WARNING!! Very contagious to mature adults. NO KNOWN CURE SYMPTOMS:
Thanks to: Jill's Genealogy! |
You know you're addicted to genealogy when...
|
Many,
many years ago
This
widow had a grown-up daughter
This
made my dad my son-in-law
To
complicate the matters worse,
My
little baby then became
For
if he was my uncle,
Father's
wife then had a son,
My
wife is now my mother's mother
If
my wife is my grandmother,
For
now I have become
Thanks to Sue Wassenhove, Mishawaka, IN |
I think
that I shall never see, the finish of a family tree,
Author
unknown from : "Gates Researcher", courtest of Wilma Hildebrecht.
Chris
Clark -- Computer Training Specialist, OIT
|
It
was the first day of census, and all through the land;
Mon,
24 Aug 1998 14:36:14 -0700
|
Thought you'd enjoy this as much as I did. My cousin Judy sent them to me..... Would you believe...these are copies of actual correspondence received by the Family History Department? Our 2nd great grandfather was found dead crossing the plains in the library. He was married 3 times in the endowment house and has 21children. For running down the Wheelers, I will send $3.00 more. He and his daughter are listed as not being born. I would like to find out if I have any living relatives or dead relatives or ancestors in my family. Will you send me a list of all the Dripps in your library? My Grandfather died at the age of 3. We are sending you 5 children in a separate envelope. Documentation: Family Bible in possession of Aunt Merle until the tornado hit Topeka, Kansas, now only the Good Lord know where it is . . . The wife of #22 could not be found. Somebody suggested that she might have been stillborn. What do you think? I am mailing you my aunt and uncle and 3 of their children. Enclosed please find my Grandmother. I have worked on her for 30 years without success. Now see what you can do. I have a hard time finding myself in London. If I were there I was very small and cannot be found. This family had 7 nephews that I am unable to find. If you know who they are please add them to the list. We lost our Grandmother, will you please send us a copy? Will you please send me the name of my first wife? I have forgotten her name. A 14-year-old boy wrote: "I do not want you to do my research for me. Will you please send me all of the material on the Welch line, in the US, England and Scotland countries? I will do the research. Further research will be necessary to eliminate one of the parents. Carol Collins |
INCIDENCE:
CONTAGION:
SYMPTOMS:
These have always been the classic symptoms. But recently the virus causing this Pox seems to have mutated. The newest symptom is spending hours in front of a computer screen, sending e-mail messages and looking for more and more genealogy websites on the Internet. This can lead to dire consequences, as the victim often forgets to eat or sleep and can become emaciated, disoriented and clinically speaking, totally nuts! TREATMENT:
REMARKS/OBSERVATIONS:
Mon, 28 Sep 1998 08:13:22 -0500 From: Chris Clark <clark.96@nd.edu> |
Your
tombstone stands among the rest:
It
reaches out to all who care
Yet
each of us are cells of you
Dear
Ancestor, the place you filled
I wonder
if you lived and loved,
Author Unknown Date:
Fri, 13 Nov 1998 13:00:13 -0600
|
My
undertaking was slow in search of the past.
Pieces
fell into place, I was making great stride,
The
tree full of skeletons of highwayman and crooks.
Claudine Watkins |
Blessings
on this fine machine,
Sun,
15 Nov 1998 22:01:23 EST From: Susiemw@aol.com
|
A modern mother is explaining to her little girl about pictures in the family photo album. This is the geneticist with your surrogate mother and here's your sperm donor and your fathers clone. This is me holding you when you were just a frozen embryo. The lady with the very troubled look on her face is your aunt, a genealogist. Date:
Sun, 15 Nov 1998 23:23:21 1100
|
Lord,
help me dig into the past,
Author Unknown Date:
Tue, 10 Nov 1998 19:06:06 -0500
|
Dear Santa: Don't
bring me new dishes;
Author Unknown |
The public ceremony in which your distinguished ancestor participated and at which the platform collapsed under him turned out to be a hanging. When at last after much hard work you have solved the mystery you have been working on for two years, your aunt says, "I could have told you that." You grandmother's maiden name that you have searched for four years was on a letter in a box in the attic all the time. You never asked your father about his family when he was alive because you weren't interested in genealogy then. The will you need is in the safe on board the Titanic. Copies of old newspapers have holes occurring only on the surnames. John,
son of Thomas, the immigrant whom your relatives claim as the family progenitor,
died on board ship at
Your gr. grandfather's newspaper obituary states that he died leaving no issue of record. The keeper of the vital records you need has just been insulted by an another genealogist. The relative who had all the family photographs gave them all to her daughter who has no interest in genealogy and no inclination to share. The only record you find for your gr. grandfather is that his property was sold at a sheriff's sale for insolvency. The one document that would supply the missing link in your dead-end line has been lost due to fire, flood or war. The town clerk to whom you wrote for the information sends you a long handwritten letter which is totally illegible. The spelling for your European ancestor's name bears no relationship to its current spelling or pronunciation. None of the pictures in your recently deceased grandmother's photo album have names written on them. No one in your family tree ever did anything noteworthy, owned property, was sued or was named in wills. You learn that your great aunt's executor just sold her life's collection of family genealogical materials to a flea market dealer "somewhere in New York City." Ink fades and paper deteriorates at a rate inversely proportional to the value of the data recorded. The 37 volume, sixteen thousand page history of your county of origin isn't indexed. You finally find your gr. grandparent's wedding records and discover that the brides' father was named John Smith. From: "Shirley Reed" <misskitt@redbird.net> KINSMAN This
poem was written by an unknown author who was inspired by looking at
tombstones showing the date of birth and the date of death separated by a
dash. The Dash I
read of a man who stood to speak At
the funeral of his friend. He
referred to the dates on her tombstone From
the beginning to the end. He
noted that first came the date of her birth And
spoke of the second, with tears, But
said what mattered most of all Was
the dash between those years. For
that dash represents all the time That
she spent alive on earth, And
now only those who loved her Know
what that little line was worth. For
it matters not how much we own, The
cars, the houses, the cash. What
matters is how we live and love And
how we spend our dash. So
think about this long and hard: Are
there things you’d like to change? For
you never know how much time is left. (You
could be at “dash mid-range”.) If
we could just slow down enough To
consider what’s true and real, And
always try to understand The
way other people feel; And
be less quick to anger, And
show appreciation more, And
love the people in our lives Like
we’ve never loved before. If
we treat each other with respect, And
more often wear a smile, Remembering
that this special dash Might
only last awhile. So,
when your eulogy is being read With
your life’s actions to rehash: Would
you be pleased with the things they have to say About
how you spent your dash? logy is being read |
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