March 16 2018

Beginning Genealogy

Genealogy has always been a big part of my life. I was recently looking online for the obituaries of my in-laws and stumbled across many obituaries for the other family in town that shares this surname. There are two distinct families and while I have always suspected that a name that unusual has to be connected somewhere back in time, I cannot prove it. So as I came across an obit that I know belongs to the other family, I copied it into a separate document just for that family with the intention of trying to figure out where our lines connect up.

Yesterday, I got the genealogy software I am testing working and needed data to plug into it to see how it works. The day has arrived to try to make sense of the other family and see how far back I can trace it. I began with what was the deceased patriarch and entered what I learned from his obit into the software. I added parents here, siblings there, and children too. Then I went on to do the same with all the other obits and info I had found. When I got finished, I had a fairly extended family and my sample family tree database had 66 people in it. I had names for a few of the under thirty set but was unclear where they fit into the tree I had created. It was kind of fun to see how much I could figure out without actually knowing the people I was researching.

Would it be easier if they were MY people? Absolutely! It would be nice to have names and documents to back up what I was finding. My rule was that I didn’t need it to be perfect it was just a test and I felt certain I would get stopped by lack of information almost before I got started. There are some people I am still not clear on, but I was even able to put together a fairly clear picture of some of the in-laws’ families. I was doing most of this without the benefit of typical genealogy research that I would normally do on my own lines. After about ten hours of messing around, I was very pleased with the results of my research and it was late, so I decided to call it a night.

Today, I decided that I had enough of a skeleton of the family to be able to find the patriarch and his generation in the 1940 census, which is the most recent one available to us. The program was alerting me right and left that there were potential matches, but of course, when I clicked to see these matches, they wanted me to pay for a subscription to see the little carrots of information they were dangling in front of me. No thanks. I decided to just Google the surname and city and see what that led me to. Well, it led me to loads of stuff about our family but also many bits and pieces about the other family as well. I was able to find photos to put with many of the names I had found yesterday. I had only four photos from obits before today, but now I have many more.

The problem I have now is one faced by all genealogists; how to protect the identities and privacy of living people. On the one hand, there is nothing I have found that is not freely accessible to the entire world, but on the other hand, I don’t have to put it all together and make it easy for some unscrupulous person to find either. Since my goal was and still is, to try to connect the two distinct families somewhere back in time, I decided to focus my research on the patriarch and try to go back from there. At some point, if I do make the connection between our families, I may reach out and see if any of them are interested in what I have found.

The problem I have now is one faced by all genealogists; how to protect the identities and privacy of living people. Click To Tweet

For now, this is all just an experiment to see how much I remember about genealogy research, how much things have changed in the twelve years I have been almost entirely away from it, to find what I can about our family along the way, and mostly to connect the two family lines or prove that they do not connect.

So, if you have always wanted to research your family, start at home and gather the family Bible if the births, marriages, and deaths get recorded in it and make copies of those pages and the title page. This is your first source document. If you are going to do this, be sure to always cite your sources from the very start. Title pages are important too, make a note on the title page of the date and place you found the source if it was in a library. Trust me, you may need to look in that book again sometime and will be glad to know which research facility you found it in.

You need to prove each connection as you go. Grab your birth certificate and make a copy for your files. It has your parents listed on it and is proof that they are your parents and when and where you were born. If your parents are still alive, ask them for copies of their birth and marriage certificates too. You can keep this up until you get back to the early 1900s or late 1800s. You can send off for the death certificates of your relatives if they have passed away, but you will need those birth certificates you have collected to prove you are related to them. I recently ordered several death certificates from the state and for each one I ordered, I had to prove I was the niece or grand-daughter of that person. This is why I tell you to start with yourself and collect the proof documents along the way.

As I so recently found out, it is not difficult to find information online about your family. You will need to be careful about trusting the information you find in many of the online family trees. Even an obituary is only as accurate as the knowledge of the person who acted as the informant, you will still need to prove these facts are true. An obituary or online family tree is not a source, but rather hearsay, until proven. So, trust but verify everything you find. Hopefully, you will be able to find trees that have proven all the facts with the source documents listed so you will just need to get copies of the primary source documents for yourself.

An obituary or online family tree is not a source, but rather hearsay, until proven. So, trust but verify everything you find. Click To Tweet

Have fun researching your family, and by all means, feel free to post questions in the comments below or contact me directly. I will do whatever I can to help you.

February 10 2018

Privilege (Five Minute Friday)

I consider it my greatest privilege to be able and be trusted to keep the family history.

I was taken with the idea of genealogy research when I was in the fourth grade and first learned about our family a bit when my older sister had to do a fifth-grade project about our ancestors. The next year, I had the same teacher and eagerly looked forward to learning even more than my sister had known about the family tree to use for the assignment. I remember my mother calling her sister, to ask about the specifics for her family and my dad’s mother to get details about his family. I remember there was some confusion getting all the details for my dad’s family because the chart was confusing to my grandmother. What we got was a few generations of names and dates, maybe as far back as my great-grandparents on both sides of the family. But that was enough, and I was hooked.

