“The 1970s, As I Lived Them” — A First‑Person Narrative from Paul A. Goss

Researched and Written By: Don Goss I don’t think anyone realizes they’re living through a defining decade while they’re in it. At the time, the 1970s just felt like life—busy, loud, full of responsibility, and moving faster than I could always keep up with. But looking back now, I can see how those years shaped …

The Wind before the Crossing – An Ancestral Saga of the Goss Family, 1550–1662

Researched and Written By: Don Goss Chapter I. The Edge of England (c. 1550) The wind came screaming off the Channel long before the storm clouds appeared. In the village of Charmouth, where the cliffs of Dorset rose like broken teeth above the sea, the Goss family had learned to read the weather the way …

The Coming of the Goss Family to America — A 17th‑Century Story

Researched and Written By: Don Goss Prologue — The Wind Before the Storm England in the mid‑1600s was a land of tension. The Civil War had left scars on every village, every hearth. Taxes rose, harvests failed, and the old fishing towns along the southern coast felt squeezed between poverty and the sea. Rumors drifted …

The Goss Family of Danville, Maine — A Narrative History

Researched and Written By: Don Goss Long before the Goss family ever set foot on the rocky soil of Maine, their story unfolded along the salt‑stung coast north of Boston. Generations of them lived by the rhythm of the Atlantic—its tides, its storms, its hard‑won harvests. It was a world of fishing boats, narrow harbor …

The Setting Sun

Researched and Written By: Don Goss By the mid‑1930s, Harry and Ruby Goss moved through each day with a quiet, steady purpose. They had said it often enough that the children could have recited it themselves: every one of them would finish high school. That was the family covenant. Harry and Ruby would work as …

The Gift of Love

Researched and Written By: Don Goss TRANSPORTATION — A WORLD HELD TOGETHER BY HORSEFLESH AND HOPE In the early years of the Harry Goss family, the world beyond the farm felt farther away than any map could show. Leaving home meant preparation—long, exhausting preparation. Chores first, always. Then baths drawn from water heated on the …

Fun on the Farm

Researched and Written By: Don Goss The Goss farm was never a quiet place—not in the years when Harry and Ruby’s boys were small. Life there moved with the rhythm of chores and seasons, but beneath it all ran a current of laughter, mischief, and the kind of joy that only a Maine farm could …

These We Loved

Researched and Written By: Don Goss James F. Goss lived out his final years on the Goss farm, a quiet presence whose shadow stretched long across the family’s memory. He died in 1917, only seven weeks after little Elwood was born. Ruby would later say, with a mixture of sympathy and honesty, that her father‑in‑law …