24 December 2021

HAPPY HOLIDAYS and SEE YOU IN THE NEW YEAR!

The end of the calendar year is a time to celebrate or  time to pause and think about the past and what we want for our future as individuals and collectively.  I want to thank all the people who have been checking into this blog to see what's up. Perhaps one of your New Year's Resolutions is to start back up with your personal projects.  Perhaps you worked on your projects during Covid-19 shut downs or unemployment and have put the project aside. Whatever the case, there is probably no end to the possibility that your research will lead you into new directions or more documentation.  I sincerely hope ANCESTRY WORSHIP - GENEALOGY BLOGSPOT has helped you in that endeavor.

Christine

ANCESTRY  WORSHIP - GENEALOGY BLOGSPOT


18 December 2021

FAMILY HISTORY WRITING : QUESTIONS ABOUT HOW HOLIDAYS HAVE BEEN SPENT IN THE PAST COMPAIRED TO NOW

 A Jewish friend of mine long ago told me that her family always went out for Chinese food on Christmas. She said this was because the Chinese restaurants were the only ones open on Christmas.  Her family did not send or expect Holiday cards.

HOW DID YOUR FAMILY CELEBRATE CHRISTMAS EVE? CHRISTMAS?  NEW YEARS EVE?  NEW YEARS DAY? or HUNUKKAH (CHANUKAH) the Jewish Festival of Light?  Or perhaps you've established a KWANZAA celebration?

How did your great grandparents celebrate it?

Your grandparents?

Your parents?

Your family then?

Your family now?  

Some things to think about:

Was there a change in religion or philosophy that changed the way the holiday was celebrated or ignored?

How did having children who are now all grown up change the use of these holidays? For instance maybe your family used to stay home but now they go skiing.

Maybe your family uses these holidays for family reunions?

You used to send cards through the mail and now?

(Don't throw those cards with personal messages out!)

Did they decorate Christmas trees?  Perhaps switch one year to an artificial tree? Plant live ones?

Did they hang stockings - real socks - big or small? - or put out shoes?

What, if anything, did they tell you about Santa Claus?

At what age did you believe or not believe?

Is your family one to spend on gifts or do you just give token gifts?  Do children get individual gifts or does each person provide one gift for one person?

Do you open presents on Christmas Eve or Christmas morning?

What foods do you like to prepare for yourselves or guests?  Or do you go out to eat or order in a restaurant meal?

Do you include alcohol in your celebrations?

Did your school have crafts that were for sale for gift giving?

Where did people live? What was the climate during the holidays?  (Perhaps they lived south of the equator and the holidays were during the summer?)

This is the time to look through your archived cards, letters, and photos.

Happy Ones!


C Ancestry Worship - Genealogy BlogSpot







11 December 2021

DECEMBER IS DOWN TIME FOR GENEALOGY BUT UPTIME FOR COLLECTING FAMILY STORIES : ASK YOUR GRANDPARENTS

If you see the holidays as a time to visit or gather with family, it's the best time for collecting family stories, through interviewing or at least recording conversations with family members.

How I wish I had known to do this when I was very young and still had grandparents who were alive.

It took years of genealogy research to even know what questions I should have been asking.

These questions are to spark conversations.  There might be whole conversations on any of these topics.

Here are some questions YOU might ask your grandparents.

1) When you were a child, were your birthday's celebrated?

2) How many brothers or sisters did you have? What were their names and name them from oldest to youngest?  

3) Was there a brother or sister you felt especially close to?  Why?

4) How did you learn to cook?  Was the food you learned to cook from a particular culture?

5) Was there a favorite recipe or meal that your mother or father made that you liked when you were growing up.

6) What did your mother or father do to make money?  Did they talk to their children about their finances?

7) As a child did you have a sense that you were rich or poor?  How old were you when you had this realization?

8) Were your parents religious?  What church did they go to?  Did you attend church as a family?  Were there religious differences p0layed out in your home?

9) What school(s) did you go to?  What was your favorite subject(s)?

10) Did you have a favorite teacher or coach?  Why did you like them?

11) Did you have any nicknames as a child?  Did you like that name?

12) Did you work as a child?  For money?  (Did you babysit, deliver newspapers, or mow lawns for cash, for instance?)

13) What languages did your grandparents speak?  Were you raised speaking more than one language?  Did you go to school in a certain language?

14) What games did you play with other children or alone as a child?

15) Did you like to read as a child?  What subjects did you like to read about?  Did you have favorite books or magazines?

16) What games, if any, that were physical did you play as a child, on the school yard, or in the backyard or neighborhood?  (Did you play softball, kickball, tag, tennis, badminston, cricket, or some other game?)

17) Who was your best friend growing up?  Tell me about that person.

Asking your GRANDPARENTS questions about their childhood and upbringing may help you get a feel for the values and personalities of these people who are your GREAT GRANDPARENTS.  Today people are living much longer lifespans in general and more people are having the great-grandparent experience.  But many of us never get to meet them.

If your grandparents have moved on, ask your parents what they remember about their parents.  Sometimes the questions you ask spark the memories.  

C  Ancestry Worship Genealogy  2021