Living LloydJones

Living LloydJones

Female

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Generation: 1

  1. 1.  Living LloydJones (daughter of Living LloydJones and Living Viviani).

Generation: 2

  1. 2.  Living LloydJones

    Living + Living Viviani. [Group Sheet] [Family Chart]


  2. 3.  Living Viviani (daughter of Living Viviani and Living McFarlin, daughter of Living Viviani and Living McFarlin).

    Notes:

    University of New Mexico graduate with an english and history major.

    Children:
    1. Living LloydJones
    2. 1. Living LloydJones


Generation: 3

  1. 6.  Living Viviani

    Living + Living McFarlin. [Group Sheet] [Family Chart]


  2. 7.  Living McFarlin (daughter of Living McFarlin and Claire Joyce Baker).

    Notes:

    CLAIRE JOYCE MCFARLIN (1930 to present)
    (Research by Peter Folsom McFarlin Aug 2019)
    Claire Joyce McFarlin is the only child of Kirk Charles (Mac) McFarli n and Claire Joyce (Baker) McFarlin. She was born in Flint, Michigan D ec 14 1955 after her parents had moved there to be near Mac's Genera l Motors Institute training. In 1957/ 58 her mother took her to Somervi lle, MA while Mac continued his flying career in Guatemala.

    Claire's father Mac sent Peter an email 23 June 2008;
    "...Regarding my daughter Claire Viviani, I have not kept in touch wit h them. My work with the Government kept me all over Central and Sout h America, and most of the time my only contact was with Washington DC . As mentioned before, time flys. H er brother Christopher, I have neve r met. He wasn't mine and I have not seen their mother since we split . One of these days, I'll renew with Claire and Tom. They're good peop le. ....Kirk"

    Claire e-mailed Peter July 10, 2008;
    "Hi Peter,
    Let me start giving you some of the information that you requested, a s I was just able to verify it with my mother.
    My father was stationed at Camp Lejune, N.C., that is where the US Mar ine Corp. comes in. My mother (Claire J. Baker) and father (Mac) me t on a train as he was returning to N.C. from Newark.
    They were married June 19, 1954. He was discharged from the Marines, a nd moved to Flint, Michigan where he attended General Motors Tech., an d studied engineering. I was born Dec. 14, 1955. Mac became very inter ested in flying and started takin g lessons in Flint, where he got hi s flying credentials. Shortly before graduating from GM he decided tha t what he really wanted to do was fly, and did not finish the GM progr am. He sent my mother and me back to Boston, where her parents live d , and he pursued his flying career.
    Mac must have made contacts in Guatemala City during this time, as h e and my mother decided that she and I would move down to Guatemala an d they would try again. This would have been in 1959.
    At the time he was crop dusting with a bi-wing plane. He was not hom e very much as his work took him out of the city a lot. After that wa s when he had the air-service business at the airport, because I remem ber going to hanger. During this tim e I attended the American School a nd continued there for the 10 years I lived in Guatemala, an excellen t school which provided me with a bilingual education. When I was abou t 9 years old my parents decided to get divorced, as they seem to ha v e gone their separate ways; each of them remarried Guatemalan citizens . Shortly after that, my father moved to Liberia, Africa, with Gina, h is new wife. We remained in Guatemala until 1969 when we moved to An n Arbor, Michigan.
    I'm not quite sure if my father had already joined Air America or no t at this point, but he definitely had by the time he went to VietNam . I have letters from these places, so I will try to find out more fo r you, and get back with you. Also Pet er, my mom said that you are wel come to call her if you have any questions that maybe I have not answe red. Her phone number is: ----- (Claire Sagastume). It was great chatt ing with you, sorry I'm a little slow, a lot going on right now, b u t I always have time for anything to do with family. I'll get more inf ormation to you as soon as I can.
    Good luck, and keep in touch. Claire"

