Living Histories
Column for Lodi News Sentinel
By Ann Kerr
This fall
the Lodi Family History Center is emphasizing the importance of gathering
histories from relatives who are still living. Their stories (our heritage) are
family treasures that need to be preserved.
This will
be the first in a series of three columns to give you ideas on why and how you
can gather and preserve a living history.
First, why
should we do this?
- To create and preserve heart-felt family experiences.
- To give us opportunities to learn from the lives and lessons of previous generations
- To draw upon the perspective and moral strength of the past.
- To build communication, foster respect, and show our love for those who have worked and sacrificed to give us so much.
Someone once said, “When an older person dies, a
library burns.” Don’t wait until it’s
too late to gather family history.
I read a story about a woman whose
widowed mother passed away earlier in the year.
She said, “We were always to going to sit down ‘someday’ and write down
what Mom remembered of family history.
Unfortunately, she died of injuries suffered in an auto accident before
‘someday’ came. I am afraid I have lost
some invaluable information on her family--her own fertile memory of family
incidents, as well as special memories like my father’s courtship, her wedding
day, and her childhood.”
This woman is going to try and make
up for this by making a Thanksgiving trip to an uncle’s home in another state.
There she will meet with two uncles, an aunt by marriage and two cousins and
their families. From them she hopes to get a good start on identifying pictures
and recording family stories.
She will take with her a laptop computer with
genealogy software loaded on it, her grandmother’s photo albums in which most
of the photos are unidentified, a camera and a mini tape recorder. She will try to get information from those
who knew her mother and grandmother in earlier years.
What is a living family
history? It can be oral, recorded on
audio or videotape. Next month in my
column I will give you tips on conducting a successful interview.
Five years
ago my husband and I decided to make video histories of our parents who were
all living. Two years later, three of
them had died. We’re so glad that we acted
on our impressions to get this done.
After this, we followed up by having one of our daughters make a video
history of us. You never know when your
time will come to leave this life.
Photos play an important part in a
history and make it come alive. Gather
and label family photos.
Histories can be written: either
extensive life-long histories, or short stories of interesting and vital events
that have happened in a person’s life.
Don’t
forget memorabilia. It’s interesting to
get the personal story behind the little things on the shelf and in the
drawers. My mom has a pitcher that is
shaped like an elephant and the liquid comes out of its mouth. When I was a little girl our relatives gwould
come from the city to visit our farm and my dad would take them out to watch
him milk the cows.
Now knowing
where milk came from, they refused to drink it, so my mother put it in the
elephant pitcher and told them it was elephant milk. Then they were willing to drink it. I wrote this story and put it in my history
with a photo of the pitcher.
I hope I
have convinced you to overcome procrastination in gathering priceless family
histories from living relatives before the information is lost forever. In the process you will learn more about who
you are and how much you are a product of their lives.
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