What's ironic to me, is that Phenie seems like exactly the kind of
woman you'd want to name your daughters after.  Although, Phenie is
pretty awful.



--- In [email protected], "Kate Jones"
<[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
>
> --- In [email protected], "Elizabeth Collins"
> <ecolins@> wrote:
> >
> > Maybe he didn't like the name Herman. My great grandmother was
> named Agnes, but hated it. By the
> > time I came around, everyone called her Grandma Joe. Her second
> husband was named Joe and we
> > called him Grandpa Joe. Even my mother and grandmother used
these
> nicknames, so I'm not sure who
> > originated them, or when. I don't remember how old I was when I
> figured out that her name was not
> > Joe, and that Joe was a first name rather than a last name.
> >
>
> My great-great grandmother was named "Josehpine," detested her
name,
> and refused to answer to "Jo," so the family called her "Phenie" 
> (rhymes with "teeny").  She said "if you love your daughters,
don't
> name them after me!" 
>
> She was quite a character.  At 80 she fell over a footstool and
> insisted that the family tell everyone that she got it in a beer
> brawl because she didn't want people to think that she was a
little
> old lady who falls over footstools. 
>
> She also raised my grandmother, who learned early in her dating
years
> to be ready when her date showed up.  If she wasn't Phenie would
play
> craps with the young man in question and take all his money.  (My
> brother swears the dice were loaded and round with wear, but I
doubt
> he ever saw them.)  If Phenie didn't like my grandmother's suitor,
> she wouldn't give him his money back.
>







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