    Another e-mail from Claire to Peter; Oct 23 2008
    "Hi Peter,
    Everything here is well, hectic as usual. Since I last communicated wi th you we started a master bath/master closet re-model and I had foo t surgery. The surgery went wonderful, and the re-model, well, is stil l going on (it seems more difficul t when you husband is the contractor ). I'm glad to hear all is well with you and your family.
    Our trips: there were three. The first was in 1970, which Grandma Poll y (Adelaide) took me on a 6 week guided tour of Europe, starting in En gland, by bus, and finishing in Italy. Absolutely fabulous. The follow ing year both Kirk and Adelaide to ok me to the Far East during my Chri stmas Holiday, for about 4 weeks. I especially remember celebrating m y 16th birthday in Tokyo, which was our first stop. They had a Japanes e friend that joined us. After, we went to Kyoto and then Taipei an d M anila. Then we returned to Taipei where we spent Christmas. Grandpa (K irk) must have had some type of business he was taking care of durin g this trip as I met a couple more friends (Chinese) and one of thei r wives who joined us for dinner . Then it was on to Hong Kong and Bang kok and HuaHin. After this part of the trip we headed to Beirut and af ter that, home.This too was a wonderful experience, and I definitely g ot the impression that a lot of it was business, as Grandma an d I di d other things, like shopping, swimming and Kabuki Theater. The last t rip was with Grandma, to Greece. I was already in College, and I thin k it was because she had always wanted to go and had never had the opp ortunity, and she knew how m uch I loved Ancient History.
    Every summer after we moved back to the States (1962-63) I would try t o go out and visit and I would spend a couple of weeks with them. Gran dma taught me calligraphy (which she did so beautifully) and Japanes e flower arranging (Ikibana) and Chi nese cooking with a real wok (in t hose days, that was impressive). We always managed to get in to New Yo rk at least once - by train, bus and subway, and go to the Metropolita n Museum, and could not come home unless we stopped at the Chuck-Full - O-Nuts and bought a dozen of their donuts. I also would help Grandpa i n the (home)office. This was after he had retired from his job in th e city (which he too rode the train into), and had resumed working a t home for Rife Hydraulic. I would h elp with typing letters, sending i nformation to people who requested it and general office work.
    Well Peter, I hope this gives you a little bit of insight into their l ives. I will be getting the other paperwork off to you also. Sorry i t has taken me so long, and let me know what else you need, and if I c an help, I will. Another thing, I do n't think my father had a middle n ame. I distinctly remember Grandma Polly telling me they were going t o name him Kirk Patrick, but after he was born, she couldn't see givin g such a small child, such a long name, so they left it as Kirk McFar l in. What do you think?
    Talk to you soon, Claire"

    July 8 2009 Claire to Peter;
    "Hi Peter and Karen,
    Sorry I wasn't able to get back to you before you went off to Europe . Your Central American trip sounds fantastic as does your European o ne. The early spring is my time to be outdoors and prepare the yard an d gardens for the summer before th e heat sets in. I had a late start t his year as we went to Puerto Vallarta, Mexico in January on vacation.
    Then I went out to be with my Mom in Jan. for her knee surgery, and ag ain in Feb. My daughter kept urging me to hurry and get the seeds plan ted or we would be late. Last year she and I discovered planting our o wn heirloom tomatoes, not to menti on numerous other curiosities. We ha ve rainbow colored beets and carrots, every kind of hot pepper you ca n imagine, peas, string beans, eggplant , numerous herbs-especially di fferent types of basil. So if I disappear off the the radar, I can pr o bably be found out in the garden. We have nothing structured, we jus t create as we go. This year we grew so many tomato plants (purple, wh ite, pink, black, etc.) that we just stuck them everywhere, includin g around our pool. To my daughter' s amazement, even though we were lat e, our plants have managed to catch up to everyone else's. Our tomatoe s are now the size of a pool ball. Christina is actually the one tha t pushes me to all the strange varieties, but since she lives and wor k s in Albuq. and mainly visits on week-ends, I stay pretty busy. I'll s end pictures as soon as I get out there and take some.
    Your pictures of Guatemala are great. My Dad looks real well, and actu ally doesn't look much different. Marine life must agree with him.
    We would love for you to stop by on you way through. It would be grea t to meet you both. Just keep me posted as to the dates you are planni ng on coming.
    Take care, Claire"

    April 8 2011, Karen and Peter stayed a night in their R/V at Claire Vi viani's home in Albuquerque. NM .

