Having a Genealogy Angel to walk me through the application
process for what, in my mind, is a daunting project—acceptance into the lineage
society, Daughters of the American Revolution—is a blessing. Getting to meet
with said Genealogy Angel over a cup of coffee is heaven-sent.
That’s the way I spent my morning yesterday. Thankfully, my
Genealogy Angel is officially appointed to do just that: assist people through
the process of dotting all the Is and crossing all the Ts of the paper chain
that reaches back from my life to that of a patriot in our country’s war for
independence.
I’m learning a lot in the process.
For one thing, I’ve learned that there are some details of
my grandmother’s life that I never knew. Facts that perhaps her own daughters never
knew. Sometimes it’s uncomfortable to stumble across those details. Sometimes
it leads to the realization, “That explains everything,” as another researcher
recently observed.
I’m also experiencing a process where these
relatives-on-paper are taking on a three dimensional aura like I’ve never
noticed before. I’m learning their stories. Learning how to see each one as an
individual. Above all, learning to see each name as more than a collection of
vital statistics. My ancestors are becoming real people to me.
That is not necessarily an easy task. It takes work finding
some of these details. True, the D.A.R. application requires verification of
those vital statistics. But in the journey back through time—my time—I’m choosing to adorn those
vital dates with as much detail as I can add to the picture. You know me: I need a story to go with those names!
While my maternal grandmother—the Rubie of the last few days’
posts—is still an enigma to me, her
mother is starting to come to life through what I’m uncovering. She—the Sarah Ann Broyles of “Jonesboro” in Tennessee
who somehow met and eventually married Florida dentist Rupert Charles McClellan—was a relative I
never met. Yet, her photograph has been in my life because she was my mother’s
beloved grandmother. Through my mother’s stories, her grandmother came to life
for me, and ever since my own childhood, those stories allowed me to see much
more than just the face in the photograph.
Reconstructing her through the paper trail is only part of
the journey, but it is a necessary step. I can find Sarah Ann Broyles in the
1898 record of her marriage in her hometown in Washington County, Tennessee.
I can see her tentative first years of marriage—not in her hometown, not in her
husband’s, either—in the first census after she married Rupert McClellan. With
his name mangled for the 1900 record as “Robert,” he and his young family had
settled in Virginia—but
not for long.
Within ten years, he had returned to his home state with his
family in tow—not to the homestead of his parents, but a new life for his
family and his profession in Fort Meade, Polk
County. (Not, however,
without having his given name, once again, misrepresented for the record.) And
finally, with the 1930 census, choosing to move once again—this time to Tampa, where Rupert and
Sarah Ann remained for the rest of their lives.
I find—thanks to a Find a Grave volunteer—photographs of the
McClellan grave at the Myrtle Hill Memorial Park in Tampa, the final resting
place for Rupert in 1943, and Sarah Ann in 1950. While I have yet to locate any
obituaries for them, there is enough of a framework of their life’s stories to
help sketch in the details.
And, oh, so much more I want to know than those details that
will connect me with a membership in a society that confirms my American
heritage. The process of the D.A.R. application, really, serves as the backbone
supporting my own quest to delve into the essence of these lives.
I want to know the little details. Really, I want to ask
Sarah Ann Broyles so many questions. “How did you meet your future husband?
What made you decide to move so far from home? How was life different for you
in your new home? Why did you pick the names you chose for your children?”
The list goes on and on. And I may never know the answers.
But I know one thing: without asking any questions, I could never begin to make
any discoveries.
And, once I’ve begun making those discoveries, I could
certainly use a Genealogy Angel to help light the paperwork trail for me.
And a cup of coffee can come in handy in the process.
You have a good start! I am sure you are going to learn much along the way! :)
ReplyDeleteAfter doing so much research work online for so long, it feels quite awkward to get back on the paper trail again. And to think I'll have to wait six weeks or more for some snail mail results...hmmm...there's got to be an alternate route!
Deleteahh, Jacqi, a gal after my own heart. It's the stories that give such richness to our ancestor's lives -- and to ours as well. Good work on Sarah and Rupert.
ReplyDeleteJoan, I've really surprised myself with the struggle I'm having to merely succumb to the grunt work--and grunt work, alone. I thrive on the stories, and feel like I'm clawing my way through a dry desert without their ornamentation.
DeleteThanks for the encouragement. I'll stay focused on that.
Hi! I am getting ready to start a genealogy blog and am spending some time reading what others are writing. I, too, am going through the DAR application process with a wondeful DAR Angl, as you put it. We, too, have met for coffee... well, drinks... at Starbucks. Fortunately, I already had all of the information I needed to apply! It was a just a question of getting it all together, making copies, etc. And, I am eagerly awaiting my acceptance letter!
ReplyDeleteAlso, I started genealogy almost 15 years ago, and have just recently started thinking about the people and stories... not just collecting vital statistics! I'm trying to tell myself not to find any new people... for now. I've got so much to work with as it is! :-)
Enjoy the journey!
Yeah...it's that "getting it all together" step that seems to take so much time!
DeleteThanks for stopping by, Dana! Please consider this your invitation to come back again--especially when you get your own blog up and running, so you can share the address here.
I heartily recommend, once your blog has gone live, that you go to www.geneabloggers.com and add your blog to their list. That way, others can find their way to you, too.
Hmm... My Grandmother always drank her coffee "black" (and strong!) -- something to add to the "tapestry", coffee/tea preference? :)
ReplyDeleteNow that you mention it, Iggy, I can still hear my grandmother talking about her "te-uh." I guess it wasn't ever coffee for her. (But she did have a preference for Coke! After all, that was a beverage with southern origins.)
Delete