Author Archive

Something Squirrelly Going On

By katie • May 10th, 2007 • Category: On the Web

 
“Squirrel Driven ‘Nuts’ By Heat”
That newspaper clipping attached to Cindy Furman’s letter was all I had to see to know I was hooked. The owner of the scrapbook that held the clipping—a scrapbook Cindy found at Goodwill—had carefully noted, “Martha cut this from Cleveland paper—Summer 1936.”
I had to know.



A Moveable Feat

By katie • May 2nd, 2007 • Category: Tomorrow

I don’t know anyone who likes moving. The packing up is hard to fit into a modern schedule, and if you’ve lived in the same place for any time at all, you’re bound to step on a dozen emotional land mines that will stop you in your tracks.
Relocating might seem like a modern concept, but our ancestors moved plenty—the census shows it.



Stories Behind the Stories

By katie • May 2nd, 2007 • Category: Tomorrow

Facts in Fiction
Getting the feel for when and where your ancestors lived can give you a better understanding of how they lived. Unfortunately, sometimes histories that offer information on a locale can be pretty dry. Why not put some fun into it and let someone else do the research for you?



No Rest for the Wiki

By katie • May 2nd, 2007 • Category: Tomorrow

Got your own version of family history that’s just begging to come out? Maybe you need a wiki.
A wiki is a website where anyone can participate by adding new information or changing existing information—anytime and instantly. Start looking and you’ll discover wikis exist on almost every subject. Even family history.



Giving Up Secrets

By katie • May 2nd, 2007 • Category: 5 Steps Beyond

What do you do when you get your hands on an old letter like this one found hiding in the wall?
1. Check the Address
Armed with the address on the letter, look for Griffins in city directories. George A. Griffin is listed all the way back to 1871. According to the 1880 census, he had a wife named Maizy and several children.
2.



Tracing a Trail of Black Gold

By katie • May 2nd, 2007 • Category: Today

With the price of oil hovering at record highs, who wouldn’t want to inherit a little? And the best way to find out just whose roots tap into black gold? By checking family history.
Just ask Genevieve Main. She put her family history expertise to work for the U.S. government for 14 years digging up the genealogy of land.



At the Soda Fountain

By katie • May 2nd, 2007 • Category: Yesterday

Once upon a time, just about anything you could dream up could be realized at the drugstore soda fountain.
It was yesterday’s answer to the corner coffee shop—a place where people could meet, talk, and have a tasty treat—but a lot more fun. Back in the day, corner drugstores graced almost every corner.



From Rags to Khaki Britches

By katie • May 2nd, 2007 • Category: Features

From khaki to camo, we look for visual clues to recognize members of America’s military today. But historically, to what extent did the clothes make the military man and woman?
Dressed for Success?
Every upstart needs a good defense—America included.



Keeping it in the Family: Muncaster Castle

By katie • May 2nd, 2007 • Category: Timeline

Not many of us live in homes that have been in the family for 100 years—not to mention longer. But for the Penningtons, possessing the ancestral manor is no dream. Muncaster Castle has been in their family for more than 700 years. Take a look at a house history most of us can only dream of.
1208
King John grants land along the Esk river in Cumbria, England, to Alan de Penitone.
ca.



Opening Up

By katie • May 1st, 2007 • Category: Research

 
Veterans can be reticent about sharing accounts of their combat experiences, unless the listener is the right person or an incident triggers the memories. It took both in the case of my mother’s youngest brother, Clifford F. DeRevere.