the road. Mum would look at us and I       would shout ‘Watch me’ as all kids do.                     [continued in next message]              --- SoupGate-Win32 v1.05        * Origin: you cannot sedate... all the things you hate (1:229/2)    |
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