Have you watched Who do You Think you Are? Did you want to know how the show's researchers traced their subject's ancestors? And have you ever wondered how you too could one day trace your family history?
If you answered yes to any of the above questions, then you'd want to meet our guest blogger for February, Carol Baxter.
We first met Carol at 2014 Book Expo Australia, where she was one of the presenters. We then met a year later in August where we organised three events with her for her latest book, Black Widow.
Pursuing thieves and murderers through the ages is just an
average day for the history detective, Carol Baxter. Like Dr Who, she hunts
ordinary individuals who unwittingly had such an extraordinary impact on their
world that the consequences changed the course of history. Then she brings
their stories to life as historical ‘true-crime thrillers’. She is the
internationally-acclaimed, award-winning author of five such works of popular
history. Her fourth book, The Peculiar Case of the Electric Constable,
was published internationally by Britain’s Oneworld and was praised by the
London Times as being ‘as lively and readable as a crime novel’ and by
Britain’s Independent as ‘totally irresistible’. Her fifth book, Black Widow was published in June and received four stars from Good Reading magazine. She has recently been commissioned by Allen & Unwin to write a
sixth book. Carol is also an Adjunct Lecturer at the University of New England
and a Fellow of the Society of Australian Genealogists. She has written three
genealogical ‘how to’ books and teaches researching and writing skills at
genealogical and historical conferences on land and on international cruise
ships.
Here are Carol's Three Tips on Researching Family History
Start with yourself
and work backwards
In my years as a genealogist, I’ve had many people say to me
that they are supposedly descended from someone important and that they want to
work out which branch they descend from.
It is important that we start with ourselves and work
backgrounds when we trace our family history rather than attempt to trace
descent from a particular person. We have two parents, four grandparents, eight
great-grandparents and so on; that is, each generation doubles the number of
our ancestors. Conversely, a couple can
have many children (one of my ancestors had 22) and each of those children can
have many children of their own. So, while we only have eight great-grandparents
to trace, our great-grandparents might have hundreds and hundreds of other
great-grandchildren. That is why it is
easier to trace ourselves backwards than to attempt to trace all of a person’s
descendants in the hope of finding out that we are one of them. Moreover, if we
are truly descended from someone important, we will come across that connection
as we undertake our research.
Be wary about family
stories
We must also be very wary about those tales of descent from
the famous or infamous. Families only repeat the ‘good’ stories about their
ancestors (I’ve written books about two murderers and those stories definitely did
not pass down to their descendants!). Also, families often tweak those
stories to improve them.
In fact, many family stories begin as speculation but within
a few generations have become fact. Just imagine how easily the following could
occur:
Generation 1: ‘My horse was stolen. I wonder if the thief
was the bushranger Captain Thunderbolt?’
Generation 2: ‘Thunderbolt probably stole my father’s
horse.’
Generation 3: ‘Thunderbolt stole my grandfather’s horse.’
The following is classic example of a ‘tweaked’ family story.
My great-grandmother wrote a family history in which she stated that her
grandfather was Count Fabian of the celebrated Italian Fabians. In fact, she
passed the surname Fabian to her
children in the form of a middle name. When
I researched my family history, I discovered that her ‘celebrated’ grandfather
was in fact Thomas Fabian, a hair-dresser from Portsmouth, England.
So treat family stories with a grain of salt. Remember, we
are all driven by ego and want to make ourselves look better in our own eyes
and those of our families and friends.
Annotate every source
Make sure that you write down the source of every piece of
information you find, whether it be a book, a birth, marriage or death
certificate, or some other primary or secondary source. Unsubstantiated history
is mythology! You might as well be writing fiction if you can’t show where you
obtained your information. And you will feel like an idiot if, ten years later,
you wonder where it came from and can’t remember. And you will look like an
idiot if someone asks for your source and you can’t provide it. