Archive for July, 2008
By Dara Blanchette • Jul 8th, 2008 • Category:
Features
Jim Killeen was satisfying his curiosity when he Googled his own name and found 24 other Jim Killeens. With little more than that name and sometimes an occupation, Jim contacted as many of them as he could track down.
Most of the Jim Killeens were skeptical, but seven eventually agreed to talk.
• Jul 8th, 2008 • Category:
Features
Still looking for ancestral treasures in a closet or attic? Family historian Craig Pfannkuche, president of Memory Trail Research, Inc., would tell you to dig deeper—into the outhouse. Outhouses, says Pfannkuche, can provide amazing information that you just won’t find anywhere else.
• Jul 8th, 2008 • Category:
Features
I remember watching my mother tear the fluffiest pancake I’d ever seen into chunks, crumbling it into the pan, sprinkling it with sugar, and serving it up with a side of family history as she talked about her own mother making Kaiserschmarren. According to Mom, the Austrian dish’s name meant Emperor’s Dessert, although in German a schmarr is also a cut or slash.
• Jul 8th, 2008 • Category:
Timeline
Tarot cards. Crystal balls. Psychics. Fortune cookies. Whether you’re a believer or not, you can’t deny that mortals have spent thousands of years trying to unlock the mysteries of the supernatural and change their fates by divining the future.
( ca. 2000 BC )
You have probably heard that Druids were pagan tree worshippers.
• Jul 8th, 2008 • Category:
Features
Ann Zundel thinks family history programs can work miracles in the lives of fractured families. She sees it nearly every day: tough men moved to tears by their discoveries of ancestors who overcame incredible hardships to survive. Men who barely have a place in their present families who find a sense of self from the past.
By Janet Bernice Jeys • Jul 8th, 2008 • Category:
Features
It can be a struggle sometimes to find your own family history, but is it better on the other side—when everyone knows your family history? In 2007, Ancestry Magazine asked Christopher Haley, nephew of Roots author Alex Haley, about growing up in the Western world’s most well-known family tree.
Ancestry Magazine: What was it like having such a famous family history?
• Jul 8th, 2008 • Category:
Cover Story,
Features
What if you could handpick the people sitting in your family tree? Would you choose rich ancestors? Beautiful ones? Ancestors who could get you the best seats at the finest restaurants or the kind whose mere mention would get you out of a parking ticket? Would healthy relatives be your choice? Great storytellers? Or would you just want to have relatives you might have had a chance to meet because they lived to be 100 years old—or more?
We challenged four family historians with the task of selecting people for their own dream trees. So who did they choose? See for yourself.
• Jul 8th, 2008 • Category:
Get Set Gear
As a former reporter, I can tell you that few experiences compare with traveling to where our ancestors walked, worked, and—as humble as their home may have been—lay down to sleep every night. An old family home can be full of great finds (especially if it is still in the family) so being armed with the right tools is a must.
What would I take?
• Jul 8th, 2008 • Category:
Breakthrough
My serious efforts to learn more about my Moon ancestry began in 2003, when the company I worked for installed a group of paintings on loan from the New Britain Museum of American Art. Among them was one by a Samuel Moon. My father had often said we had a painter in our family tree, but he had no details about it.
I had looked into our tree once while visiting New York in 1997.
By Elaine Clark • Jul 8th, 2008 • Category:
Features
My love of genealogy is a gift from my grandmother. When, as a child, I spent weekends with her, she enthralled me with chicken and dumplings, stories of how her parents met, and the delicious tale of how we descended from Mayflower pilgrims. I roamed the cornfields by her house looking for lost graves and dreaming of meeting the people in Grandma’s stories.