Hey gals, I personally lived some of this. The one about not becoming interested in genealogy until ones father died is me. Family letters and tradition has a young lad reading from the Bible and identifying the family photos before age 32 months, the age of his death from Diphtheria. The close lipped spinster Aunt turned out to be a father-in-law that I feel sure took the knowledge of the family Indian ancestry to the grave with him. A grandfather buried in Potters field without marker. An Uncle that married into the family using a scoop shovel to scoop the family photos and albums into a trailer to haul to the dump. Some that got salvaged were tin types of great-great grandparents. And so on. Thanks for sharing. Don -------------------------------------------------- From: "Linda Wiley" <oregontrail1851@yahoo.com> Sent: Tuesday, April 27, 2010 11:40 AM To: <evans-richard@rootsweb.com> Subject: Re: [EVANS-RICHARD] From Charleen > How very true! Charleen, can this be credited to anyone--I'd like to use > it in a couple of genealogical society newsletters. > > Linda > > > > > > ________________________________ > From: Evans-Richard List Administrator > <listadministratorevans@earthlink.net> > To: Evans-Richard Mailing List <EVANS-RICHARD@rootsweb.com> > Sent: Tue, April 27, 2010 9:24:49 AM > Subject: [EVANS-RICHARD] From Charleen > > > > The Inevitable Laws of Genealogy > > The records you need for your family history were in the courthouse that > burned. > John, son of Thomas, the immigrant whom your relatives claim as > immigrant ancestor, died on board ship at the age of twelve. > The public ceremony in which your distinguished ancestor participated > when the platform under him collapsed .... they didn't tell you he had a > rope > around his neck. > Records show that the grandfather, whom the family boasted, "He read the > Bible at four years and graduated from college at sixteen, " was at the > foot of the class. > Your grandmother's maiden name for which you've searched for years was > on an old letter in a box in the attic all the time. > When at last you've solved the mystery of the skeleton in the closet, > the tight-lipped spinster aunt claimed, "I could have told you that all > the time." > You never asked your father about his family because you weren't > interested in genealogy while he was alive. > The family story your grandmother wrote for the family never got past > the typist. She packed it away "somewhere" and promised to send you a > copy, but never did. > The relative who had all the family photographs gave them to her > daughter who had no interest in genealogy and no inclination to share. > A great-uncle changed his surname because he was teased in school. He > moved away, left no address, and was never heard from again. > Brittle old newspapers containing the information you desired have > fallen apart on the names, dates, and places. > The only record you find for your great-grandfather is that his property > was sold at a sheriff's sale for insolvency. > The portion of the index you need is continued in the next issue, only > the publisher died prior to publication. > When you find the obituary for your grandmother, the information is > garbled. Her name is exchanged with her daughter's, the whereabouts of > her sons is unknown, the date for her father's birth indicates he was > younger than she. > The only surname not found among the three billion in the Mormon > Archives is yours. > And last, but not least .... > The 4 volume, 4,800 page history of the county where your > great-grandfather lived is not indexed. > > ------------------------------- > To unsubscribe from the list, please send an email to > EVANS-RICHARD-request@rootsweb.com with the word 'unsubscribe' without the > quotes in the subject and the body of the message > > > > > > ------------------------------- > To unsubscribe from the list, please send an email to > EVANS-RICHARD-request@rootsweb.com with the word 'unsubscribe' without the > quotes in the subject and the body of the message >