
What's important is what I do and how I act now.
--A
Moderator: Orlion
It's not important.Fist and Faith wrote:You can say that about anything, Av. Why do you read so many books? If they aren't already, the authors will one day be dead, and you will be too. And their words will vanish with the universe. How is reading their books now important?
Oh my god that is beyond exciting Iolanthe! What a brilliant idea to put everything online/ create Facebook group for your family. I'm going to do that! I was born in the U.K. - and have only a few generations recorded. I'd love to go back further and find information about my ancestors. How did you get so far back? What sources are you using? A website or program? I wonder if I could research from hereIolanthe wrote:Thanks Skyweir, I have enough for 20 books, a lot of it is posted to a FB Group that I host for people with an interest in the surname, most of them from the US!Skyweir wrote:We met with a new client a few weeks back - a retired ex-serviceman (DOF) and librarian/archivist and they do military research for members of their family who served in WWI & WWII. I assume they'd do any military service though.
Well, I have a graverobber on my mother's side - he was caught sending bits of bodies off in parcels by coach to medical researchers and died in prison. Mum wasn't very enamoured by that one![]()
I also have a petition written by a possible ancestor in the 1480s (not dated but addressed to Edward IV and Edward V), and I have a photograph of the earliest reference found so far, 1385. These two in Cheshire where all my Dad's ancestors came from.
During the early 1700s my direct ancestors got up to all sorts of things - getting drunk in an alehouse and fighting (1699), stealing geese and cheese, hitting people with pikes - all this from browsing the Quarter Sessions records. One was even up in court for shouting "Down with the Rump" outside the gates of Cholmondeley Castle in the 1740s - something to do with George 1 and the Jacobites.
Yes, it can be a very interesting hobby if you don't just collect names and dates.
What is your book title and details - I'll request it through our libraryIolanthe wrote:You're right there Fist. We here in the UK are obsessed with Family History, but so too are all the countries whose indigenous populations were boosted by emigration from the British Isles, and now the Europeans are getting just as obsessed. As you say, it's good detective work, although with the onset of the on-line bandwagon there is now a lot of rubbish on the web that some researchers actually believe!! There must be many people out there collecting the wrong ancestors.
But that's another story. And there is another side to it as well. In-depth research by individuals has produced experts in areas that may not have been covered were it not for family history. After 30 years work on documents relating to the poor I've become something of an expert on the poor law, even having written a book on the subject. There are now many learned books on surname derivation, old occupations have been thoroughly researched, and it all adds up to a great deal of knowledge about social history.
As with anything, we get out of it what we put in. There is a great camaraderie amongst family historians, random acts of kindness abound. It's a good thing to be involved in.
When I started there were no computers around, didn't get my first until 1985 - Spectrum - not much good for FH. So I went to Cheshire every year for a week with the family, camping, spent the week in the record office researching while my husband took the children out every day. That was how we did it in those days. Did a lot of browsing and found all sorts of interesting things. Nowadays it is much easier. There are websites with original documents such as parish registers that you can use, and all the Pay Per View sites have census records. You should join a local (to you) Genealogical Society - there are loads in Aus. There you will be able to get help from people who know how to go about research.Skyweir wrote:
Oh my god that is beyond exciting Iolanthe! What a brilliant idea to put everything online/ create Facebook group for your family. I'm going to do that! I was born in the U.K. - and have only a few generations recorded. I'd love to go back further and find information about my ancestors. How did you get so far back? What sources are you using? A website or program? I wonder if I could research from herelol ... I wish you could post pics and that petition to Edward IV ... love to see them but it's probably not doable.
Fist- I get the "he doesn't necessarily have any more of an idea how to go about it that you do." thing.Fist and Faith wrote:It doesn't seem that he has any more of an idea how to go about it than you do. But he continues to exchange letters. He doesn't have to, which means he wants to...Sorus wrote:I wish he'd just say something if he has something to say.
Why embarrassing?wayfriend wrote:...Several years ago, I returned to my old home town for a funeral, a death in the family. It was an occasion for me to meet a lot of semi-distant relatives that I had never known I had. For me this was fascinating, but sad, but embarrassing. I resolved to come back to town as soon as I could and start mapping out the edges of my family tree.
Maybe it doesn't all hang on you, wf.wayfriend wrote:I never did. Embarrassment won. Now, I regret it. My kids will probably never know about all those people, their relatives too, unless I get my act together.
Do you watch Fresh Off The Boat?Sorus wrote:I've never really felt like I had an actual membership in the other side of my family. My father and I went for 20 years or so without speaking to one another, starting when I was 12, so he's basically a stranger to me. We exchange letters a couple of times a year, but don't really have any idea what to say to one another. I got a letter from him last week. Didn't say much. He enclosed a photograph with no mention or description. I don't know what to say in return. I feel like I should acknowledge it in some way, but I am wary of what doors I might be opening. My best guess is that it's a picture of my sister when she was 7-8 years old. She'd be in her early 30s now. We've never met. The whole thing is weird and out of character, and I wish he'd just say something if he has something to say.
I do not. Had to Google it. Guessing there's a context deeper than 'family drama' but it wasn't jumping out at me. I basically live under a rock as far as TV is concerned.Fist and Faith wrote: Do you watch Fresh Off The Boat?
Cheers Iolanthe!Iolanthe wrote:
When I started there were no computers around, didn't get my first until 1985 - Spectrum - not much good for FH. So I went to Cheshire every year for a week with the family, camping, spent the week in the record office researching while my husband took the children out every day. That was how we did it in those days. Did a lot of browsing and found all sorts of interesting things. Nowadays it is much easier. There are websites with original documents such as parish registers that you can use, and all the Pay Per View sites have census records. You should join a local (to you) Genealogical Society - there are loads in Aus. There you will be able to get help from people who know how to go about research.
Regarding the old docs, they images are all copyright so I don't post anything on the public FB page except modern photos or docs that I own myself. I do post transcriptions of docs on the page though. The Petition is a free download from the National Archives website. If you do a google search for DUNCALF you should find all my stuff on the web. I use a program called "Family Historian" for recording all the info that I have, which creates a gedcom file that I can send to another site that I use, Tribal Pages, where trees can be kept, but I have complete control over the trees and they can't be downloaded by anyone else. They also allow me to "hide" living people, unless I give access to descendants who make a request. I would never put a family tree onto ancestry, although there is one of mine there as a site I used many years ago, Gencircles, was bought up by Ancestry and they published all the trees. Loads of people have copied it although it has several errors and I cannot now access it to do corrections.
I just noticed this just now.Iolanthe wrote:So I went to Cheshire every year for a week with the family, camping, spent the week in the record office researching while my husband took the children out every day...
That is frustrating... it's like... you've done the work, have the info, and yet... can't get it to people.Iolanthe wrote:I would never put a family tree onto ancestry, although there is one of mine there as a site I used many years ago, Gencircles, was bought up by Ancestry and they published all the trees. Loads of people have copied it although it has several errors and I cannot now access it to do corrections.
I'm happy you did.Sorus wrote:That sounds about accurate. Fifteen seconds of awkward small talk about the weather.
(I wrote back and asked about the picture. Can't help feeling like it was some kind of test that I've probably failed, but who knows.)
The only "effective" (opposed to theoretical") family I have left is one of my cousins, who I've always had a great relationship with based mostly off shared perspectives.)In Illusions, Richard Bach wrote:The bond that links your true family is not one of blood, but of respect and joy in each other's life. Rarely do members of one family grow up under the same roof.
Sounds a lot like my family in some ways, though I'm on the other side of the equation. I can't offer any advice. It's a matter of weighing the possibility that bringing it up will be throwing gasoline on a fire, versus the knowledge that one day it will be too late and you may regret that you didn't try.Vraith wrote:
BUT...we are NOT a talking family...
He NEVER mentioned it before or since...
And I can't find any way to make myself ask him about it now...
I really want to know...
But our peeps just don't talk about shit...and what happens in drunken stupor STAYS in drunken stupor.
TMI, or TL;DR? oh well.