No Two the Same
Remember that every life is different. Each is important. Each had its joys and its sorrows. The stories of courtship, of moves by teams of oxen and early rail, will enthrall you. When I learned that one great-grandfather left New York as a small boy and sailed the Great Lakes to Wisconsin, it led to a study of the great sailing era when hundreds of boats dotted the lakes. Finding that a great-great-grandfather was a “forty-niner” to California and had sailed around the Horn was almost as much fun to study as learning that within a couple of years his young daughter followed from the East, by way of the treacherous Isthmus of Panama crossing.
The Past Has a Personality
You will find opportunities along every step of the search to bring history alive for you and your family. The search is not about collecting names. It is about identifying, with certainty, each of your ancestors and learning enough about their lives to forge a connection. When you read a will written in 1715 and realize what few possessions they had and how they parceled them out, you will understand their lives of bare necessities. When you find the 1850 inventory of an estate that lists shoemaker’s tools, you will realize that your shoemaker grandfather was following in the family trade. The 1906 letter written from San Francisco will give a jolt when you realize that was the year of the big earthquake and fire. Opportunities to know your ancestors are endless. Enjoy them at every step of the search.