If you follow The In-Depth Genealogist on social media, you’ll know that we just love The Armchair Genealogist. The resources, support, and encouragement that Lynn Palermo provides through her website is enough to let any family historian know that they CAN write their family’s story. If you have a story to tell, be sure to join Lynn for her Family History Writing Challenge starting February 2013. ***** The Family History Writing Challenge Motivates Members to Write Their Stories For Immediate Release Contact : Lynn Palermo The Armchair Genealogist lynn@thearmchairgenealogist.com The Family History Writing Challenge The Family History Writing Challenge returns for the third year of motivating family historians dedicating daily time for writing their family history stories. Family historians wishing to take up the torch of writing their stories are encouraged to put down the microfilm and pick up the pen for the month of February, and start writing their family history stories. Upon signing up for The Family History Writing Challenge, participating members are invited to declare a goal in the form of a word count and to commit to completing that word count during the 28 days in February. In exchange for the commitment, Lynn Palermo (The Armchair Genealogist) host of the month long challenge will send out daily newsletters that include motivational messages, writing lessons, along with instructional guest posts by leading genealogists, published authors and editors. Lynn Palermo states, “by committing to a daily word count my hope is for all participants to make substantial headway in their family history writing goals and to create long lasting writing habits that will carry them forward throughout 2013.” Lynn encourages members to sign up early to take advantage of the January newsletters that will help participants organize themselves to begin writing on February 1st. A forum ... Read More »
Tag Archives: Mariann Regan
Feed SubscriptionWar Letters from Confederate Soldiers
Our ancestors who fought in the Civil War can be identified through Cindy Freed’s excellent advice in “Tracing the Blue and Gray,” in her May 15th article for The In-Depth Genealogist. For historical context about what these soldiers thought and felt and believed, numerous books and websites offer collections of Civil War letters. There is even a PBS tutorial in Civil War letters for high school students. http://to.pbs.org/fI5Ro3 Some families have their own cache. My cousin Diane keeps her letters from Fraser soldiers (our grandmother’s line) in her living room chest. As I read transcripts of these letters, I ask myself one question: What does each Confederate soldier believe he is fighting for? Read More »
Fact, Story, Truth
From the Editors: The In-Depth Genealogist team would like to thank Mariann Regan for sharing her stories and research with our readers. Mariann Sanders Regan is Professor Emerita of English at Fairfield University in Connecticut. She grew up in North Carolina, graduated from Duke, and got her doctorate at Yale. She has written articles, fiction, a book of literary scholarship (Cornell University Press), and a novel about the health care system (Creative Arts Books). Her family memoir Into the Briar Patch (AuthorHouse 2011) explores the effects of slaveholding upon her South Carolina ancestors, and the psychological legacy for the family. She and her husband, who have two children, live in Connecticut. Her book blog is http://mariannregan.authorsxpress.com/. More about the memoir, with reviews, is at http://www.mariannregan.com/memoir_desc.html. We are all attracted to stories. With our lives unfolding in time, we are always on the lookout for a narrative line. The more genealogical data I gather about my South Carolina ancestors in slavery days, the more stories my mind generates. These stories give life to my set of facts. In creating the stories, my mind is continually drawing upon my ideas about human nature and historical forces, my meditations upon old photos, even past experiences that I don’t consciously recall. So my stories are working hypotheses about my ancestors. I use them to search for more data, in a natural feedback loop. In particular, I’m trying to find my living mixed-race relatives. Here, then, are three stories—three working hypotheses—from our family’s past: 1. The Erasmus, Annie, Caroline, and Thomas Story My great-grandfather Erasmus is in the June 30, 1849 minutes of the Black Creek Church in Darlington, South Carolina: The committee appointed to investigate the charge of bastardy alleged against Brother E. G. Kirven, reported ... Read More »
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