    April 14 2011, email from Claire:
    "...We so enjoyed meeting and spending time with you both. It really w as a treat, and it is great to know we have such lovely people as par t of our family. Thank you for sharing with us stories about your fami ly. Please keep us posted on everyo ne. We haven't forgotten the pictur es, will get them to you soon.
    Be safe, and we hope you make it home in time for Easter.
    Your Cousin Claire"

    Claire's mother, Claire Sagestume, passed away August 19, 2011 at ag e 78. Peter had continued corresponding with her until just before sh e passed.

    July 20 2019, Peter to Claire;
    "Hi Claire,
    (Don't know if this email will reach you?)
    Hope all is well with you and yours?
    I'm back to updating the stories about our McFarlin families. It's bee n 8 to 10 years since the last re-write of family info.
    I do know that Polly McFarlin passed in 1999 and Everett B in 2001 - b oth in Houston
    Your mother Claire passed in 2011 - have a nice obit for her with phot o. She was quite helpful with a few details about how she an Kirk Jr m et and their life in Guat. I found copies of your 1962 Pan Am immigrat ion cards when you returned with h er to Arlington, MA.
    btw Is your middle name Joyce or Baker or something else?
    Could you help me fill in any new stuff about;
    You and Paul (more kids - ha ha?? events etc)
    Christina (married, kids etc)
    son Joseph Thomas (married kids etc)
    And, of course, your father, my 1st cousin Kirk ("Mac"). I've heard th at he had returned from Guat with recent mini-strokes. I hope he is st ill OK?
    I'll send these updated bio stories as pdfs on to you when done. (wit h pics and maybe sound clips from my 1974 interviews with Kirk and Pol ly in NJ)
    I also have a very recent article I wrote for the MacFarlane Clan publ ication; Loch Sloy! In it are many parts and links to our MacFarlane h eritage and Archaeology of our ancient Loch Lomond castles and strongh olds which I have been involved wi th for the last ten years. It is a s earchable pdf. (Didn't your son have a MacF crest tattoo?) If this ema il reaches you OK then I'll send it along.
    Karen and I are just fine; healthy and active. Moved three years ago f rom Woodstock, CT into a nice roomy new condo in nearby Putnam. See ou r nine grandkids often and still travel for three winter months to F L state and private parks in trust y R/V motor home. Even took a mont h in Colorado in it last Oct. Also rented a rural cabana in Hopkins, B elize for ten days in Dec 2018. Flew - not drove!!
    We're planning a double cruise (one western Med and one eastern Med) f or 11 days each with 3 days in Rome between cruises. This for 25 day s in Sept coming. Various ports in different countries.
    Send as much info as you care to for the update of these stories.
    Many thanks
    cousin Peter"

    July 20 2019 Claire's e-mail to Peter;
    "Hi Peter,
    Yes, my email is still the same. So glad to hear from you and that yo u are still continuing with the McFarlin stories.
    Let me see how I can help.
    I am married to Thomas Paul Viviani (Tom). Have two children, Christin a Michelle born in 1985, and Joseph Thomas born in 1989.
    Christina is married to Daniel Lloyd Jones, from Wales, UK. They hav e two girls, Nia Claire Lloyd Jones and Alexandra Eiry Lloyd Jones an d live in Albuquerque. Christina works for Abbot Medical Devices.
    Joseph is still single, and yes he has the tattoo of the McFarlin cres t, This I will defend. He is a trained chef, but has taken a break fro m that for awhile and is flipping houses in the Denver area with his a unt.

