If you are like me, there are times when you just want to
curl up with a good book and get lost in the story. Sometimes those stories get
so compelling, though, it’s hard to resist the temptation to take a peek
ahead, just to see what’s going to happen. Whether whodunit, thriller, or the more tame varieties of novels—even a well-written biography—stories have
this magnetic pull, drawing the reader to the back of the book.
Genealogy books, on the other hand, work in an entirely
different direction. They are likely the only kind of book written in which the
reader is sorely tempted to jump ahead to the beginning of the book. When I found the Tilson genealogy book, for
instance, I began with the first listing of my immediate line that I could find
from the index, landing me somewhere around page 167. That’s where my Davis family connects by
marriage with the Tilson line.
Considering that is in a book boasting 609 pages, I was
doing well. After all, my connection was six generations subsequent to the
original immigrant Tilson’s arrival on colonial American soil. Rachel Tilson
Davis, my third great grandmother, claimed designation 1393 out of a total 5524 numbered
entries. And that was in a family tree extending only up to the year 1911.
I couldn’t resist; I peeked. I could see from the
format that her line of ascent went from her father Peleg, to his father
William, to Stephen, to Edmund, to Ephraim, to Edmond the immigrant. Curiosity got the best
of me, and I wanted to know about this most distant of ancestors who managed to
arrive on American soil in the 1600s.
So, I flipped to the front of the book and began reading.
Truth be told, I skipped over the promised “brief sketches of the family in England back to
1066,” and zoomed in on the start of the genealogy. That didn’t begin until page thirty. But at least then, I could
work my way forward and see how the original family began unfolding into the
multiple generations that led toward the future.
Under the chapter heading, “First Generation,” I easily
spotted Edmond’s
son, Ephraim. The third child of Edmond and
Joane Tilson, he was likely born in England
before the family left for the New World. As
the book began listing each of the children and their progeny, I paged forward
to find that third child, Ephraim.
First listed was Edmond’s
daughter, Mary, followed by the second child, Elizabeth. At the bottom of page
thirty two, I finally spotted Ephraim, along with the details of his marriage
to Elizabeth Hoskins and the listing of their six children. Edmund, my targeted
ancestor, was Ephraim’s firstborn, listed as person number twenty eight.
You know that’s the next number I went flipping through the
pages to find. Yep, I skipped all the history. All the land records. All the
quotes from colony records where he was fined for “breaking the King’s peace.”
And believe me—there was a lot of that history. I was still scanning through
the narrative at page thirty six.
On the next page, the narrative ended. The numbering system
started up again. I was finally going to be able to read up on my ancestor.
But wait! The bottom of the page started up with entry
number thirty four. What happened to my guy, number twenty eight?
I flipped back and forth, trying—in all that text—to find the
number I was missing, but all to no avail.
Finally, it dawned on me to look up to the top of the page
to the numbers that really counted: the page
numbers. There, I found the explanation to my difficulties: the book was missing two pages.
Of course, they
had to be the very two pages upon which my seventh great grandfather’s
information was recorded.
Where did those two pages go? I looked ahead—and back
behind, as well—to see if it was just a fluke of the numbering system. Still, I
knew that wasn’t the reason. The missing text made the jump between the pages
too disjointed.
If this weren’t a digitized version of a public domain book
freely accessible to anyone who cares to read it, I’d say I wanted my money back.
But with the convenience and accessibility of online books—after all, you can’t
beat the price!—comes a down side. When the imaging process misses a page—or two
or three—the reader has no recourse but to go back and do what would have been
done in the first place: go find another copy of the book.
If I’m fortunate, the Mercer Tilson book will have been
digitized by another entity—perhaps a resource like the Hathi Trust. If not, I’ve
already confirmed with WorldCat that I can access the “analog” version of the
volume at a sort-of-nearby real brick and mortar library.
And where does that put me? Back where we used to be, doing research
from real books in real libraries.
If only those libraries had cozy chairs to go with those
books.
Above: "The Bookworm," oil on canvas by Carl Spitzweg, circa 1850; courtesy Wikipedia; in the public domain.
Above: "The Bookworm," oil on canvas by Carl Spitzweg, circa 1850; courtesy Wikipedia; in the public domain.
Argh! Why those pages!? I'd be a little miffed too!
ReplyDeleteOh, well, add that to my list of real books to look up when I get to the Sutro library.
DeleteAt least you can go to the real library and find your answers, they are not lost forever:)
ReplyDeleteSo glad there's a recourse when those highly organized electrons fail me ;)
Delete