Jocelyn's first soccer practice
McKailyn at preschool....
Spring break day at CoCo Key indoor waterpark
Neighborhood Easter Egg hunt
Easter
Jocelyn's first soccer game
Building our new backyard playset
Now with us all scattering across the country, hopefully we will all still be able to keep in touch and up to date on all the great things happening in each others lives.
Jocelyn's first soccer practice
McKailyn at preschool....
Spring break day at CoCo Key indoor waterpark
Neighborhood Easter Egg hunt
Easter
Jocelyn's first soccer game
Building our new backyard playset
It was during the dark winter of 1864, at Petersburg, Virginia. The Confederate Army of Robert E. Lee faced the Union Divisions of General Ulysses S. Grant. The war was now three and a half years old and the glorious charge had long since given way to the muck and mud of trench warfare.
Late one evening one of Lee's Generals, Major General George Pickett, received word that his wife had given birth to a beautiful baby boy. Up and down the line the Southerners began building huge bonfires in celebration of the event. These fires did not go unnoticed in the Northern camps and soon a nervous Grant sent out a reconnaissance patrol to see what was going on. The scouts returned with the message that Pickett's wife had a son and these were celebratory fires. It just so happened that Grant and Pickett had been contemporaries at West Point and knew one another well; so to honor the occasion Grant, too, ordered that bonfires should be built.
What a peculiar night it was. For miles on both sides of the lines fires burned. No shots were fired that night, no yelling back and forth and no war was fought; only light celebrating the birth of a child. But it didn't last forever. Soon the fires burned down and once again the darkness took over. The darkness of the night and the darkness of war still loomed heavily over the men and the nation.