My interest never wavered, but there wasn’t a lot I could do as a young kid. Once I was in high school and had some pocket money of my own, I began researching in earnest. There was a shop in town called Ye Olde Genealogie Shoppe that put on all-day conferences with well-known guest speakers and they were not terribly expensive so I told mom I wanted to go. She said I could if I would pay my way. I assured her I would. I explained that I would also need a ride to and from the hotel where the conference was being held. I asked if she would be willing to go with me and drive if I was to pay both our admission costs from my own money. She agreed and seemed interested, but not as obsessed with it as I was. We had fun going to many of these events throughout my high school years. We spent time going over what we had learned and comparing our notes. When I was in college and finally had a car so I could drive myself, I spent many a Saturday downtown at the Indiana State Library. I would pack a lunch and bring lots of change for copies. I spent so much time combing through the microfilms of census records with my head almost inside the little cave-like machines squinting to read the strange handwriting and using a pencil to fill in the forms for the census with the entries for the ancestors I found. I just couldn’t get enough. I wasn’t interested in social studies or history of any kind, that was dull and boring, but when it came to MY family, MY ancestors, I was doing research because I wanted to not because I had to. This was more intense than homework and more difficult too, but I didn’t care. I loved it! I felt like I had won the lottery when I discovered some new tidbit or another ancestor’s name. I read books that I bought at the conferences or the local bookstore. The library didn’t have much available back then. I had to limit the time I spent on genealogy so my grades in the college courses wouldn’t suffer. I longed for school breaks so I could focus on genealogy.

When I got married in 1986, my husband seemed so lucky because his grandmother lived right here in town. I was much closer to his grandmother than my own. We went swimming with her in her apartment complex pool and she would patiently answer my questions. I got the privilege of wrapping all her Christmas gifts for a few years. I just loved having a grandparent so close. I only remember meeting one of my grandparents, my maternal grandmother, and she lived so far away I only saw her once or twice a year for an hour or two. I was in heaven! My husband and I had been having Sunday dinners with his parents, his brother and his grandmother for years by the time we were married. Our first house was less than a mile away from her apartment so we often picked her up and took her back home from the Sunday dinners. I learned that her father was an amateur photographer. She had albums full of his photos. When we looked at them, I turned them over to read the writing on the back but where others would have written the dates, location or the names of those in the photo, her father had written film speeds and f-stops. I quizzed the family on many occasions to get names and dates and specifics on births, deaths, and marriages. I can’t imagine what they thought of this nosy new family member, but I didn’t let that bother me. I had loads of new ancestors to research. I wanted to know them all and find them all. His family was from states I had never had reason to research before, exotic places like New York and Pennsylvania. I wanted to know how they came to live in Indiana if their families were from “back east”. So I asked. I think they liked that I was interested in them and their families. They let me scan photos and bring them back the next week and then take another batch. After all, I was family now and would willingly share the scanned images with anyone who wanted them.

Gradually, as time passed, more census records were released. I remember when the 1910, 1920, 1930, and 1940 census records were made available to the public. These were released 72 years after they were taken, so researched had to wait ten years in between these big releases! Oh, how exciting it was to be able to find people on the census that I actually knew and had met! I loved searching through the microfilmed newspapers for obituaries when the people stopped appearing on the census records. City directories were fun too. When I noticed that my grandparents’ families lived just a few blocks from each other I began to speculate on how they met and what their courtship might have been like. Many people thought me strange for wanting to spend all my extra time and money looking for and making copies of these old records. Social security death records were indexed and you could send for a copy of the social security application once you found it in the index for only $7 each. This was a bit pricey back in the day, but I cut corners and saved my spending money to use for making copies at the library and to send off for my record copies. This was before the Internet and then during the early days of it. Not much was indexed and even less was online. Few had emails or web pages so we wrote letters and sent checks when we wanted information and we waited, and waited and watched the mailbox day after day for the record copies to arrive or for some possible distant cousin to answer our letter. It was so different then, back in the old days before DNA testing and Internet databases.

I went to cemeteries and walked the rows searching for specific names. We knew tricks for getting the best photos of the headstones. Yes, I have an album full of headstone photos. When I learned how to write HTML and create web pages, I created virtual cemeteries with photos and transcriptions of the headstones along with the info on where the cemetery was located and any other information or maps to go with it. I wanted to share my research with distant cousins I had never met. It was like leaving breadcrumb trails for them to find and those crumbs led them back to me. I shared photos of ancestors, school class photos from my mothers’ grade school years. She had written all the names on the back when she was an adult. I knew not everyone would have copies and if I added the names, the search engines could find them.

I spent about thirty years consistently immersed in my hobby, then I had to return to the world of working full-time again in addition to parenting and running the house and just that quick, time to do research vanished. Now after about ten years away from it, I realize I really miss it and want to immerse myself in it all over again. I am a different person now with new and different hobbies. The way genealogists do research is vastly different than it was ten years ago. Many of my beloved relatives are no longer here to pester with questions and I know what a great opportunity I lost when they died. I find myself realizing I took the privilege of knowing them for granted and never considered that it might one day be too late to ask the questions I hadn’t yet thought up. Now more than ever, I understand that I am one of the older generation. Now, I am the one the younger ones will need to come to in order to get their questions answered and I want to be ready if and when they do. Oh, I really hope they do. I hope to infect them with just a bit of my enthusiasm for family history.

Having family is a treasure. It is a privilege to know them and to remember them and to honor them by making sure they are not forgotten.

This post is part of the weekly Five Minute Friday link-up!
The prompt this week is: Privilege
The assignment: Write for five minutes on the word of the week. This is meant to be a free write, which means: no editing, no over-thinking, no worrying about perfect grammar or punctuation. Just write.

Ok, obviously I got a little carried away and went well past the 5 minutes…it just couldn’t be helped.