I have been working on genealogy charts, using free software I downloaded. I have a lot of information from my mother and my aunt, and I plugged it in, sat back, and looked at the results. I have information going back about 5 generations, to England where the family began. Then I added in the 'newcomers', the babies and the latest generation, giving me about 8 or 9 generations of family.
You know, it's interesting to see how all family groups intertwine. I had 'cousins' growing up who were really my mother's mother's cousin, but my mother never bothered to try to explain the convoluted family relationship so we settled for 'shirt-tail cousin'. Now I see how that branch of the family fits in. I see where the stories about "grandpa's mother died and his father remarried fast because there were so many kids to raise" -- yeah, like 10! No wonder Grandpa Levi remarried fast! I remember his second wife, who used to tell us stories about living on the frontier in the early 1900s.How our world has changed since my grandmother -- even my mother -- lived. It feels like we're making leaps and bounds in the progress department, but when I put it in perspective -- when I look at my great x 4 grandfather, I'm sure he thought the same thing about the steamboats and the railroad and the telegraph.
It's good sometimes to look back because it gives a new perspective on what's here now. And to reflect on what those long-ago relatives experienced. In many ways, their lives were just like ours now. And in other ways ... how different!
1 comment:
It's a wonder all the women back then weren't raving loons. 10 kids - I can't even imagine... I love history, so genaology seemed like the perfect fun project. Following all those lines is like a puzzle that never ends. Hope your reunion goes well.
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