Archive for the ‘Just For Fun’ Category

Getting to Know the New Neighbors

Tuesday, May 18th, 2010

In our community in Northwest Houston, Steeplechase Terrace Townhomes, Bayway Homes recently hosted it’s semi-annual “get to know your neighbor” party.  This is an event we have had regularly here in the community since we started building here a little over 2 years ago. 

One homeowner who was in attendance shared this comment with me via e-mail after it was over.  “I had met some of my neighbors, but not all by any means.  This allowed me to meet more of my neighbors, giving me and my son a stronger feeling of security and warmth while getting adjusted to our new home”.

Bayway Homes is pleased to be able to provide support for homeowners in new neighborhoods so they can get to know one another, making it easier to watch out for one another and just be ‘neighborly’.   We supply the hot dogs and hamburgers, the neighbors supply the fun and conversation.

Each homeowner brought something to the lunch, and one of the homeowners was kind enough to man the grill for her hungry neighbors.   As a salesman for Bayway, I am so pleased to see the homeowners getting to know one another as well as share information about themselves and their Built Better Bayway Home.

Mother’s Day… How Did This SPECIAL Day Begin?

Sunday, May 9th, 2010

The history of Mother’s Day is centuries old and the earliest Mother’s Day celebrations can be traced back to the spring celebrations of ancient Greece in honor of Rhea, the Mother of the Gods. During the 1600′s, the early Christians in England celebrated a day to honor Mary, the mother of Christ. By a religious order the holiday was later expanded in its scope to include all mothers, and named as the Mothering Sunday. Celebrated on the 4th Sunday of Lent (the 40 day period leading up to Easter), “Mothering Sunday” honored the mothers of England.Italy, Turkey, Australia, and Belgium which also celebrate Mother’s Day on the second Sunday of May. In some countries, the appreciation lasts for two days.

During this time many of the England’s poor worked as servants for the wealthy. As most jobs were located far from their homes, the servants would live at the houses of their employers. On Mothering Sunday, the servants would have the day off and were encouraged to return home and spend the day with their mothers. A special cake, called the mothering cake, was often brought along to provide a festive touch.

As Christianity spread throughout Europe the celebration changed to honor the “Mother Church” – the spiritual power that gave them life and protected them from harm. Over time the church festival blended with the Mothering Sunday celebration . People began honoring their mothers as well as the church.

With the passage of time, the practice of this fantastic tradition ceased slowly. The English colonists settled in America discontinued the tradition of Mothering Sunday because of lack of time.

In the United States, Mother’s Day was loosely inspired by the British day and was first suggested after the American Civil War by social activist Julia Ward Howe. Howe (who wrote the words to the Battle hymn of the Republic) was horrified by the carnage of the Civil War and the Franco-Prussian War and so, in 1870, she tried to issue a manifesto for peace at international peace conferences in London and Paris (it was much like the later Mother’s Day Peace Proclamation). During the Franco-Prussian war in the 1870s, Julia began a one-woman peace crusade and made an impassioned “appeal to womanhood” to rise against war. She composed in Boston a powerful plea that same year (generally considered to be the original Mothers’ Day proclamation*) translated it into several languages and distributed it widely. In 1872, she went to London to promote an international Woman’s Peace Congress. She began promoting the idea of a “Mother’s Day for Peace” to be celebrated on June 2, honoring peace, motherhood and womanhood. In the Boston Mass, she initiated a Mothers’ Peace Day observance on the second Sunday in June, a practice that was to be established as an annual event and practiced for at least 10 years. The day was, however, mainly intended as a call to unite women against war. It was due to her efforts that in 1873, women in 18 cities in America held a Mother’s Day for Pace gathering. Howe rigorously championed the cause of official celebration of Mothers Day and declaration of official holiday on the day. She held meetings every year at Boston on Mother’s Peace Day and took care that the day was well-observed. The celebrations died out when she turned her efforts to working for peace and women’s rights in other ways. Howe failed in her attempt to get the formal recognition of a Mother’s Day for Peace. Her remarkable contribution in the establishment of Mother’s Day, however, remains in the fact that she organized a Mother’s Day dedicated to peace. It is a landmark in the history of Mother’s Day in the sense that this was to be the precursor to the modern Mother’s Day celebrations. To acknowledge Howe’s achievements a stamp was issued in her honor in 1988.

It should be well to remember that Howe’s idea was influenced by Ann Marie Reeves Jarvis, a young Appalachian homemaker who, starting in 1858, had attempted to improve sanitation through what she called “Mothers Friendship Day”. In the 1900′s, at a time when most women devoted their time solely on their family and homes, Jarvis was working to assist in the healing of the nation after the Civil War. She organized women throughout the Civil War to work for better sanitary conditions for both sides and in 1868 she began work to reconcile Union and Confederate neighbors. Ann was instrumental in saving thousands of lives by teaching women in her Mothers Friendship Clubs the basics of nursing and sanitation which she had learned from her famous physician brother James Reeves, M.D. In parts of the United States it was customary to plant tomatoes outdoors after Mother’s Work Days (and not before).