    I am Claire Joyce McFarlin Viviani, and my mother was Claire Joyce Bak er (McFarlin, then Sagastume).
    Tom and I still have T.Viviani Construction, but are doing just enoug h to keep him semi busy. I help our daughter with their kids, and in t he summer spend a lot of time in the garden. We too have been enjoyin g a little bit of traveling. Two yea rs ago went to Italy for a coupl e of weeks and last year went to Spain for a couple of weeks.
    I haven’t heard from my father for a couple of months, so I don’t kno w how he is doing. He had told me about the stroke and had stopped smo king, and he said he was trying to sell the house in Guatemala and mov e back to the States.
    Thanks for the update, let me know if there is anything else I can hel p you with. Will be looking forward to reading the PDFs and anything e lse you send.
    Many thanks to you,
    Claire"

    Children:
    1. Living Viviani
    2. 3. Living Viviani


Generation: 4

  1. 14.  Living McFarlin (son of Charles Kirk McFarlin and Adelaide Sutherland Hollenbeck).

    Notes:

    KIRK CHARLES (MAC) MCFARLIN (1930 to present) - U.S.MARINE - Contrac t and U.S. Gov't AIR PILOT
    (Research by Peter Folsom McFarlin, Kirk's paternal 1st cousin - draf t of Jan 17, 2011, updated Aug 12, 2019)

    Most of the following quotes in italics are from the Feb 9 2009 one ho ur interview between Peter McFarlin and his cousin Kirk "Mac" McFarli n in the Mary Ranchon Restaurante, Fronteras, Guatemala - between th e Rio Dulce and Lake Izabel.

    YOUTH
    Kirk Charles McFarlin was born in East Orange Memorial Hospital, New J ersey (NJ), on July 13, 1930, the second child of Charles Kirk and Ade laide (Hollenbeck) McFarlin who were living at 24 Delwick Lane, Shor t Hills, NJ at the time. (About 192 8 his mother Adelaide had given bir th to a baby girl who did not live.) Both he and his father were name d after their New Jersey/Ohio pioneer ancestors, the Andrew Kirk(patri ck) family. Kirk was often called Peter by his parents, so as not t o b e a 'junior'. Later in life he was called 'Mac'.
    Kirk grew up there in Short Hills, NJ with his parents, younger brothe r Everett and a housemaid.

    PHOTO OF MOM, KIRK AND ALLIE NEAR HERE

    Mac; "I knew her; Peggy - and I thought she was a doll - she was a ver y, very nice girl. Of course I knew Donald, your dad, and I think abou t the last time I saw him was when his mother died ...(1949). I neve r knew Donald because he was never a round when I was and I was never a round when he was, I guess.
    Kirk attended the fine local grammar schools nearby but his parents se parated him from his brother Everett.
    Mac says "... there were conflicts between me and my brother, he was n ot in my world. They kind of had me going to different schools. Howeve r, Tabor got me - I was there for two and a half years. A year of summ er school and my two last years o f high school."
    So, by 1947 he went to Tabor Academy in Marion, Massachusetts and grad uated from that preparatory school in 1949. Coincidentally, Kirk's fir st cousin Alison McFarlin's later-to-be husband, Leo Convery, also att ended Tabor, from 1948 to 1952. Wh en I (PFM) asked Kirk and Leo if the y knew of each other, they both told me they slightly remembered the o ther while at Tabor.

