In all the years I have been doing research into the history of my family, I have been constantly amazed by the lack of interest I see in most genealogies for providing contextual materials that show whatever about how their ancestors lived. From time to time I see stories about individuals, when people have been lucky sufficient to find a personal anecdote that has managed to make its way into historical records. I see wills, and deeds and land grants. Once in a while, I see a personal letter or journal entry, or a page from the house bible. But these instances are indeed relatively rare in the plethora of genealogies posted on the internet. Mostly I just see names, lists and lists of names.
To make matters worse, at least in my own humble opinion, the lists of names are often displayed in such a way as to make them effectively meaningless. You click on a name and you can get a person's parents names, or a child's name, but often they are so jumbled in a list on the page that you can't even begin to ensue a line of descent in any comprehensible way.
This type of recording may be genealogy, but it is not house history. I personally can see no sense, and get no pleasure, out of knowing a list of names. I don't indeed care what my ancestors were called, I want to know what they did. I want to know how they lived, what they experienced, who their friends were, what they did for a living, what they cared about and what they disliked. I want to know how they were raised, whether they were happy, and what was going on in the world around them. Knowing as much about these things as you possibly can is the only way to indeed know who it is you came from. Only then, can you say what you have is house history, and only then can you truly understand your ancestors, and get a real sense of knowing what kind of blood is flowing in your veins.
So, you may be wondering, how are you supposed to get all this enriching contextual material, when all you have is, for example, a name on a census?
Start with the family! More often than not, people only concern themselves with the name of the child in a house that is their direct ancestor. Siblings are too often totally ignored.
When doing my own house history, the place I start is with the other members of the family. From my experience, most people never look for facts about siblings. Many never even list their names. However, this can be a very rewarding line of research. In my own house I have many times discovered spellbinding and highly helpful facts by doing this. For example, in my Haines line, I have a Carlisle Haines married to a Sarah Matlack. I'm sure these names mean nothing to you, as they didn't to me either. However, while researching Sarah's family, which included seven siblings, I discovered an highly important piece of information.
Sarah had a brother named Timothy Matlack, It turns out that Timothy is the man who indeed scribed the proclamation of Independence we all know and love. Yes, the words were written by Thomas Jefferson, but the handwriting on the final copy was that of Timothy Matlack. What an spellbinding discovery! So what does this mean for my house history? Well, there is quite a bit of material written about Timothy. By studying that, I can deduce that his family, along with Sarah and her family, probably knew many of the people whose names we read of in the history books.
Perhaps they even attended collective events together. Most likely they had political sympathies in line with Timothy's. It tells something also of the level of community in which they lived. So now, instead of having naturally the names of some generation of great grandparents, I have the beginnings of understanding much more about who they were and how they lived. Supplementary delvings into the house uncovered a lot more, facts I would never have known if I had not begun looking at the siblings of my ancestor in the first place.
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