Heavy.
And
what better quotation could there be for a genealogist? I may not have
mentioned it before, but I am a genealogist. Not by vocation, but by
passion. If I had my way, I would research genealogy until I turned
blue. And I nearly have a couple of times. I can hardly take credit
for the association of that quotation with genealogy, however, after all
it is carved into the facade of the National Archives.
And,
yes, the National Archives in Washington is one of my favorite places
in the world. Back before Ancestry.com put all the census data online, I
would take trips to the Archives building and hunch over the microfilm
viewers and scroll through endless images searching for a connection.
urrrrh, urrrrh,. . . whirrrrrrr. . . urrrrh, urrh, urrh,. . . whirrrrrrrrrrr. . .
Then,
when I was done with a reel, I'd have to stand up for leverage to
rewind. Nowadays, people can sit in the comfort of their own home, in
their jammies, with a cool drink and look things up in an INDEX! Wimps.
If your arm isn't numb at the end of a research day, you weren't
really working.
The past is
our prologue. Everything that's happened to us and to our ancestors
has laid the foundation for today. What motivated John Watkins to sail
with John Smith to the New World? Where would I be if he hadn't? In my
mind, I see genealogy as the perfect avocation using a combination of
research skills, detective skills, knowledge of history, geography,
etymology, human relations, handwriting analysis, documentation and
prose.
But all that takes a back seat to the rush of discovery. I
vividly remember sitting all alone in a dusty, rarely used records room
in Montgomery County, Maryland searching through wills in books that
hadn't been opened for twenty years. I had been at a standstill
searching for proof that the father of Caleb Watkins was Nicholas as
others had documented repeatedly, but without proof. When I found
Caleb's will, included in the possessions he was bequeathing was a
certain silver watch that "had been given me by my father Jeremiah". In
the silence of that room, Caleb had spoken to me across the years and
across the generations. I can't describe to you the thrill of that
discovery, the surety, the ultimate illumination. Caleb's
voice clearly echoed through the dust particles floating in the air,
"Nicholas was my uncle, you idiot, Jeremiah was my father, I have his
watch."
The past is the past, and it is merely the prologue for
what will come today. Use the knowledge you have gained by your
hard-won experience and make today better.
Sounds as you've found your calling. This should be interesting reading and I look forward to it!
December 2, 2008 at 10:27 AM