The impetus for starting this blog was learning about the 52 ancestors in 52 weeks. I have been so frustrated trying to figure out how to share all the stories and information I have accumulated with family members and others in a way that they will enjoy and not feel too overwhelmed.
I started working on my family history when I was eight years old. I loved listening my grandmother talk about her family and I started writing down notes about her mother and all the children she had that didn't survive in an old 1930s era leather bound agenda that my grandmother didn't want. I should take a picture of it and post it here!
I continued being interested in family history and would pester everyone about stories and when family members eventually passed away they would give me all the stuff they didn't know what to do with including, pictures, old letters, suitcases with random papers, etc. All this interest led me to go to college and earn both a bachelor's and Master's in history with an emphasis on 19th century women, but my true love was local history and learning about the every day lives of ordinary people. As a student, I also took classes in their new applied history program which included oral history, archives, and writing articles for the new edition of the Handbook of Texas, which was published in the 1990s. I loved this so much and was offered a job writing articles for the project as a research assistant. The articles included county histories, biographies of prominent people, and some businesses. This helped me become proficient with microfilm records, such as the census schedules. Not just the population schedule, but also the agricultural schedules and the slave schedules for 1850 and 1860, which are a sobering look at life during that time.
Also, during college in the late 1980s I would borrow Swedish microfilm at the local LDS library to research my mother's family. This took a lot of dedication to read the records and understand them. I managed to trace my family back four or five more generations.
In the summer I would visit my grandfather in Columbia, Missouri to work on more of the family history at the State Historical Society of Missouri where I would stay from open to close. We would also drive around to cemeteries, visit with family members, or anything else I could think of to gather more information.
I didn't realize I had so much to say about this, so I am calling this part 1. I will continue it later! I am going to start small and improve as I go along. Stay tuned!