Saturday, December 24, 2022
Thursday, December 15, 2022
Why Do You Do Genealogy?
This post was first published 14 Nov 2008 and my reasons for doing genealogy remain the same today in Nov 2022. Genealogy is still fun and there is still a thrill each time a piece of new information is found.
When you are really frustrated at not finding the information you want to know, do you wonder why you even do genealogy? I do, but only for a short time. Genealogy has been such a big part of my life for so long that it is hard to imagine life without it.
But why do I do genealogy? It isn’t in hopes of finding a connection to a famous person - I gave up that hope six months after I started researching. From the very beginning of time, or so it seems, my ancestors were hard working farmers whose lives centered around providing the basics for their families. None achieved greatness in terms of money, land or personal fame, but most were blessed with courage and perseverance. I’ll take those traits over money any day.That still doesn’t tell you why I do genealogy. I can’t answer in one word, but I can give you three reasons why genealogy is so important to me
Thursday, December 1, 2022
Spiritualism in Smithland
The following was originally published here on the 11th of June 2020.
On the 1st day of July 1875, a jury of 12 men met in a special term of the Livingston County Court to hear evidence and decide if Charles S. Lyon, a 35 year old resident of Smithland was of unsound mind and, if so, to determine the cause.
Robert Dale Owen of New Harmony, Posey County, Indiana was also a Spiritualist. Owen (1801-1890) was a member of the Indiana House of Representatives, wrote about his personal and political views and published two books. His family is found throughout New Harmony’s history. Another well-known Spiritualist was Sir Arthur Conan Doyle (1859-1930) who was interested in many subjects, including the paranormal and those of a mystical nature, but is perhaps better known as the creator of the character, Sherlock Holmes.
Thursday, November 24, 2022
Friday, November 18, 2022
Interview with Mother
In 1992 and 1993, I did several oral interviews with my mother, usually as I was driving her back to Kentucky after visiting my family in Indiana. These tapes laid in a desk drawer until they were recently re-discovered. They are now a precious reminder to me of my mother, who passed away in 2006. I can press the on button and immediately hear that soft Kentucky accent with the infectious laugh.
Never one to mince words, Mother was "on stage" as soon as that light started to glow on the recorder and she didn't stop until the tape ran out. She remembered and told me about things that happened when she was a young child, including the names of neighbors and exactly where their houses stood.
All of her life, Mother called her parents Mama and Daddy. Her voice softened when she talked about them. They were strict disciplinarians, but they were respected always. Anything less would not have been tolerated.
When news of a possible war in Europe began to filter to the United States, my grandfather would go to his brother's home nearby to listen to their radio and then would go home to tell his wife and children what was going on. Mother said the news frightened the children as they thought war was imminent. They got their own radio for Christmas shortly thereafter, but Mother's father was disappointed that there was nothing but seasonal music on Christmas day.
Mother attended Pleasant Grove School through eighth grade and then boarded with her grandfather, Chester Bebout, and his wife Minnie, to attend Salem High School. Mother told how her mother had always said that her daughters could not marry until they were 18 years old so when Mother turned 18, she thought it was time to marry ... and she did on the 25th of July 1937 when she was 18 years and 18 days of age. That marriage lasted until my father's death 39 years later.
There was much more that Mother had to say. She talked about pie suppers at Pleasant Grove, spending the nights with relatives and the childhood antics of my brother and I. There was much that came in Mother's life after these interviews. I wonder what she would have had to say about her re-marriage and the death of her son and second husband.
If I can make one comment about these tapes, it is that I
am so very fortunate to have made them over 20 years ago. If you
have older relatives living, I strongly recommend that you interview them while it
is still possible.
Originally published 12 March 2015, Western
Kentucky Genealogy Blog, http://wkygenealogy.blogspot.com/
Wednesday, November 9, 2022
To Some Evil -Minded Person
Some things are just too good not to share, even if they have little genealogical importance. The following advertisement appears in the Henderson Weekly Reporter, Thursday, 19 September 1861. It was first published on this blog on the 8th of April 2009.
Thursday, October 27, 2022
Children Born Out Of Wedlock
The following post on bastardy cases was originally published 11 Jul 2017.
What happened when a woman gave birth to a child begotten and born out of wedlock? Did the mother have any legal recourse? If she named the child's father, yes, she did have legal recourse.