    MARINES, CLAIRE BAKER, GENERAL MOTORS, FLYING
    Two years later, by April 23rd 1951, Kirk had mustered into the U.S. M arines and was PFC in the 4th Recruit Trng Bn in Quantico VA. (MOS 350 0 basic mtr veh transport). In July 1952 he was in Hq Co 2nd Ord Bn 2n d Marine Div. (MOS 3531 heavy tran sport driver and repair). Then, in J an 1953, still in transport, he was in Camp Lejeune, NC. Fortunately , he was not called to the Korean war conflict which was officially fr om June 25 1950 to July 27 1953, when a cease-fire was agreed to.
    When asked about Peter's father, Donald, Mac said; "I knew Alice an d I knew your dad in Jamaica...They were in business in a little retre at for professional people about 15 miles outside of Kingston, up in t he mountains. I was in the service an d our ship put into Kingston an d we were aboard ship (in the Marines). That was in about 1952 or 195 3 because we were down in the Carribean on an island off Puerto Rico . For some reason we went to Kingston at that time. It was about a ten -da y layover. At which time I grabbed a taxi and I went up to see you r dad who was up in the mountains, and drank lots of rum - ha,ha."
    In 1953, while riding a train from his NJ home returning to his NC Mar ine station, Kirk met Claire Baker of Melrose, MA who was traveling t o Miami. She was twenty-one and he twenty-three. They corresponded, da ted and later married at Trinity Ch urch in Boston, MA in June, 1954. H e then went to Michigan with Claire and enrolled in the General Motor s Tech School there where he took business courses. While in Flint, Ki rk became very interested in flying and started taking lessons and g o t his flying credentials. Shortly before graduating from GM, he decide d what he really wanted to do was fly full time, and so left the GM pr ogram.
    Mac; "And then on to college. That was the whole idea, to get me int o college. ...I went to General Motors Institute. It started off to b e a dealer/management course, then it went from there to engineering . One semester before I graduated, I qu it...because you were in schoo l part-time with General Motors, and they found out I was flying. The y didn't like that and they gave me a choice; either flying or workin g for General Motors. ...I could see myself out on the street after sp endi ng the good years of my life and with nothing. So I left them an d went to flying."
    Kirk and Claire had one child; Claire Joyce McFarlin, who was born 1 4 Dec of 1955, in Flint, MI. Claire, and their daughter Claire, live d variously in Flint and then Melrose, Massachusetts with her family w hile Mac pursued his flying career.

    GUATEMALA
    Peter's question; "What first brought you to Guatemala?"
    Mac; "It was on a trip to Venezuela ... about the end of '55, afte r I married claire in '54. - I flew down....it was in a Piper...it wa s a small single engine - tail dragger type"
    Peter; "You flew the plane?"
    Mac; "Yeah, my father was on a business trip for RIFE and wanted to se e some people in this country, and then all the way down into South am erica, but I got here and I liked it - so I stayed here and he kept o n going, in a commercial plane. I g ot here in Guatemala and I liked it ..."
    Kirk's father's business; the Rife Hydraulic Engine Manufacturing Co , had contracts in central America and so he flew his father to Guatem ala where they engineered and installed, for the coffee industry, som e of the gravity-impulse water system s made by Rife. These systems ar e non-electric, purely hydraulic/mechanical and are perfect for drivin g a percentage of confined, flowing water back uphill, especially in p laces where there is no electricity.
    Mac; "...and I stayed. And I went back to the States and got my commer cial license, because I had signed a contract with two farms to crop d ust their cotton. So I stayed in the crop dusting business, really u p until the time we left for Africa. "
    So, Kirk fell in love with the country and decided to stay there. Clai re and their daughter rejoined him there in Guatemala City in 1959. Hi s daughter Claire (McFarlin) Viviani wrote Peter in 2008 ; "he and m y mother decided that she and I woul d move down to Guatemala and the y would try again. This would have been in 1959. At the time, he was c rop dusting with a bi-wing plane. He was not at home very much as hi s work took him out of the city a lot. After that was when he had an a ir- service business out at the airport, because I remember going t o a hanger...He shared close quarters with Guatemalan workers while i n the dusting business and quickly learned Spanish. During this tim e I attended the American School and continue d there for the ten year s I lived in Guatemala, an excellent school which provided me with a b ilingual education... When I was about nine years old my parents decid ed to get divorced, as they seemed to have gone their separate ways; e ach of th em remarried Guatemalan citizens. Shortly after that my fathe r moved to Liberia, Africa with Gina his new wife."
    Mac; "...so, that was my start here in Guatemala, and I liked it and t he money was good. I got here about 1957. In 1958 I made a company 'c ause in the aviation here they passed a law saying no more pilots coul d come in for crop-dusting unles s they had a company and here if you h ad a company you're automatically entitled to participate in any par t of that company's business. So that let me fly right up until '64.
    In December, 1964, Kirk married twenty-year-old Lydia Regina Menende z who was living then in Guatemala City. She was from the small town o f Chiquimula, about 60 miles east in the City. Claire and her new Guat emalan husband, Edwardo Sagastume (t hey married about 1965), remaine d in Guatemala until 1969 when they moved with her daughter Claire t o Ann Arbor, Michigan.

