I have a blogging friend who writes from Minnesota. Every fall, she has a contest
among her readers to see whose guess comes the closest to the season’s first
snowfall. Incredibly, she already has a winner.
Around here where I live—I assure you, a much more habitable clime
than Minnesota—thoughts are more likely to turn to rain than snow. We can begin
our rainy season any time from September through mid November.
As for this year, it started last night.
The drip-drip-drip of the season change happens to take on
the very aura of what I’ve been feeling about my genealogy project since taking
the leap from researching a big city (Chicago) to exploring a rural area (like
northern Florida or east Tennessee). Believe me, after a day of sheer research
drudgery, I’ll take digital and email any day, over analog and snail mail.
But snail mail it is to be. I’m all set to hurry up and wait
six weeks for the sunshiny state of Florida
to respond to my request for death certificates for my great grandparents,
Rupert Charles and Sarah Ann Broyles McClellan. (By the way, you know this is
the south, now, don’t y’all? And everyone in the south uses two names, y’hear?)
All the while, I’m fervently wishing there was a place where I could get a fast
response without the financial drain.
Why is it that going from zero to sixty to enter the digital
research race is such a thrill, while returning from sixty to zero is such a
drag? It’s just the same process, only in reverse.
And it’s not like I haven’t paid my dues in dusty reading
rooms, or cranking microfilm readers so fast it induces motion sickness. I used
to thrive on the hunt in archives, or the chase through multiple cities’
libraries, just to come up with one coveted fact. What’s different now?
It may just be that I’ve become spoiled. With an online
world saturated with the likes of Ancestry.com, GenealogyBank, Fold3—not to
mention the free resources all the way from the top with FamilySearch.org to the
thousands of free genealogy links just there for the taking on Cyndi’s List—there
are so many ways to find what we’re looking for.
Until I get to rural—read isolated—places like Embreeville, Tennessee.
A spot like Embreeville doesn’t even have its own Wikipedia entry (okay, insert
tongue in cheek here). Granted, having a Wikipedia entry does not confer
authority upon a person, place or thing. But it does take people to write
Wikipedia entries, and it looks like there is quite a dearth of people willing
to record anything about the place called Embreeville. Oh, there is a
longstanding AngelFire page that gives a brief history of the place. And a
weather service website that includes a picture of the area. After all, one of
Embreeville’s claims to fame is that the Nolichucky River
makes a horseshoe bend around the town. Now, that’s living.
As you can imagine, it sometimes seems as if it would be more productive for research
progress to actually travel there and try to find things for myself.
That, however, is my bad attitude coming out. (Yes, I’ll
blame it on the rain.)
When the Broyles family needed to go to town, however, they did have a town to go to—thankfully.
Sarah Ann Broyles McClellan’s childhood days were balanced between the solitude
of Embreeville and the historic quaintness of Tennessee’s oldest town, Jonesborough. Or,
putting it more the way the family wrote it in Bible and other records, “Jonesboro.”
Just as there were signs of civilization for the Broyles
family living near the town of Jonesborough,
I do have online options open to me, too. Just in my one fitful—make that pouty—day
of stumbling about in this strange online land, I managed to find some old
Rootsweb sites, plus the thoroughly modern Facebook pages for the Washington County Tennessee Obituary Project (seventeen hundred and counting), the
Jonesborough Genealogical Society, and Friends of the Washington County Tennessee Archives. The more I look, the more I’m sure to find. It’s just a
learning curve, and I’ll have to get used to climbing it without slipping.
Someday, I’ll be taking it at sixty.
Somewhere in all those signs of civilization, though, I’ve
yet to uncover any obituaries or cemetery records that match up to my Broyles
family names. And yet it is Sarah Ann Broyles’ father who is my next link to my
quest for D.A.R. membership: the good doctor, Thomas Taliaferro Broyles. I need
to remind myself, though, that for this
application, all I need is documentation . Stay the course, don’t be tempted to detour onto bunny trails. I
need to remind myself of that mantra when I’m yearning to stop and sniff out
all those delicious family stories that have peopled the data I’ve done in past
research quests. While D.A.R. may want names and dates, I really thrive on the
stories—but that will come later. The dreary rainy season does take an
occasional break for some sunshine.
Above: oil painting by Gustave Caillebotte, Paris Street in Rainy Weather, courtesy Wikipedia; in the public domain.
Patience and focus... that is my mantra... oh and "no! NO! NOOOooooo snoooooow!"
ReplyDeleteI heartily agree with you, Iggy...but somehow I yielded to the temptation to go as far as "no more rain" too. Obviously, I'm having a hard time getting over summer :(
Delete