Jessup Hits The Lincoln Highway
From the Imaginactory Archives
Mary Josephine “Jessup” Sanderling (1885-1983) was my great-grandmother. This is a page from a vacation journal written in her hand, circa 1934. Unfortunately, I have been unable to find the rest of the manuscript. Hopefully, it will be discovered one day amongst the many documents I have yet to catalog. I have left spelling as it appears in the manuscript, though I have standardized punctuation for the sake of clarity. (more…)
William Sanderling and the Lowly Sheep

My triple-great grandfather William Sanderling was a sheep farmer in the mid-19th century. His stock was directly descended from Thomas Jefferson’s sheep, which he bought from George Washington, who had received them as a gift from the Marquis De Lafayette. So they were French sheep. William Sanderling gave up farming after becoming a successful songwriter, made a wagon load of money at it, and eventually built a whopping big music store where Hibb’s Dept. Store is now located. Known as Sanderling’s Wonderful Music Emporium, at one time it was one of the largest music stores in the country and sold instruments from violins to banjos as well as sheet music of his spirituals, which were shipped to all corners of the earth except for Islamic countries. Many of the church tunes you’ve had stuck in your head, if you go to church enough for them to stick, were written by William Sanderling. Find yourself singing a hymn one Sunday morning with a sheep metaphor in the lyrics? It‘s likely one if his, for he may have left the sheep but the sheep never left him. (more…)










