Bayram Cigerli Blog

Bigger İnfo Center and Archive
  • Herşey Dahil Sadece 350 Tl'ye Web Site Sahibi Ol

    Hızlı ve kolay bir şekilde sende web site sahibi olmak istiyorsan tek yapman gereken sitenin aşağısında bulunan iletişim formu üzerinden gerekli bilgileri girmen. Hepsi bu kadar.

  • Web Siteye Reklam Ver

    Sende web sitemize reklam vermek veya ilan vermek istiyorsan. Tek yapman gereken sitenin en altında bulunan yere iletişim bilgilerini girmen yeterli olacaktır. Ekip arkadaşlarımız siziznle iletişime gececektir.

  • Web Sitemizin Yazarı Editörü OL

    Sende kalemine güveniyorsan web sitemizde bir şeyler paylaşmak yazmak istiyorsan siteinin en aşağısında bulunan iletişim formunu kullanarak bizimle iletişime gecebilirisni

How to Get to High Speed Train in Ankara?

There are several public transport alternatives to access to Ankara Train Station where both high speed trains and main line trains depart/arrive.

Ankara City Map
Ankara City Map. 

From/To Ankara Esenboga Airport

Distance is about 29 km. By taxi, it costs 75 TL (€ 25)*
Public Bus : Bus no 442-3. Departures every 20 minutes.
Havas (Airport Shuttle) : Calls at Havas Terminal, 700 mt away from Ankara Main Train Station. Departs from airport 25 minutes after every landing.
From/To Ankara Main Bus Station (ASTI)
Distance is about 5 km. By taxi, it costs 15 TL (€ 5)*
Ankaray : Closest station of Ankaray Light Metro is Tandogan, 800mt to Ankara Main Train Station by walk. Walking through underpass may be hard in rainy days. There’ll be a direct connection to Maltepe Station after High Speed Train Station is completed. It’s under construction next to Main Train Station.
Public Bus : Bus no 442-3. Departures every 20 minutes.
From/To Points in City Center
Distance to Kizilay, city center of Ankara is 3 km. By taxi, it costs 10 TL (€ 4)*
Metro : Closest station of M1 Metro, giving service between Kizilay and Batikent, is Ulus, 750 mt to Ankara Main Train Station by walk.
Ankaray : Closest station of Ankaray Light Metro is Tandogan, 800mt to Ankara Main Train Station by walk. Walking through underpass may be hard in rainy days. There’ll be a direct connection to Maltepe Station after High Speed Train Station is completed. It’s under construction next to Main Train Station.
Suburban Train : Ankara suburban trains are calling at Ankara Main Train Station. Suburban trains are giving service between Sincan ve Kayas, every 5-20 minutes.
Public Bus : There are many public buses calling at Ankara Main Train Station.
* As of 08.12.2015, calculated by taksiyle.com

The Polish Exodus To Iran in World War 2

In light of the horrific deaths of refugees & migrants crossing into Europe and the alarming xenophobic sentiments that are being spouted on the radio waves, I have decided to bring attention to an almost forgotten footnote in history; the Polish refugees of Iran.

A Polish woman decorates her tent, in an American Red Cross camp in Tehran, Iran. 1942
Why were the Polish in Iran?
Time for some backstory. It's September 1939 - Germany and the Soviet Union have invaded Poland and partitioned the country between the two. To say life was miserable for the Polish at this time would be an understatement. The Soviet Union interned over 320,000 Polish citizens and deported them to Siberia for work in the infamous Gulags. Another 150,000 Poles died, in gruesome massacres such as the Katyn massacre. Stalin began emptying Poland of anyone who could resist the occupation. First went military officers and their families, then the intelligentsia, and last anyone with wealth, influence or education.

Fast forward to 1941 and Nazi Germany launched a full-scale invasion of the Soviet Union (Operation Barbarossa, the largest military campaign in history). Officially on the side of the Allied powers in July 1941, Joseph Stalin signed a Polish-Russian agreement that led to the foundation of a Soviet-backed Polish army that was to be made up of Polish prisoners of war who were 'pardoned' from the Gulags. The formation of such an army would take place in British-occupied Iran.

