Timelines – the interest and pleasure they can give
Just over a year ago, only a few months after I had joined the Genealogical Society of Queensland, I attended an Information Session on Timelines that was held at GSQ. At the time I was new to my family search and was deeply engrossed in obtaining birth, death and marriage certificates and was satisfied enough just to place each ancestor in the context of where they had been born or died or who was married to whom and where they had been married. I had given little thought to what might have been happening in their town or local area or the world at large. Of course, I knew that one of my grandfathers had fought at Gallipoli and I knew that my own father had served in World War 2 but that was really as far as it went in setting my ancestors in the context of local or world events. The session I attended really captured my interest and made me realise that I could bring my ancestors to life by putting them into another context rather than just the one on the printed page of their relevant certificates. So, I began the habit of researching the events that had taken place in Australia and around the world on the particular date or in the year of any new certificate or family event that I uncovered.



Some members of the Burgett line of my family tree lived in London and married, had children and went to school during the time of Dickens. In 1821 my ancestors Charles Burgett and Ann Skinnerd were married. They had 8 children and one of them was Frederick Augustus born in 1827. He was married in 1856 to Mary Ann Scott and their first son Haughton James Frederick (my great grandfather) was born in 1857. They had 5 other children. Haughton came to Australia in 1878.
It is very well recorded that the writings and novels of Charles Dickens were extremely popular and well loved in his lifetime, not only in England but around the world. I wonder if some of my ancestors were also fans of his writing and waited excitedly for each instalment of his serials. Or maybe in his earlier years when he was a court and political reporter for major newspapers they read his articles and opinions over their breakfast, or morning cup of tea. Did they discuss his articles around their dining room table or did they speculate on what they thought the next instalment of each of his famous novels might reveal? I find pleasure in daydreaming about the possibility of this happening, particularly when it is a novelist who has brought me such pleasure in my own lifetime.
This is only the tip of the iceberg of what I have found in my research into timelines. I would heartily recommend it to anyone who hasn’t tried it and has the time to do so. Time is the operative word, as you may find that you disappear down the proverbial timeline “rabbit hole” early one morning and not reappear until the sun has set and darkness has fallen. But I guess you are all familiar with that particular phenomenon. It happens regularly when you embark on family history research.
Meg Carney
As moderator of the GSQ Blog, one of my tasks is to invite a guest to provide a post in those months when there are five Mondays. For June, I invited a member of the GSQ Writing Group to be the guest blogger and Meg took up the challenge. This is Meg’s first ever blog post and I hope you enjoyed it. I decided to create a timeline in Legacy for my newly-found 4th g.grandfather Richard Paddock, b. 1764; part of this is attached and makes interesting reading and opens up many avenues for research. Pauline
Great post, well done. I've just started with timelines too – certainly brings other facts to life and provides rich and deep context.
Well done, Meg. Fabulously interesting and well written. I trust the future for you in your genealogy is bright and fruitful.
I’m new to GSQ Blogs, Meg. My first four have been published just this year (2023) and they relate to my strategies, successful and unsuccessful, for researching my late wife’s ancestors. I’m currently working on her paternal ancestors from Germany (Bahlow/Balow/Barlow) and am currently developing a timeline to assist. I was excited to find your blog about your experiences with using timelines and broadening your understanding of times and places in your ancestors’ lives.