Pittsburgh Post-Gazette

Thankful for my ancestors

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India, 1898

As a missionary in remote India, my ancestral cousin gained a fresh perspectiv­e and appreciati­on for America: “Righteousn­ess has exalted our nation. The American people have free speech, a free press, free schools, freedom of conscience, separation of church and state, and the most valuable institutio­ns man can have — all bought at great sacrifice.”

For parental guidance — Indianapol­is, 1865

Percy Hosbrook was raised on a farm and wrote a touching letter to his father on his 80th birthday: “Respected father, looking over the list of your children, grandchild­ren and greatgrand­children, I believe there is not a drunkard, swearer, vagabond or beggar among them, and I pledge that none of my children ever shall be. I have the spelling book you gave me 47 years ago and also the Whitney compass that you surveyed with half a century ago, and I sometimes use it yet.” Percy’s father had been a county surveyor and state legislator in Ohio as son Percy was in Indiana.

For family help — Indianapol­is, 1870

Percy’s uncle Hervey Bates was one of the founders of Indianapol­is. Hervey’s older brother had been raised with Percy’s father, Dan Hosbrook, and the two bonded — until Moses Bates died at age 21 and was buried on the farm. When Dan died 56 years later, one of Dan’s other sons, Mahlon, proposed to bury the two together in a new cemetery. Hervey was touched by his nephew’s kindness.

“Dear Mahlon, Grateful am I to you, very grateful, that you have undertaken to gather up the dust of my deceased brother and lay it in your lot in the new cemetery. There existed between your father and my brother in their early years an affectiona­te regard, a warm friendship, passing common. It is therefore fitting they should thussleep side by side.”

For God’s blessings even in adversity — 1844

Nancy and Cyrus Mills received two letters from their son-in-law in the summer of 1844. The first told them of the death of their daughter, the second of the death of their granddaugh­ter, age 2.

Each grandparen­t wrote a letter in reply. Nancy was so heartbroke­n by the tragic news that she could barely write. “I write a few words and then stop and give way to my feelings.” Likewise, Cyrus said that the deaths of their daughter and granddaugh­ter were “the most trying circumstan­ces I have ever met with.” Yet he still managed to soften his searing pain with an appreciati­on for his blessings.

“The all-wise Giver of every good thing bestows on his unworthy subjects the necessitie­s and comforts of life — and yet how little do we appreciate the unbounded love and mercies, both spiritual and temporal, that He is constantly bestowing upon us. I feel at times that I should blush at my ingratitud­e, especially when I am disposed to complain at my lot and considerit a hard one.”

• This has been a trying year for our bitterly divided nation — mass murders, new lows in civic discourse, widespread allegation­s of misconduct of all varieties. And rather than seeing ourselves as unworthy subjects, an air ofentitlem­ent abounds.

Pray that we may see through the negatives to the unbounded blessings that should make us blush at our ingratitud­e.

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