That's it!Prepare, therefore, to follow me. ?
Wow!
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That's it!Prepare, therefore, to follow me. ?
Wow!
Mom's people, several generations back, immigrated from Scotland, Ireland, & England. That's as far as I've gotten so far.Ancestry has the best resources and set up.
However, there are other sites where you can find worlds of interesting things.
I really like archived newspapers. I think the site I used and liked was newspaperarchive.com
For newspaper ads my ancestors placed, and obits too. But I found that they were on the board of Bluebell icecream, and vicepresident of a gun club.
Anyway, interesting stuff pops up. It helps if your ancestors are in a podunk town with it's own podunk paper.
That newspaper stuff isn't on Ancestry.
Ancestry has excellent census records, and organizes it easily and well. But there are lots of things that they don't have too.
They had most of the Texas farm schedules. (Actually , for most of the US), but they didn't have any of the very old tax roles of Texas that are only available on micro fische and microfilm, in person, at the Houston archive library.
Ancestry has a great collection of records out of New England, even old Mayflower stuff. They also have a huge amount of British records going back to about 1000, or whenever the Doomsday book was written. The exact date escapes me at present.
The German records are spotty. It depends on what region you are from. Germans tend to be informative, so those records are usually good.
Irish records are poor on Ancestry. I had more luck finding an Irish site that I paid for for 1 month, but the name escapes me.
Also, if there are specific things you are looking for.... like I wanted to know exactly where my twice great grandparents house was... there are usually state archive sites with good records.
I found a Texas site with antique maps you could look at for free. And the Texas state archive, all free online, has most land records from the early years of Texas.
But if you are close to where they lived... the local courthouse ROCKS! You can look up all land they bought or sold, all registered brands, and anything that went to court or that a lawyer filed. So wills, lawsuits, criminal cases, all pop up.
I had 2 direct ancestors that were called to testify infront of a congressional committee... on a suspected tar-n-feathering case after "the great unpleasantness ". It was a hoot, because every word was transcribed.
I was so frustrated & ticked off that I wasn't far from taking a hammer to the computer.
Very cool.Much of my MIL's family is buried in a tiny cemetery near here. I took pics of gravestones to show the kids, and found this pyramid shaped one with this sobering inscription:
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"Kind friends beware as you pass by,
As you are now so once was I
As I am now so you must be,
Prepare------- follow me...."
(not sure of that last line)
We too saw another grave (in same cemetery) with the same epitaph, I think it must have been trending in the 19th century....maybe before. Oooh, I googled it, here we go back to the 14th century:Very cool.
I don't think I have seen a pyramid 1 before.
The cemetery at the church I attend has that same poem on 1 of the graves. I somehow think the ending is different.... or maybe not...
It is a blustering blowing rainstorm at present, so we will all have to wait until it clears before I get a picture and see if it matches or not.
It is a great quote.
I do too.I found a good source is the findagrave website, they often have pics of old headstones with inscriptions, genealogy, etc. I upload un photographed headstones in my free time
Cool.We too saw another grave (in same cemetery) with the same epitaph, I think it must have been trending in the 19th century....maybe before. Oooh, I googled it, here we go back to the 14th century:
An 1850 edition of the New England Historical and Genealogical Register cites the Canterbury tomb of Edward the Black Prince (1330-1376) as the source of the verse. Edward's epitaph was originally written in Norman French, but was at some point translated into English:
Whoso thou be that passeth by;
Where these corps entombed lie:
Understand what I shall say,
As at this time speak I may.
Such as thou art, sometime was I,
Such as I am, such shalt thou be.