Friday, August 20, 2010

Laws of Genealogy

I did not write this but I thought it was too funny not to share~

Laws of Genealogy


The keeper of the vital records you need will have just been insulted by another genealogist.

Your great-grandfather's obituary states that he died, leaving no issue of record.

The town clerk you wrote to in desperation, and finally convinced to give you the information you need, can't write legibly, and doesn't have a copy machine.

That ancient photograph of four relatives, one of whom is your progenitor, only carries the names of the other three.

Copies of old newspapers have holes which occur only on maiden and surnames.

No one in your family tree ever did anything noteworthy, always rented property, was never sued, and was never named in wills.

You learned that Great Aunt Matilda's executor just sold her life's collection of family genealogical materials to a flea market dealer "somewhere in New York City."

Yours is the ONLY last name not found among the billions in the LDS archives in Salt Lake City.

Your folks hated government and never filled out forms.

Your families never had attics, much less Bibles or boxes full of photos.

All real library "finds" are made five minutes before closing, when the copier is broken.

The correctly shelved books and correctly filed forms are never the ones you need.

The person sitting next to you at the research center is finding ancestors every five minutes...and telling you.

Your microfilm reader is the one that squeaks, has to be turned backwards, and doesn't quite focus.

Your cemeteries have no caretaker or records archive.

Alternate spellings and arcane names were your folks' favorite pasttimes.

Your ancestors only knew three names, and used them over and over in every collateral line.

Your sister neglects to mention that the date she gave you, which you have researched, and sent to other researchers, was just a guess with no foundation, and she guessed because she "didn't like leaving that line blank."

Your mother neglects to mention that, "Oh, yes, we knew they changed their name.

The critical link in your family tree is named "Smith."

The will you need is in the safe on board the "Titanic".

The spelling of your European ancestor's name bears no relationship to its current spelling or pronunciaiton.

The 37 volume, sixteen-thousand-page history of your county of origin isn't indexed.

The blot on the page of the census covers your grandmother's birthdate!

Your ancestor's will leaves his estate to his beloved wife and children but he doesn't name them.

The only overturned, face-down gravestone in the cemetery is your great-great grandfather's!

You finally find your ancestor's obituary in an old newspaper and all it says is "Died last week."

You finally get a day off from work to travel to a courthouse -- and when you get there it's closed for emergency plumbing repairs.


Genealogy Law #1
Ink fades and paper deteriorates at a rate inversley proportional to the value of the data recorded.

Genealogy Law #2
Anything that could have burned, did.

Genealogy Law #3
The census taker with the clear handwriting and good ink never enumerated your ancestors.

Genealogy Law #4
If you find a well-documented, illustrious ancestor, you've probably made a mistake.

Genealogy Law #5
The document containing evidence of the missing link in your research invariably will be lost due to fire, flood or war.

Genealogy Law #6
The spelling of your European ancestor's name bears no relationship to its current spelling or pronunciaiton.

Genealogy Law #7
The information you desperately need could be only found in the 1890 census.

Genealogy Law #8
The e-mail address that bounces is the one from a person who listed your exact names. If you find a working address, you aren't related.

Genealogy Law #9
The book you need is never indexed, or, if indexed, doesn't include people.

Thursday, June 17, 2010

1965 Death Certificate for "Uncle Leamon" Lester Thompson- Marble, Cherokee County, NC

 photo LeamonLesterThompson-DC-1965.jpg


"Leamon" Lester Thompson died 30 January 1965 of
"apparently heart failure."

Leamon was the son of Sidney Elcaney Thompson and Adeline York originally of Rabun County, GA and the twin brother of Lener "Hester" Thompson.  My daddy called him "Uncle Leamon."

Thursday, March 25, 2010

Treasure Chest Thursday- Applications from Lineage Societies

One Treasure Chest of information that many researchers may overlook are the wonderful applications and related records submitted by other researchers to join a lineage society. Such societies include The United Daughters of the Confederacy (UDC), The Sons of Confederate Veterans (SCV), The Daughter of the American Revolution (DAR), The Sons of the American Revolution (SAR), and The Mayflower Society, just to name a few.

Potential members must not only prove their ancestors’ involvement in the particular event in history but also provide proof of lineage for each generation there after until the present day generation. There is such a great deal of information in these membership applications and subsequent supplemental applications of members. Each application provides an enormous amount of research- the most difficult part for non-members is finding these records.

I recently met a distant cousin that was willing to share their membership applications with me for my own potential membership. Those documents provided so much information for me that I did not know about my own family. I will be forever grateful for her kindness in sharing these records with me.

How can you find these documents? Each society has different guidelines for accessing an ancestor’s records so you’ll have to do some research as how to go about finding out what’s available. The point is that there may be a wealth of information out there already gathered about your ancestors. See what’s available!

I’ve included some helpful links to get you started:

http://www.hqudc.org/

http://www.dar.org/natsociety/default.cfm

http://www.sar.org/

http://www.scv.org/crg.php

http://www.themayflowersociety.com/

http://www.nsdac.org/

Thursday, January 28, 2010

Treasure Chest Thursday- I've added my Family Tree online

For this week's "Treasure Chest Thursday," I am adding my own treasure- my own research. I have finally added my Family Tree online. I found a neat (and free) site that will allow me to share my Family Tree with others. It's called "Tribal Pages."



I have put off doing this because I didn't want people to simply copy and paste my names into their "name collector tree" of thousands of names without verifying any of my information. I will be glad to share all my sources but please don't copy and paste my Family Tree and call it your own. Our ancestors deserve more respect than that. Everyone wants to be remembered but I don't think anyone wants to be remembered incorrectly.

If you find any errors or have any questions, please let me know.

Simply click this image (in the column on the far left) to visit my Family Tree.

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