The Big Scoop

Here in St. Helena my grandpa, Maurice Gilbert, has dozens of rare ice cream scoops. He’s been collecting these scoops for 50 years and still is.

He has a banana split disher from 1928 and a Hamilton Beach No-Pak scoop from 1925.

The rarest in his collection, from 1926, is the “cold dog.” It’s a long tube for a special cone.

He also has the Dan Dee ice cream sandwich dipper from 1920, the profit scoop from Thrifty Stores where ice cream cones sold for 5 cents, also a Dover, N.H. 1927 scoop with a unique cut-off feature that sliced the ice cream, and a tower of ice cream scoop dating to 1940.

A variety of the ice cream scoops are arranged in an ice cream cone-shaped cabinet that he made. The cabinet also contains scoops from the late 1800s that dispensed ice cream by turning a key which operated two blades on the inside of the scoop to release the ice cream on the cone.

He still searches out other rare scoops he knows are waiting to be found.

(Editor’s note: Lisa Butala is a fifth-grader at Howell Mountain School. She is proud of her grandfather, who operated the Big Dipper soda fountain on Oak Avenue with his wife, Esther, the shop’s founder, from 1980-2004.)image

Peter and Magdalena Simmer

Peter and Magdalena Simmer
Our Zimmer(Simmer) German roots can be traced back to 1805 and my great great great grandparents Peter and Magdalena Simmer living in Dalheim, Remich, Grevenmacher, Luxembourg where they were farmers. In 1842 the emigrated to America with their three small children Nicholas, John and Peter. They settled near relatives in Manitowoc Rapids WI and continued as farmers. They would have 6 more children.

Dalheimimage

Farms in Dalheim

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Manitowoc Rapids

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Great great grandmother Christina Henrikson Grek

#WaybackWednesday #SvenkaFamilj #Grek #Birthdays~ This is the 180th birthday of my great great grandmother Christina Henrikson Grek ..Born in 1836 in Elfsbacka Sweden, in 1868 she emigrated to Cocato Minnesota with her husband Lars Grek and three small children, the youngest only four months old. She would have five more children after settling in Cocato. She is buried in the Cocato Lutheran Cemetery. The postcard pictures the Elfsbacka countryside.

Homeland

Homeland

Zimmer COAimageimageimage -My DNA profile says I’m 21% German but those German roots cover a number of different geographic areas. The Zimmer(Simmer -Semmer) families are from, Luxembourg, specifically Dalheim, Remich, Grevenmacher. This is rich farm country and this was the Simmer occupation and the occupation Peter Simmer took up when he settled in Manitowoc WI
Zimmer COA, Dalheim countryside