Do you collect anything?
When I was in college, it seemingly was the rage to have
something to collect. I’ll never forget the time when, just before my birthday,
someone asked me, “What are you into?”
“Into?” Not discerning what my friend meant, I had to ask
for a re-take on that question. Apparently, the question was meant as a
gift-giving query. At the time, people were “into” collecting owls. Or cats. Or
sheep. While I do find little lambs to make adorable insignia, the only cat
collectibles I might have been “into” would have been Kliban cats—not exactly
the kitsch my inquiring friend might have had in mind. So I ended up being the
recipient of various useless trinkets designed to represent caricatures of
owls.
For inexplicable reasons, some of these are still in my
possession.
How can I explain to inquiring friends that my sole object
of collection—if you can call it that—would be cousins? Something so intangible
as to have escaped the mass marketed promotional hype of that era.
Now? I’m not so sure I am the only one collecting cousins.
If you are a subscriber to Ancestry.com or FindMyPast.com or MyHeritage.com,
you are collecting cousins as well. Even more so, those of you participating in
DNA testing are doing so for that very reason.
So: we collect cousins. We find cousins of our grandparents.
Of our second-greats. Distant cousins we’d never recognize if we met them,
face to face. Duly noted, we fill our family history databases with their
records and ephemera about their lives and whereabouts. You never know when a
collateral relative might help you with that end run around your brick wall
ancestor.
While I haven’t been publicly cataloguing my research finds
here lately, behind the scenes I’ve been busily accumulating records of as
many of these distant cousins as I can find. Remember, I’m the one bent on
figuring out how my mtDNA exact-match mystery cousin connects with my maternal
line—even though it’s quite possible the line will exceed the reach of genealogical possibility.
Though I’m not talking much about the sausage-making aspect
of my genealogical grind right now, you can be sure I’m adding names, dates, and data
on every descendant of my Taliaferro and Broyles lines from the point of my
fourth great grandparents on down through our current generation. Sometimes, I
think this is going to make a mess of my family tree database—and then I remind
myself that that is what computer-driven databases are all about: data
crunching.
I wince when I think back to the last time I was crazy
enough to take on a project like this. I was still using an ancient version of
FamilyTreeMaker, a program resident in my desktop computer—yes, the old clunker
I am still, for the most part, using. When I lit upon the fact that my
mother-in-law’s ancestors all settled in one isolated place—Perry County, Ohio—and
stayed there for generations since their settlement in the early 1800s, I
realized what a field day I could have, examining how everyone in the community
was related to everyone else.
And they were. I have the records to demonstrate it. I can
tell you all the ways my husband is related to himself. No joke. That, too, was
how my database blew up to hold records on over fourteen thousand individuals.
And now I want to add my mother’s line to that?
I promise I’ll come up for air and let you know my progress
if I stumble upon anything interesting in this quest. In the meantime just know that behind
the scenes, I’m plugging away, adding Taliaferros, Broyleses and many, many new
surnames to my now-cloud-based family tree.
Someday soon—hopefully—the effort will lead to connections
with all those DNA matches I’ve gained from my autosomal and mitochondrial DNA
tests. Even better, all this work will bring me to the point of connecting with
my mystery cousin, aligning two families' stories into one.
Above: Portrait of Dr. Luis Simarro at the Microscope, 1897 oil on canvas by Joaquín Sorolla y Bastida; courtesy Wikipedia; in the public domain.
Above: Portrait of Dr. Luis Simarro at the Microscope, 1897 oil on canvas by Joaquín Sorolla y Bastida; courtesy Wikipedia; in the public domain.
I collect dust... does that count? :)
ReplyDelete:P
DeleteOld photos, dice, marbles...way to many things!
ReplyDeleteI am keeping my fingers crossed that you collect many cousins:)
Thank you, Far Side. Whether many or few (cousins, that is), it will still prove to be an interesting journey.
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