    LIBERIA
    Soon after, in 1965, Kirk and Gina left for Liberia, Africa where he w as under contract for two years as a bush-pilot. "When '64 came in I l eft for Africa for two years....under contract. It was a verbal contra ct, they paid the tickets."
    Peter; "What did you do there?"
    Mac; "Fly! Fly the whole time. Yeah, we supplied the diamond mining in dustry. Liberia. but that was not a place where you want to reside per manently... I remember there was a fellowthat I wass going to do som e business withover there, found a n 87 carat diamond. The guy went nut s and sold it right away there in Monrovia and I don't know what he di d but the first thing he probably did was buy a white Mercedes. And th at was that. Because deveryone over there, for prestige, had a whit e M ercedes. They took that diamond to ...Amsterdam and they sold it for $ 230,000. What the guy in Liberia got for it I don't know. ...I was goi ng to go into the river, on the bottom, instead of the placer edges.
    Peter; "...you went into the mining yourself?"
    Mac; "I didn't get into it because of the guy - like I said -
    "Yeah, I had all the equipment ready to buy and U.S. Divers gave u s a 50% discount on all the diving equipment, and it would have kept m e there awhile. But, after two years we decided to take a trip to Euro pe to vacation, ...we never got ther e because a cable from Washingto n came in with the invitation to go to Vietnam. We just packed up ever ything, sold our Volkswagon and went back to the States. We had to ge t visas and all, and from there we went to Taipai for two weeks and th e n into Saigon".
    So, after the west-Africa job, Kirk and Regina returned to the State s in Dec of 1966 and stayed for two months with his parents in Short H ills, NJ. In a 1967 letter to PFM from his uncle Kirk McFarlin; "We ha ve been enjoying a visit from our ol der son Kirk Jr, called Peter, an d his wife while en route from two years in Liberia to a contract in F ormosa and Indo China. Under contract as pilot for three years..."

    FAR EAST FLYING - AIR AMERICA
    The Vietnam War occurred in Laos, Cambodia and Vietnam from 1959 to 19 75. US involvement escalated in the early 1960's and combat units wer e deployed beginning in 1965.
    Peter; "So you went over to Saigon, and you were starting to fly the n for Air America I think? Correct?"
    Mac; "Yes that was for five years. That was good experience"
    Starting in 1967, Kirk flew special operations missions for Air Americ a in those contested areas. The following is from Wikipedia (2008); "A ir America's slogan was 'Anything, Anywhere, Anytime, Professionally' . This was not an exaggeration as A ir America aircraft, including th e de Havilland Canada DHC-4 Caribou and Fairchild C-123 Provider, fle w many types of cargo and people ... to countries such as the Republi c of Viet Nam, the Kingdom of Laos, and Cambodia. It operated from bas e s in those countries and also from bases in Thailand and as far afiel d as Taiwan and Japan. it also, on occasion, flew top-secret mission s into Burma and the People's Republic of China."
    Kirk and Regina had two daughters while in the Far East; Regina (Gina ) Maria McFarlin was born in 1967 in Saigon, Vietnam, and her sister L issa Michelle McFarlin was born in 1969 in Vientiane, Laos. In 2008, h is daughter Gina goes on to say tha t her dad did a great deal of perso nnel insertions and removals to save civilian lives while in the Far E ast. In 2006, Kirk refers back to his time when flying the Canadian d e Havilland Caribou twin engine DHC-4 (further designated by the U S a s the C-7 in 1967).

