Keeping it in the Family (Cecilia Peartree)
During the pandemic I’ve been ‘inspired’ to write some odd, random things as well as trying to keep up with my output of mystery novels. One month - it may have been June but all the months have run together so it was possibly May, or July – I aimed to write the songs that would turn an old short story of mine into a musical as well as shortening a sort of novella-length story so that it would fit into an anthology. There was a month when I managed to finish two novels and start a third one unexpectedly. I don’t think my efforts are getting any less random as the situation goes on. The other week I found myself signing up for a screenwriting project whereby you are supposed to write a screenplay every day for 14 days. Watch this space! I predict that the results will not be coming to your local cinema any time soon.
Then there was the project to write up my family history. The writing up part is now more or less finished, with a little more light editing still to do, but I now have to decide what images and charts to add, and what to do about publishing it, which will quite likely take me a while.
I’ve been researching my family history ever since the arrival of the world wide web made it feasible to get started without too much effort. At first my brother and I used Family Search, which is run by the LDS (Mormons) and derives from their wish to baptise everyone into their church retrospectively. I apologise to anyone who knows more about it if this is a gross over-simplification. Although more advanced technology is now available for family history research, I don’t know that we would have made so much progress so quickly if it hadn’t been for Family Search, not least because we discovered fairly early on that some of our own relatives had already been researched quite thoroughly. This is not, I hasten to add, because we are related to royalty or the nobility, but because some of my great-grandmother’s cousins actually became Mormons after some missionary efforts in Fife, of all places, and were subsidised by them to emigrate to America and then trek to Utah by wagon train.
Anyway, I didn’t intend this post to be about my
family specifically, but about the general process of writing up this kind of
thing, as opposed to the fiction I usually specialise in.
There has to be some kind of story even in
non-fiction, and it’s partly because of this that it has taken me years to get
round to writing down any of the family history, although I have at least two
drawers full of my research findings and a database both on my own computer and
on the Ancestry website. Another reason for delay was that of course research
is never-ending, so there is always the temptation to hang on until that last
little piece of the puzzle can be put in place. It never is, of course.
I had a vague idea that I might write a chapter
for each generation or so, but for a long time I couldn’t make up my mind
whether to write in chronological order, starting with a planned section called
‘Lost in the Mists of Time’ or something similarly vague, or whether to deal
with one branch at a time or arrange the book by themes or in some other way.
Eventually I settled on writing in reverse
chronological order and started with a chapter called ‘Baby Boomers’ (myself
and my brother). The following chapter was about my parents and was entitled
‘The Wartime Generation’. After that, it became impossible to write by
generation because, perhaps unusually, the people in my family had life
experiences that differed from one family to the next, to a far greater extent
than I had expected, and the further I went back in time, the more diverse their
experiences became. This seems counter-intuitive since people may imagine all
their ancestors in the 19th century were either agricultural
labourers or worked in coal mines or factories. I think quite a few of mine
were in these categories, but not all by any means. Similarly, some episodes of
‘Who do you think you are?’ might lead people to believe every impoverished
family ended up in the workhouse, but I haven’t found this to be true of mine.
In many cases older family members went to live with their children and
grandchildren, and in some areas the local church helped people financially.
Something else that has surprised me is the ripe old ages some people,
particularly men, lived to in Victorian Scotland.
The next few chapters were divided up, more or
less, by people’s occupations. There was ‘The Soldier and the Quaker’,
‘Textiles and Friendly Societies’, ‘Rooted in the Land’, ‘All at Sea’ and
‘Crystals among the Coal’. Towards the end of that part of the book, I realised
that in many cases I had traced the family back to their roots, or at least to
the place where their family name originated. The next couple of chapters
mostly deal with these localities and with vague theories about which of
various families with the same names might be the right one, and the final
chapter mentions DNA testing and how it complements research in the records.
I’ve also added lists of various resources I’ve used, both online and in the
real world, with comments about how to use them. I think this part of the book
might be of some use to other researchers, particularly if they suddenly find
they have Scottish ancestry and don’t know where to start. This has recently
happened to someone I know.
Although this account may not be of much interest
to many people, I’m planning to go ahead and publish it anyway, just to make
sure it’s available to others in some form. According to Ancestry I have 359
DNA relatives for a start! At the time of writing I’m thinking in terms of
publishing just the text as an ebook, and adding images and charts to a print
edition, but there may be yet another delay while I decide on whether it’s
worth the effort of trying to put images into an ebook.
Comments
It reminded me of my mother who began family history at Liverpool Central Library when they were using microfiche, but who eventually produced a family tree going back to the C18. She left school at 15 with no exams but loved reading. One day I may write her biography.
Thanks very much for this inspiring blogpost. I like your book cover design.
The picture on the cover shows my father, my brother and me in the river gorge at Killiecrankie in Perthshire, the site of a battle. My mother must have taken the picture, and I think she would have been amazed to see it on the cover of a book as she wasn't known for her photographic skills!
I love the old black and white pictures, and the cover shows the sweetness of you and your brother. That you're looking at your mom with a smile and your brother is the same way with your father says a lot about that moment.
Huge endeavour, though, but I'm sure it's worthwhile and satisfying to know a bit more about your family history. :)
eden
Eden, yes, I particularly like that photo.