With news of their mass release, Poles began to slowly make their way towards Iran. With the Polish government in exile unable to assist their compatriots, and the Soviets refusing to allow access to trains to facilitate their exodus, fatalities due to hunger, the Siberian cold, violence, disease and simple exhaustion were high. By August 1942, a conservative estimate suggests more than 115,000 Poles (included 40,000 civilians) fled to Iran. At most, it is thought 300,000 Poles fled.

Camp Polonia:

The soldiers who enlisted in Anders' Army (named after its commander Władysław Anders) regrouped in Bandar Pahlavi, Mashhad and eventually Ahvaz, before being transferred to British command in Mandatory Palestine.

Young Polish refugee at a camp operated by the Red Cross in Tehran, Iran. Nick Parrino, 1943
The civilians were left in the refugee camps that sprawled up around the country. Having first arrived in the port of Bandar Pahlavi (now Bander Anzali) on the northern Iranian coast, a makeshift city comprising over 2000 tents (provided by the Iranian army) was hastily erected along the shoreline of Pahlavi to accommodate the refugees. It stretched for several miles on either side of the lagoon: a vast complex of bathhouses, latrines, disinfection booths, laundries, sleeping quarters, bakeries and a hospital. Every unoccupied house in the city was requisitioned, every chair appropriated from local cinemas. Nevertheless, the facilities were still inadequate.

The Iranian and British officials who first watched the Soviet oil tankers and coal ships list into the harbour at Pahlavi on the 25th March 1942 had little idea how many people to expect or what physical state they might be in. Only a few days earlier, they had been alarmed to hear that civilians, women and children, were to be included among the evacuees, something for which they were totally unprepared.[4] The ships from Krasnovodsk were grossly overcrowded. Every available space on board was filled with passengers. Some of them were little more than walking skeletons covered in rags and lice. Holding fiercely to their precious bundles of possessions, they disembarked in their thousands at Pahlavi and kissed the soil of Persia. Many reportedly sat down on the shoreline and prayed, or wept for joy.

They had not quite escaped, however. Weakened by two years of starvation, hard labour and disease, they were suffering from a variety of conditions including exhaustion, dysentery, malaria, typhus, skin infections, chicken blindness and itching scabs. The spread of typhus in particular was deadly to such an extent that 40% were hospitalised and a large proportion later died.
Overcrowded ship crossing the Caspian Sea to Pahlavi

Gholam Abdol-Rahimi, a struggling photographer in Pahlavi, emerged from bed to witness ships disgorging disheveled refugees. Abdol-Rahimi's photographs are perhaps the most complete account of the catastrophe. But his work was never recognized or published.

Pahlavi was only a temporary shelter. Refugees were later dispersed to more prepared camps in Isfahan (Isfahan in particular being dubbed as the 'City of Polish Children'), Tehran and Ahvaz.

More than 13,000 of the arrivals in Iran were children, many orphans whose parents had died on the way. In Russia, starving mothers had pushed their children onto passing trains to Iran in hopes of saving them.

As the war dragged on, most refugees continued their journey away from the Soviet Union, reaching Pakistan, Palestine and British East Africa & South Africa, eventually to the United Kingdom and the United States.

The Polish cemetery in Bander Anzali (Pahlavi)
In all, 2,806 refugees died within a few months of arriving and were buried in cemeteries around Iran. Their alien names and the dates on their tombstones chronicle a calamity, even to a visitor without knowledge of their history. Etched on row after row of identical tombstones is a single year of death: 1942.
Polish military cemetery, Tehran.
Further reading:
Forgotten Polish Exodus to Persia - Washington Post
The Exile Mission: The Polish Political Diaspora and Polish Americans, 1939-1956. Anna D. Jaroszyńska-Kirchmann. page 26-27 
The Polish Deportees of World War II: Recollections of Removal to the Soviet Union and Dispersal Throughout the World. Tadeusz Piotrowski. page 10-12.