It was Jarvis’ daughter, Anna Jarvis, who finally succeeded in introducing Mother’s Day in the sense as we celebrate it today. Anna graduated from the Female Seminary in Wheeling and taught in Grafton for a while. Later she moved to Philadelphia with her family. Anna had spent many years looking after her ailing mother. This is why she preferred to remain a spinster. When her mother died in Philadelphia on May 9, 1905, Anna missed her greatly. So did her sister Elsinore whom she looked after as well. Anna felt children often neglected to appreciate their mother enough while the mother was still alive. Now, she intended to start a Mother’s Day, as an honoring of the mothers. In 1907, two years after her mother’s death, Anna Jarvis disclosed her intention to her friends who supported her cause wholeheartedly. So supported by her friends, Anna decided to dedicate her life to her mother’s cause and to establish Mother’s Day to “honor mothers, living and dead.” She started the campaign to establish a national Mother’s Day. With her friends, she started a letter-writing campaign to urge ministers, businessmen and congressmen in declaring a national Mother’s Day holiday. She hoped Mother’s Day would increase respect for parents and strengthen family bonds.

As a result of her efforts the first mother’s day was observed on May 10, 1908, by a church service honoring Late Mrs. Reese Jarvis, in the Andrews Methodist Church in Grafton, West Virginia, where she spent 20 years taking Sunday school classes. Grafton is the home to the International Mother’s Day Shrine. Another service was also conducted on the same date in Philadelphia where Mrs. Jarvis died, leaving her two daughters Anna and Elsinore. So it was more of a homage service for Mrs. Reeves Jarvis than a general one conducted in honor of motherhood. Nevertheless, this set the stage for the later Mother’s Day observances held in the honor of motherhood.

Following this, it gained a widespread popularity across the nation. The Mother’s Day International Association came into being on December 12, 1912, to promote and encourage meaningful observances of the event. Anna’s dream came true when on May 9, 1914, the Presidential proclamation declared the 2nd Sunday of May to be observed as Mother’s Day to honor the mothers.

It was here in the first observance that the carnations were introduced by Miss Jarvis. Large jars of white carnations were set about the platform where the service was conducted. At the end of the exercise one of these white carnations was given to each person present as a souvenir of Mother’s Day. All this was done because the late elder Jarvis was fond of carnations.

From there, the custom caught on — spreading eventually to 45 states. The first Mother’s Day proclamation was issued by the governor of West Virginia in 1910. Oklahoma celebrated it in that same year. It stirred the same way in as far west as the state of Washington. And by 1911 there was not a state in the Union that did not have its own observances for Mother’s Day. Soon it crossed the national boundary, as people in Mexico, Canada, South America, China, Japan and Africa all joined the spree to celebrate a day for mother love.

The Mother’s Day International Association came into being on December 12, 1912, to promote and encourage meaningful observances of the event. Starting from 1912, Mother’s day began to be officially declared a holiday by some states. Anna’s dream came true when in 1914, President Woodrow Wilson declared the first national Mother’s Day, as a day for American citizens to show the flag in honor of those mothers whose sons had died in war.

The House of Representatives in May 1913 unanimously adopted a resolution requesting the President, his cabinet, the members of both Houses and all officials of the federal government to wear a white carnation on Mother’s Day. On May 7,1914, a resolution providing that the second Sunday in May be designated Mother’s Day was introduced by Representative James T. Heflin of Alabama and Senator Morris Sheppard of Texas. It passed both Houses and on May 9, 1914, President Woodrow Wilson made the first official announcement proclaiming Mother’s Day as a national holiday that was to be held each year on the 2nd Sunday of May. He asked Americans to give a public expression of reverence to mothers through the celebration of Mother’s Day:

“Now, Therefore, I, Woodrow Wilson, President of the United States of America, by virtue of the authority vested in me by the said Joint Resolution, do hereby direct the government officials to display the United States flag on all government buildings and do invite the people of the United States to display the flag at their homes or other suitable places on the second Sunday in May as a public expression of our love and reverence for the mothers of our country.”

And issuing a Mother’s day Proclamation has since then been a convention.