    PHOTO OF CARIBOU NEAR HERE

    Mac;"Just wanted to mention I have about 2500 hrs Caribou time. It wa s my favorite for special ops, close in air drops and balls-to-the-wal l flying".
    During 1967-1971, Air America's 'Captain Kirk' McFarlin also belonge d to the Far East Pilots Association.
    Mac; "...I would have stayed with them, but of course, that folded, an d there was no more of that. However, I did go to Washington to try t o get back in. If not there, then somewhere else. And then that wa s a bad time for 'The Company' becaus e they were being investigated b y Congress."
    Peter; "Air America? The Far East Association?"
    Mac; "Yeah, The Far East Association. So there was just no way to ge t in. In fact they said they were just waiting for attrition to take i t's course. They weren't hiring anybody.
    In another letter to PFM in 1971, Kirk's father Kirk (sr) writes; "... our family from the far east came on for their vacation. In September , after they had been back only a few weeks, they pulled up stakes, an d have been with us off and on sinc e that time, a period of great joy , because our Peter (=Kirk) had come through almost five years of cont act with the North Vietnamese and Pathet Lao without injury." He furth er writes; "...now we are leaving on Dec 12, 1971 to take our oldes t g rand daughter Claire (16) with us on a journey we hope will take us ar ound the world and give her the same thrill which we have found in th e Far East."

    BACK IN TEXAS, MEXICO and SOUTH AMERICA
    From about 1978 to about 1984, cousin Kirk and his second family wer e in the Brownsville, Texas area. Kirk worked for the State Dept o n a 'black passport'.
    Mac; "That didn't make me at all happy because they took out income ta x, and what was left -- and I was 'outside'- (Kirk was working in Mexi co at the time) - wasn't worth continuing. So after that year I left . and I got back in, to a contractin g operation. We worked anti-drug s - not DEA. We were different, we were State Department. But it was s till anti-drugs. We supported DEA in a lot of cases. So I went on wit h them as a pilot, and it was in '91 I think it was- they made me sit e m anager for the operation here in Guatemala. Because we had been al l over South America and finally the contractors brought me here to Gu atemala."

    THE RIO DULCE - GUATEMALA
    Mac; "...and I was there until I had passed 60. They didn't want peopl e older than 65. So, my contract expired and they didn't renew it. Tha t was when I decided to build a house. The property where the house i s we bought in '78...the house wa s built in '91."
    Daughter Gina relates that her father and mother later (about 1989) se ttled back to the Rio Dulce River area of Guatemala near the town of F ronteras. To get around to different places on the river (Rio), you mu st travel by boat. All homes and b usinesses on the Rio have a boat doc k.
    In 2003, Kirk writes to PFM, "After thirty-four years flying in differ ent parts of the world, we are in a completely different environmen t - boats. It's hard to believe that after being a contract pilot doin g 200 miles/hr and going from countr y to country, here we are doing 1 5 mph...The reason behind this is that our house is here and we live h ere...on the Rio Dulce, one of the most picturesque areas of all Centr al America... I and another American built the house with a helper. F o ur bedroom, two bath in partial 'post and beam' design all of processe d pine. The wood building is a blessing as it stays cool even on the h ottest days. Being right on the river and up on a rise makes for a nic e location. It is a refuge for t he sailboats cruising the Caribbean du ring the hurricane season so we have lots of people from all over th e world to enjoy."
    In 2008 he and wife Gina still lived there on the Rio Dulce River in G uatemala, which connects Lake Izabal to the Caribbean Atlantic. Kirk' s wife Gina would sometimes return to their apartment in Houston to b e near their daughters Gina and Liss a. Kirk returned to Houston fo r a few weeks in October for their daughter Gina's wedding.
    Mac; "It gets hot down here...I like the hot weather. I'm not a cold w eather person....Where we live we have a forest on one side of us an d the normal flow of air comes right through that forest to us and out . Actually I spend a lot of time o n the computer. I'm a big game play er. I play cribbage, with a group that plays for tokens, not for money . No, I've played a lot of games for money.
    "Somebody said; 'The day you die, everything will be even, you will no t have won and you will not have lost'."