John "The Boyne Water Major" Montgomery and Family

The property of John Montgomery
It's a frustrating truth that as much as I'd like to be able to tell the complete stories of the places and people of Mill Creek Hundred, there are some subjects that just refuse to be totally revealed. With a lot of families, for instance, I can trace them back just so far, then they become a confusing jumble. Of all the clans who have frustrated me in this way, few have done so as much as the Montgomerys. There were unquestionably Montgomery families who were prominent in MCH society in the 18th and 19th Centuries, but there is precious little information about many of them, especially as you get deeper into history.

There was, for instance, an Alexander Montgomery who ran the Rising Son tavern in Stanton in the early days. There was also an Alexander who co-founded the first mill in Milltown in 1747. They may or may not have been the same person. A Samuel Montgomery purchased land from the Robinsons near Milltown in 1766, and William Montgomery built the house that still stands along Old Limestone Road, over 200 years ago. Again, these men may or may not (I think they probably were) have been related -- there's just no good data I've come across yet to make a firm connection.

Although all of these Montgomerys deserve to have their tales told (and hopefully I'll be able to do that someday), right now I'd like to focus on a different (and apparently unrelated) branch of the clan. This line of the family has its own rich heritage, and thanks to some typically fabulous work by old deed-miner extraordinaire Walt Chiquoine, we have a pretty decent grasp on who they were and where they lived. And as a bonus, I hope to have an interesting follow-up to this story sometime in the near future.

The story of this family in MCH begins across the sea, in Ayrshire, Scotland, about 1665. It was then that John Montgomery was born, son of another John. The younger John is almost always referred to in family writings as "The Boyne Water Major", a title he received from events in 1690. By that time the family (or at least John, Sr. and his sons) had relocated to Ireland and were part of the army fighting for the new rulers of England, William and Mary. Only two years earlier, at the behest of a group of nobles, King James II was overthrown by the Dutch William of Orange and his wife, Mary. Mary was the Protestant daughter of James, and the coup was undertaken to ensure that James' newborn (and Catholic) son would not inherit the throne.

In July 1690, the armies of James and William met at the Battle of the Boyne, about 30 miles from Dublin. In this battle the elder John Montgomery (a Major) and two of his sons were killed. His surviving son, John, was soon-after promoted to Major in the regiment, earning the title he'd keep the rest of his life. The Williamites (which included the Montgomerys) prevailed, basically ensuring the continued Protestant hold on the English throne.

Outline of John Montgomery's property
Jumping ahead now about 40 years, sometime around 1730 John and his family emigrated to America, and ended up in Mill Creek Hundred. Some accounts have him here as early as the mid-1720's, but what we do know is that in 1731, John purchased 766 acres from the Penn family. As you can see from the illustration above, the property was located in the eastern part of the hundred, around the intersection of Old Wilmington Road and Brackenville Road.

By the time he came to America, John and Margaret (Dunbar) Montgomery had four sons. It's not quite clear what happened to the eldest, named John, but he doesn't appear to have made it to this area. One story says he may have perished at sea, while other evidence suggests he settled in Virginia. Whatever the case, the other three Montgomery boys -- Alexander, Robert, and Thomas -- did all settle in MCH, at least for a while. They were all young adults in their early 20's by the early 1730's, and likely helped their father work the farm.

The division of the Boyne Water Major's land

We have no definitive date of death for the Boyne Water Major, but clues point to John Montgomery's passing as being in about 1750. He left no will or probate records, but the wills of his sons make fairly clear who settled where. (And huge thanks to Walt for digging through them and mapping everything out.) Robert received the northern part of the tract, Thomas the southwestern section, and Alexander settled in the southeastern portion. It seems that at least Alexander was settled in his land by 1746, as he died that year and his property was willed to his son John. We'll get back to this lot in a moment.

Thomas Montgomery remained on his southwestern portion of of the tract until his death in 1799, at age 87. The property then went to his son, Moses (1766-1856). It was Moses then, who in about 1823* constructed a new stone house a little south of Old Wilmington Road. The house faces southeast, overlooking the bulk of the property. Eventually a private road ran in front of the home, connecting Old Wilmington Road and Lancaster Pike. This ultimately became Mitchell Road, as the house later passed through the Ball and Mitchell families.