Nine years after the first official Mother’s Day, commercialization of the U.S. holiday became so rampant that Anna Jarvis herself became a major opponent of what the holiday had become. While honored for her part in the growth of the holiday, Anna Jarvis’ last life was miserable. As the observance of Mother’s Day enjoyed increasing popularity, new dimensions came to be added to it. This made Anna Jarvis disillusioned with her own creation. Though the original spirit of honoring the mothers remained the same, what began as a religious service expanded quickly into a more secular observance leading to giving of flowers, cards, and gifts. And Anna Jarvis was unable to cope with this changing mode of expression.

In 1934 Postmaster General James A. Farley announced a stamp to commemorate Mother’s Day. The stamp featured the famous painting “Arrangement in Grey and Black”. The painting was a portrait of the mother of James Abbott McNeill Whistler, an English artist. It was brought in to the United States as part of an exhibit in the year 1934.

Mother’s Day continues to this day to be one of the most commercially successful U.S. occasions. According to the National Restaurant Association, Mother’s Day is now the most popular day of the year to dine out at a restaurant in the United States. The occasion is now celebrated not so much with flags as with gifts, cards, hugs, thank yous and other tokens of affection. While many countries of the world celebrate their own Mother’s Day on different days and at different times throughout the year.

Today, Mother’s Day is a day honoring mothers, celebrated on various days in many places around the world. It is the day when you acknowledge your mothers contribution in your life and pay a tribute to her, often with flowers and gifts.

Keels & Wheels, Seabrook, TX

Friday, April 30th, 2010

News from Bayway Homes, Seabrook Community:   SEARIDGE

If you’re looking for something to do this weekend, check out the               15th Annual Keels & Wheels Concours d’Elegance on Saturday, May 1st and Sunday, May2nd, here in Seabrook.  You will find the largest collection of classic cars & wooden boats in the United States on display at the beautiful grounds of the Lakewood Yacht Club.  Follow the link for more information

http:/www.seabrooktourism.com/calendar.html

While you’re there check out the seabrook home page and future events.  I think you’ll see why their logo reads “Seabrook: A Year Round Resort”

When you’re done immersing yourself in automotive & marine history, stop by our Searidge Community (we’re only minutes away) for some ice tea & cookies and learn why Bayway Homes was nominated “Builder of the Year” in 2003, 2004 and 2008 by the Bay Area Builders Association. 

From the Yacht Club make a right on Nasa Rd. One.  Make a left at the light onto Hwy. 146 N.  Make a right on E. Meyer (CVS on corner).  Make a left on Todville Rd.  You will see the Searidge entrance on the left and the model in the cul-de-sac on the left when you enter.

940 Bay Sky Way, Seabrook, TX   77586

281-942-9112

Enjoy your weekend!

VACATION

Saturday, April 17th, 2010

I’m getting ready to go on my annual vacation and needed an idea for my weekly blog.  My first thought, was that since I started selling homes  in Bayway Homes Searidge Community, I feel like I am on a mini vacation every time I drive through Seabrook.  Since I had my camera with me, I took a few pictures.  Hope you enjoy the view as much as I do.  Seabrook has 15 parks & a 10 mile hike/bike trail that runs right through Searidge’s entry. 
 
 If you like what you see, please go to back to our Bayway Homes website & choose Current Communities & Searidge to see the great homes we are building in Seabrook.  Then you could enjoy an “every day” vacation too!
 
 Eloise

vacation

late 14c., “freedom or release” (from some activity or occupation), from O.Fr. vacation, from L. vacationem (nom. vacatio) “leisure, a being free from duty,” from vacare “be empty, free, or at leisure” (see vain). Meaning “formal suspension of activity” (in ref. to schools, courts, etc.) is recorded from c.1456. As the U.S. equivalent of what in Britain is called a “holiday,” it is attested from 1878.
Online Etymology Dictionary, © 2010 Douglas Harper

Skateboard Park – 1 min from Searidge

Gazebo on 2nd Street

Tennis Courts, 2 blocks walk from SearidgeBaybrook Park Playground, 2 block walk from Searidge

Fishing/Walking Trail on 2nd Street
Fishing Pier at Pine GullyFishing/Walking Trail on 2nd Street

Join us for our Grand Opening Tomorrow!

Friday, April 9th, 2010

Consider Yourself Invited to Celebrate our Newest Community in Seabrook!

Please join us for  food  &  fun  and tour 3 of our completed floor plans.

Saturday, April 10th, 11-3   * 940 Bay Sky Way, Seabrook, TX  77586

From Hwy. 146 go East on E. Meyer.  Make a Left on Todville Rd.  Make the 2nd Left into Searidge.  You won’t be able to miss us.      281-942-9112

It’s promising to be a beautiful day.  Perfect day to take a scenic drive through Clear Lake, Seabrook & Kemah & stop in at Searidge for lunch.

We would love to see you there!

It’s That Time of Year Again…

Tuesday, April 6th, 2010