    When Peter and Karen stopped for their Feb 9th, 2009 luncheon meetin g with Mac at the Fronteras restaurant, he had come over by boat fro m his home on the Rio. Peter gave Mac some family biographies he had j ust written as well as some family gen ealogy.
    This was the only time first cousins Peter and Mac were ever to be tog ether. Totally worth it!

    photo of peter and kirk near here

    CLAN MACFARLANE and DNA CONNECTIONS
    Mac was agreeable to have his Y-DNA studied with Family Tree DNA, alon gside Peter's and other distant MacFarlane cousins. This is to help de termine our older ancestry, prior to our known connection back to Joh n McFarland (ca1750-1800) and his w ife Margery (Anderson) McFarland (1 756-1838), of Coitsville, Ohio.
    In Dec 2015 Peter wrote an email to Mac, and daughters Gina and Lissa : "Kirk's 111 tested gene markers came out as an exact match to mine . This is certainly confirmation of our close genetic relationship o f our male descent. Exact matches are n ot always to be expected...I ca n confirm that we are all certainly descended from the early Earls o f Lennox (from the 1100 and 1200's) and then somewhere later through t he Chiefs of MacFarlanes."
    Mac immediately wrote back; "Thank you so much for your email with th e ancestry information. It was super interesting...We are stilll in th e throws of selling here. What exactly are our plans afterwards is sti ll up in the air. Maybe we can ge t together and spend some time. I mis s the north-east...I always loved Maine. I needed a seaplane rating so me years back and got it up there. Beautiful....Mac and Gina. Then fur ther; "Yes, the house in Guatemala is for sale. I want out so we ca n d o something. Gina wants to travel. And I want to fish. We'll see."
    In 2019, 89 year-old Mac was mostly back in Houston being cared for b y his family. He had to return there for treatment of some mini-stroke s. They were still trying to sell his home on the Dulce.
    The genetic connection studies are ongoing. PFM - August ?? 2019

    Sources;
    Peter F McFarlin (PFM)'s personal research, plus;
    1967-1977 letters to PFM from uncle Charles Kirk (b1892) McFarlin
    1974 PFM's personal interview with; Charles Kirk McFarlin
    2003-2019 emails from Mac (b1930) McFarlin
    2008-2019 interview and emails from Gina (b1967) McFarlin
    2008-2019 info and emails from Claire (McFarlin) Viviani
    2008-2011 info and emails from Claire (Baker) Sagastume
    2009 interview between Peter and Karen McFarlin and his 1st cousin Kir k Charles McFarlin (b1930)

    Living + Claire Joyce Baker. Claire was born on 9 Dec 1932 in Melrose, Middlesex, Massachusetts, USA; died on 19 Aug 2011 in Detroit, Wayne, Michigan, USA. [Group Sheet] [Family Chart]


  2. 15.  Claire Joyce Baker was born on 9 Dec 1932 in Melrose, Middlesex, Massachusetts, USA; died on 19 Aug 2011 in Detroit, Wayne, Michigan, USA.
    Children:
    1. 7. Living McFarlin