* -- The 1823 date comes from the NCC Parcel Search website. However, the home's current owner has found that an 1822 tax assessment lists Moses as having a stone barn and log house, while in 1828 they are both listed as stone. This at least makes the 1823 date plausible. Also, an 1808 date stone likely moved to the house from the barn when it was demolished in the 1970's seems to date the older stone barn to that year.

The home of Moses Montgomery
The northern portion of John Montgomery's tract was passed to middle son Robert. As Walt's diagram indicates, the exact northern and southern boundaries of this lot are not precisely clear -- not too surprising when they mark lots out with things like trees, stumps, and rocks. Robert Montgomery (1710-1779) seems to have been a bit of a real estate guy, and owned land in Chester County in addition to the property he inherited from his father here in MCH. When Robert passed away, his MCH land went to son Robert, Jr. (who, incidentally, we're not quite done with). Much of this property eventually ended up in the hands of Chandler Lamborn. This was the farm mentioned previously in the post about Dutch Billy.

The Montgomery land, further divided

The last bit of the Boyne Water Major's original tract, the southeastern portion, belonged to Alexander Montgomery (bef.1710-abt.1746). As mentioned, Alexander died several years before his father, and his land was passed to his son, John. John eventually moved south, to North Carolina, most likely about 1773. In that year, he sold most of his property (300 acres) to William Tate. However, two years before, John sold the western end of his inheritance to his Uncle Robert. What makes this lot interesting is that as early as 1777, there was a tavern on this property.

Two different 1777 maps, one American and one Hessian, note the tavern. The Hessian map gives it the name of the Harp and Crown -- Irish symbols. In case there was any doubt, Scharf specifically lists Robert Montgomery as the proprietor of a hotel at Mt. Pleasant in 1797. Scharf also states that the inn closed in 1885, with William Reese as the last owner. To this point there has been little written about the Harp and Crown, or Mt. Pleasant Inn (at least that I'm aware of). If more information comes to light, I'll be sure to follow up.

This has by no means been a complete history of the Montgomery family in Mill Creek Hundred -- not even of this one line. However, getting at least this much straight greatly helps lead towards a larger understanding of the overall history. And as noted at the top of the post, I hope to have at least one related follow-up in the near future. The Boyne Water Major and his family certainly deserve their place in the story of Mill Creek Hundred.

Biz Var Ya Biz

Var ya var ya ayrı yazılırmış!!!

Haftanın Sorusu

    Göz kelimesinin sesteşi nedir?
     

Dilsiz Dünya Haritası

10.Sınıflar İçin Dilsiz Dünya Haritası Tıklayınız

Jang Min Lee

Jang Min Lee
Misc. Pictures






'İki keklik, bir kayada ötüyor' türküsünün hazin hikâyesi










Anadolumuz, ozanların söylediği gibi, dağı taşı baştan başa
türkü olmuş memleketimizdir. Asırlar öncesinden biraraya gelerek, bazen hüzünlü ve kederli, bazen kıpır kıpır sevinçli duyguların dile geldiği türkülerimiz…
Kökleri bize ait olan ve bizi, bize anlatan türkülerimiz. Televizyonun olmadığı
yıllarda, radyolardan dinlediğimiz, belki daha önce hiç gidip, görmediğimiz
Anadolu

"Write your name in Korea!" ~ Sevda mı yoksa?



Evet geçtiğimiz aylarda Korea Tourism Organization'un düzenlediği 'Adınızı Kore Sokaklarına Yazın!" isimli bir kampanyasına katılmıştım. Aralık başında elemeler sonuçlanmış ve kitapçıklara basılacak isimler seçilmiş. Evet doğru bildiniz o isimlerden birisi de benim. Mailime gelen, şenlendiren bir bildiri sayesinde haberdar oldum. 

Tabii ki Seoul'un birebir sokaklarına adınızı vermiyorlar. Bu etkinliğe katılan 23.000 isimden birisi olunca Sang Sang Gil bölgesindeki caddeye isminiz yazılıyor. Tıpkı 'Hollywood Yıldızları Caddesi' gibi. 

Bizzat gidip göremeyecek olsam da bir şekilde sizi mutlu eden bir etkinlik :)





Kim Chang Geun

Kim Chang Geun
Modeling Musclemania Nov. 2015