While online networking has its many positive points for
family history researchers—as we’ve seen discussed in the past few days—most people
considering these benefits are looking prospectively
rather than retrospectively. I find
that, by using online resources as a form of documentation of our work, we can
also leave a long tail of sorts—one that will serve as historic place marker so
others in the future may find us through our digital tracks.
Of course, I take that concept with a caveat: our online
footprints, and all the ways we leave the digital imprints of our research
efforts, are delineated by the permanence of the servers who host our
electronic activities. I discussed that last year in reviewing an article I
found on the mission to archive the contents of the now-defunct GeoCities.
While we may think—and act as if—computing monoliths such as Google will never
fade from the scene, permanence itself, alas, is never guaranteed.
And yet, we continue to leave our tracks in the digital
sand, hoping someone, somehow, will connect with us.
Take these pieces of ephemera I struggle to make sense of—these
items found among the personal papers of my husband’s grandmother. Agnes Tully Stevens, a through-and-through American descendant of Irish grandparents all
around, saved all the important papers. She carefully preserved letters home
from the war front, written by her son in the Navy on the Pacific Front. She
kept news clippings of people whose connections I can reconstruct—and some of
acquaintances whom I cannot fathom despite my best efforts.
Though I don’t know who some of these people are from those
long-gone generations, I still don’t hesitate in the least to post their
information online. Why? I hope these transcriptions will show up in the search
results of some genealogy researcher who is hoping to find a more complete
picture of who his or her ancestor really is.
So when I come to scraps of paper from over one hundred
years ago—lists of graduating classes of 1895, for instance—I transcribe them
with all the hope and anticipation of a child waking up to the possibilities of
a Christmas morn. I hope that Google search for the name that was someone’s
ancestor brings researchers to a site like this where they can leave having
found just a little bit more of their family’s personal history.
So for the next couple days, please indulge me as I list
some Chicago names from another century—people who were not famous, not sought
for anything in particular, except for the fact that they had a son…or a
daughter…who had a son…or a daughter…who had, eventually, a child who grew to
seek out the lives that went on before.
And if you are one of those seekers, please do stop by and
let me know. I love to hear other people’s stories!
Closing exercises of
St. Anne’s School,
Wednesday and Friday,
June 26 and 28, 1895,
St. Anne’s School Hall
Wentworth Ave and 55th St.
At 7:30 P. M.
Jacqui, I appreciate your endeavors to post those tidbits that might otherwise be lost -- and the hope that some family member might find that lost link. Keep up the good work.
ReplyDeleteJoan, having a distant family member find something helpful in these posts would really make my day! Of course, I keep reminding myself that this "long tail" effect of the Internet resources requires a lot of patience! Someday...
DeleteThis is truly a labor of love. I hope Miss Tully did not have 950 classmaates like I did... :)
ReplyDeleteYou will be glad to know, Iggy, that the setting for these exercises was a little more intimate. This may be a labor of love--but not that much love!
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