Visit the blogs linked below following this post to read more and feel free to join the party by posting a tribute on your blog and adding the link in the comments.
I asked the vendor if I could please have a look at the ephemera of the beautiful and intriguing woman behind the glass.
“Which one?”
“The one with the tiara, please.”
“Ah, yes. She’s a favorite of mine. footnoteMaven is her name.”
“footnoteMaven? That’s a unique name.”
As he handed me footnoteMaven’s ephemera he replied, ”She’s a unique lady.”
“How much?”
“Thirty dollars.”
“Sold.”
I usually dicker on the price a little, but it didn’t seem right to try to talk down the price of the woman with a tiara in one photo and a crown in another. To do so seemed, I don’t know, common.
I rushed home, and began to look her up online. Who was footnoteMaven?
According to this online tree and family website I found ~ all of which had been completely sourced ~ the Royal Line of Mavens to which she belongs was long and distinguished. One of her great-uncles, Prince citationMaven, had overseen all the citations for the royalMavens until his passing, and because he passed without issue, all of his responsibilities were handed down to footnoteMaven. While she is responsible for all of the Royal Maven family’s footnotes, her specialty, if you will, is photos and their stories.
Was it possible that these pieces of ephemera that I had found and bought were those that had been stolen? [And I wonder if robberBaron has been questioned in the case of footnoteMaven’s stolen ephemera? I definitely would have questioned him.] However, one thing was for sure. I had to find where she was today.
It didn’t take me long to find where she was living. [Oh, the joys of the internet.]
I’m conflicted by my finds, though. I’m saddened by the fact that she lost her precious items, but I’m selfish as well. I’m actually more saddened by the fact that I know that I’m going to have to do the right thing, and try, at the very least, to contact her and return her items.
Perhaps, I’ll gaze a little more at her ephemera. Perhaps I’ll research her a little more. Perhaps I’ll contact her tomorrow.
There is one thing I’ve learned by all of this. No one can ever own footnoteMaven. She owns me. And she owns you. She holds us all in captivity, and we are none the wiser as we are entranced by her youthful beauty and sage advice.
And her handy dandy footnotes.
And the jewels on her crown and tiara.
I’m definitely enthralled with those.
~Caroline
Credits and Sources:
Please note that these photos were used without footnoteMaven's permission. That's right. I borrowed them without asking. [Perhaps robberBaron is in my family tree. Oooh! Does a family member of a Baron get a bejeweled tiara?] Anywho, while I borrowed the images without asking, I'm not common enough to not cite them for goodness sakes.
- footonoteMaven. "Earth Day - Birthday Graphic." footnoteMaven, 22 April 2009. www.footnotemaven.com/2009/04/earth-day-birthday.html : 2012.
- footonoteMaven. "Profile Picture." footnoteMaven, 10 Dec 2010. http://www.facebook.com/media/set/?set=a.431072607947.214851.621697947&type=1 : 2012.
- footonoteMaven. "fM Queen." footnoteMaven, 28 Feb 2008. http://www.footnotemaven.com/2008_02_01_archive.html : 2012
- footonoteMaven. "Cutarug." footnoteMaven, 15 Feb 2008. http://www.footnotemaven.com/2008/02/all-right-mr-demille-im-ready-for-my.html : 2012.
- footonoteMaven. "robberBaron." footnoteMaven, 15 Feb 2008. http://www.footnotemaven.com/2008/02/all-right-mr-demille-im-ready-for-my.html : 2012.
- footonoteMaven. "fM Vogue Cover." footnoteMaven, 24 Feb 2008. http://www.footnotemaven.com/2008_02_01_archive.html : 2012
Please follow the links below for more of this birthday tribute to footnoteMaven:
The Educated Genealogist, by Sheri Fenley
The Family Curator, by Denise Levinick
Geneablogie, by Craig Manson
Healing Brush, by Janine Smith
A Sense of Face, by Rebecca Fenning
Shades: Birthday Edition -- A Teacup Throne at Moultrie Creek, by Denise Olson
What's Past is Prologue, by Donna Pointkouski








