date
newest »
newest »
I hadn't heard of WikiTree Challenge before but I LOVE ancestry research, so I will certainly have to check it out. To me it is endlessly interesting to discover the human stories behind the names and dates. From family who hunted cross country for a cousin's killer, an epic court battle that went all the way to the US Supreme Court in the 1890s/1900s, to the mystery of an African American relative who died at 21 in the early 1900s and her death certificate cause of death only says "doctor refused to sign". The stories and circumstances have endless variety that never cease to entice me to research and learn more.
Sandy wrote: "I hadn't heard of WikiTree Challenge before but I LOVE ancestry research, so I will certainly have to check it out. To me it is endlessly interesting to discover the human stories behind the names ..."Yes. All this fine-grained history tends to get erased out of formal histories, which I feel falsifies them to some degree. And yet, limited time and attention, 24/7 is a hard limit, etc. Selection is required, but readers need to realize that selection is happening in the first place. Even a little acquaintance with first-hand contemporary accounts can help with that; one can then at least extrapolate.
I'm now old enough that I can see the simplification process being applied to events in my own lifetime, which feels deeply weird. No, actually, the entire population of US teenagers in the 1960s was not at Woodstock...
Ta, L.



23 & Me. They seemed very comprehensive.
L.