Sometimes, those old family stories can get a person in
trouble. You know, those unbelievable tales your Aunt Mabel insisted were the very truth about her
grandmother. Or worse, the ones your grandfather passed along when you were
just a little kid. Surely, everything grandfathers say is true.
Right?
Not my grandfather. He was a lot of fun. Energetic,
gregarious, he wasn’t exactly the life of the party—too hard a worker to wander
toward the night life direction—but he could strike up a conversation with
anyone, known or unknown, at the drop of a hat. My mother used to reminisce
that her father never knew a stranger.
And he could tell stories.
Of course, those were the stories from my childhood that I
remembered well into adulthood. When I got entangled with family history
research, I pulled those stories back out for a serious review. Now that he was
gone, I had to determine which ones were real, and which ones were just for a
little fun.
One story I remember hearing—and couldn’t quite recall
whether it was told with a twinkle in his eye—was that of John Wilkes Booth.
Remember, my grandfather was a Southerner, through and through. The gasps of
horror one would expect from those hearing the assassination news up North were
not the same sounds emanating from some people in the South. Those other people were the type from whom my
grandfather descended.
To the point, the story was that John Wilkes Booth did not die like the history books insist,
but rather escaped and fled to Texas—to an isolated place, in fact, where our
own Booth relatives owned a ranch.
Of course that was not true. Everyone knows what happened in
that story. When I grew up, I realized that was one of my grandfather’s ways of
“pulling my leg” and let it go at that.
Then dawned the advent of online genealogical research.
Remember those early years of genealogical forums? What should I discover while
exploring that new world of computer-enabled accessibility but the very same
stories I heard about the Booth family from my grandfather. Yet, the people
sharing those stories were not relatives I knew.
“Who are you?” I’d find myself asking, when encountering
someone else who knew that same story. Why did these people know my grandfather’s
joke, when I didn’t know them?
All these discussions occurred in online forums, so of
course, my responses have been forever captured for the search-savvy world to
discover. And, just recently, someone did.
How do I know? Because yesterday, my day started when something happened that I least expected. I got a phone call from
someone who wanted to follow up on that very story.
Actually, my grandfather had an alibi for having told the
tale: he really did have a relative
named John Wilkes Booth. Only, this man was born in 1871—not 1838. Our John Wilkes Booth was born in Texas—yes, on or near that very ranch I just
mentioned. Likely, the child was merely a Southern sympathizer’s token
remembrance with the use of the infamous namesake.
Yet, incredibly, after all these years, there are people
still earnestly seeking proof of identity of the man who was buried after that
tragedy. Such stories are not hard to find—just googling the topic, from recent years, I came
across a couple here and here.
For the record, though I’ve tried—oh, you know I’ve tried; I’m an obsessed
researcher—I haven’t been able to find any connection between my family’s
Booths and those of the never-to-be-forgotten John Wilkes Booth.
But I still got a phone call yesterday, anyhow. Just in
case.
Above: photograph of John Wilkes Booth, circa 1865, taken by Alexander Gardner; courtesy United States Library of Congress via Wikipedia; in the public domain.
Above: photograph of John Wilkes Booth, circa 1865, taken by Alexander Gardner; courtesy United States Library of Congress via Wikipedia; in the public domain.
I bet that was an interesting phone call:)
ReplyDeleteIt was quite a conversation!
DeleteI love this story. It reminds me of my grandmother telling me that my grandfather went to Harvard, but never graduated. Years ago, I followed up by writing to the Harvard registrar's office and they dutifully replied that no Vernon Tarbox Adams had ever been enrolled there. I could never figure out why my grandmother thought that he did and she passed away before I could ask any more questions. A few years ago, the World War I draft registrations were added to Ancestry. I found Vernon Adams in them. He was born in 1899 and just turning 18 as the war ended. He was in boot camp in 1917 and they were stationed at - Harvard! She was right all along as he "went" to Harvard, but never graduated. Sometimes there is a kernel of truth in family stories.
ReplyDeleteWhat a great story, Linda! Thanks for sharing it.
DeleteYou're right: sometimes it is hard to figure out what family members were thinking when they shared the stories they did. Of course, now we can't ask them those questions...but at least with the search capabilities we have now, it is getting easier to track down the answers for ourselves.
English is a slippery language!! Be careful how you interpret the family lore!
ReplyDeleteSo true, Iggy. Sometimes, that "kernel of truth" Linda mentioned can go a long way...but the trick is in finding it in the first place.
Delete