Things I’m grateful for
I started my family history research in 1987 following my father’s death. I looked at the people who attended his funeral and wondered not only where all the people I remembered from my childhood had gone, but also who they really were – we often called people aunt and uncle as a courtesy not because they were related. As I had by then migrated to Australia, doing research in England was a slow process and involved many hours of searching microfilmed records and waiting for replies to letters sent by airmail to England. I was recently reflecting on the changes that have occurred in family history/genealogy research over recent years. The ease of selecting records found on subscription sites can often make us forget that there are many things to be grateful for. I was going to list ten things, but then realised that many of these were based on technology, so my list is now shorter but perhaps more encompassing. These are in no particular order. You can probably think of many more.

In a similar vein, the development of websites by governments, organisations and societies, including subscription sites and portal sites, have facilitated research worldwide. Records such as civil registration, parish records, immigration, criminal and court records, often provide a framework for our ancestors’ lives. The challenge is to subject the search results to rigorous analysis to ensure that research can be validated. Indexing of individual records can save hours of browsing through record sets. I emphasise the word ‘can’ because we’ve all experienced problems with poor handwriting, mis-transcriptions, mis-indexing, mis-everything. Having said that, though, where would we be without the multitude of mostly volunteers worldwide who give up their time and energy to create these indexes which are fundamental search tools in our quest to find our ancestors. I am grateful to them, and maybe we can all play our part in correcting errors when we find them.

There are two record sources that have been essential to my research. UK census records provide the ability to track family members back through the decennial censuses from 1911 to 1841 and, combined with civil registration records, has enabled me to track family groupings, occupations, movement around the country, etc. These results have been supplemented with wider reading to set my ancestors’ lives in context. The release of the 1939 Register has provided a much more recent record of family members and has helped to answer the question in the first paragraph – who were all these people I remembered?
1911 census. Joseph & Mary Ann Kinston, Newhall, Derbyshire |
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Derby Daily Telegraph 01 February 1950
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The second record source, and final thing on my list, is the digitisation of national and local newspapers and their availability online. Although this could have been included under technology, I thought I’d mention it separately. Newspapers provide details of the day to day minutiae of life; announcements; advertisements; reports of trials, inquests, accidents, etc; sporting results; local, national and global news. A wonderful cornucopia of information about life in a particular place at a specific time. They allow us to speculate on how our ancestors’ lives intersected with the items reported in the newspapers.
So, my list of things I’m grateful for covers some very broad categories. Is there anything you’d like to add to the list?
Pauline
I'd add the army of volunteers in the geneaworld who work in so many ways to help us in our research.