Once upon a time, there was consumer expectation that, when
a new product was brought to market, it was error-free and all possible malfunctions
had been worked out of the system.
Then there was software. Computer programmers discovered
that, if they applied some cool-sounding term like “beta” to their product,
they could get away with selling the general public on becoming unpaid guinea
pigs for their newest release.
Somehow, in the world of genealogy, we haven’t yet reached
the plateau of beta testing nirvana. When we receive a book or a printout on a
family’s genealogy, we expect it to be expertly-researched, footnoted, duly
documented in every which way to Sunday’s genealogical gospel truth.
In other words, no beta testing for us family historians.
And yet, we now have so many advanced opportunities to
engage in genealogical crowd-sourcing. We could,
feasibly, issue our family trees as proposals
from the perspective of our research as it stands at this point in our process of discovery, and invite collegiate
review of our work—a thought I’ll pursue in more detail tomorrow.
For the low-tech genealogical writer in 1960, however, things wouldn’t
have gone quite the same. Take, for instance, a book revered in circles of
those researching the widespread Broyles family in the United States.
The Broyles family from Germany,
having emigrated to the New World as early as
the 1700s, happens to be one segment of my own roots. One of the first sources
I became aware of for research into this line was the very book by Montague
Boyd that I mentioned yesterday.
Apparently, at its publication in 1959, Genealogical Data: Broyles, Laffitte, and Boyd Families was not the
authoritative and exhaustive work it may have been envisioned to be—at least,
if we can read between the lines on a brief letter scrawled by the author on
the back of a printed sheet we'll look at tomorrow, mailed to my grandmother in Columbus, Ohio,
on March 12, 1960. “See if you can make any changes or additions in it for me,”
requested Dr. Boyd from his location in Atlanta, Georgia.
I have no idea whether my grandmother ever got a copy of the
book to “look it over carefully.” I never found a copy of Montague Boyd’s work
in my grandmother’s property, though her Aunt Nellie recommended it
enthusiastically. When I found her papers—saved among her daughter’s personal
belongings at her passing—the letter below was still carefully tucked inside
its envelope, along with the undated note I posted yesterday from her aunt, Nellie Broyles Jones of Johnson City, Tennessee.
For some people, the interest they take in genealogy may be
keen, but often it is fleeting. It takes a lot of work to assemble a
genealogical project of any sort—even if it was a “beta version” issued in 1959
seeking low-tech updates by snail mail in 1960.
Mar
11, 60
My dear Mrs. Davis
Mrs. Nellie B. Jones gave me your
address. I had the wrong street etc in Columbus,
Ohio.
I wish that you would get one of the
books of genealogical data and look it over carefully and see if you can make
any changes or additions in it for me.
Kind regards
Montague
Boyd
(Over)
I think I'm too much into "instant gratification" to have thought about researching by snail mail... I probably wouldn't be half as interested without the "at your fingertips" the Internet has brought the science/art.
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