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GSQ Blog→Categories family stories

Category Archives: family stories

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Metaphors We Live By: Phrases That Capture the Genealogical Journey.

GSQ Blog Posted on May 5, 2025 by Andrew RedfernApril 21, 2025

Family history isn’t just about names carefully plotted on a chart—it’s a lived experience, rich with mystery, challenge, and moments of delight. It’s the thrill of uncovering a long-forgotten story, the frustration of chasing a record that seems to vanish into thin air, the quiet satisfaction of piecing a life together from scattered fragments. Along the way, family historians—whether seasoned researchers or curious beginners—adopt a unique language. We find ourselves speaking in phrases steeped in metaphor and meaning, a kind … Continue reading

Posted in AI in family history, Artificial Inteligence (AI), Family, family histories, family history, family stories, genealogy, genealogy research, stories, story, Story wriing, writing strategies | 10 Replies

Connecting to a Forgotten Past.

GSQ Blog Posted on August 12, 2024 by Christine LeonardNovember 2, 2024

I’ve always believed that the journey of researching and writing about family history is just as important as the destination, but the research will often take us along unexpected paths. Uniting the current generation with earlier generations about a forgotten past is a worthy undertaking, but the project is often complex and can take a long time. Recently I came across a book, Starry Field: A Memoir of Lost History by Margaret Juhae Lee. Margaret, the author, researched her family’s history … Continue reading

Posted in asking relatives, family histories, family history, family secrets, family stories, research, story, Wall family, writing strategies, writing tips | 2 Replies

Ada Baker – From gentility to domestic service in the colony.

GSQ Blog Posted on June 17, 2024 by Christine LeonardNovember 3, 2024

Adelaide (Ada) Baker, the second eldest of six siblings was born on 22 February 1856 in London to parents Daniel Thompson Baker and Ann Dorling, who lived in a comfortable residence at 390 Oxford Street in Soho, London: about where Oxford Circus is located. The Bakers employed housemaids, one of whom accompanied Ada to school before bringing her home in the afternoon for music lessons with a private tutor. The children lived in sophisticated gentility, they were not asked to … Continue reading

Posted in Ada aka Adelaide Baker, Daniel Thompson Baker, Fakenham, family stories, Heraldic artist, Indus, Keppel Bay, Norfolk, Queensland, Rockhampton | Leave a reply

Writing a Memoir

GSQ Blog Posted on May 20, 2024 by Pauline WilliamsNovember 2, 2024

Have you thought about writing up the results of your research and producing a family history. How to do this can be quite a daunting prospect and therefore something which many family historians defer. Not everyone has the time or inclination to write a full family history and many explore other ways of recording the family’s story. Some produce books, others create stories around their photo collections, yet others write blog posts, create websites – the options are endless. One … Continue reading

Posted in family stories, GSQ Writing Group, Memoir writing, Patti Miller | 3 Replies

Family History is a Team Game: The Collaborative Journey of Unearthing Our Ancestral Past

GSQ Blog Posted on March 25, 2024 by Andrew RedfernNovember 2, 2024

By Andrew Redfern. The study of family history often conjures images of solitary researchers poring over dusty archives or staring intently at computer screens into the early hours of the morning. This picture, though accurate in its depiction of the genealogist’s dedication, misses a crucial aspect of the endeavour—the vibrant undercurrent of collaboration that makes genealogy not just a personal quest but a collective journey. Family history is indeed a team game, a multifaceted exploration that thrives on the collaboration … Continue reading

Posted in Family folklore, family histories, family history, Family history societies, family pictures, family stories, family tree, Genealogical Society of Queensland, genealogy, genealogy research | 26 Replies

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  • Researching a female convict of Van Diemen’s land: Ann Simmons, a convict mother.
  • Metaphors We Live By: Phrases That Capture the Genealogical Journey.
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  • Richard Hamilton of Newbridge.

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