The following article is © Barbara A. Brown and posted on Olive Tree Genealogy blog with her permission
Yep -- I want ancestors with names like Rudimentary Montagnard or
Melchizedick von Steubenhoffmannschild or Spetznatz Gianfortoni, not
William Brown or John Hunter or Mary Abbott.
I want ancestors who could read and write, had their children
baptized in recognized houses of worship, went to school, purchased
land, left detailed wills (naming a huge extended family as legatees),
had their photographs taken once a year -- subsequently putting said
pictures in elaborate isinglass frames annotated with calligraphic
inscriptions, and carved voluble and informative inscriptions in their
headstones. I want relatives who managed to bury their predecessors in
established, still-extant (and indexed) cemeteries.
I want family members who wrote memoirs, who enlisted in the
military as officers and who served in strategically important (and well
documented) skirmishes. I want relatives who served as councilmen,
schoolteachers, county clerks and town historians. I want relatives who
'religiously' wrote in the family Bible, journaling every little event
and detailing the familial relationship of every visitor.
In the case of immigrant progenitors, I want them to have arrived
only in those years wherein passenger lists were indexed by National
Archives, and I want them to have applied for citizenship, and to have
done so only in those jurisdictions which have since established
indices.
I want relatives who were patriotic and clubby, who joined every
patrimonial society they could find, who kept diaries, and listed all
their addresses, who had paintings made of their horses, and who dated
every piece of paper they touched. I want forebears who were wealthy
enough to afford, and to keep for generations, the tribal homestead, and
who left all the aforementioned pictures and diaries and journals
intact in the library.
But most of all, I want relatives I can find!!!
Note that Ms. Brown's "I Want" article was originally posted in 1994 to
the National Genealogical Conference, FIDO bulletin board forum.
This article also appeared in IIGS Newsletter August 1998 with her permission. Ms. Brown offers lookups in Who's Who books from 1901 to 1978 and Social Register Directories from 1917 to 1971. She can be reached at babrown12@yahoo.com
As the granddaughter of John Smith, and the great, great granddaughter of Patrick Flynn, I couldn't agree with this more :)
ReplyDeleteLove it! I think I have a mix of all the above from common names to unusual ones to those who kept a lot of records to those who didn't!
ReplyDeleteThis post reads like every single wishful thought I've ever had about my ancestors all rolled into one post. If only....
ReplyDelete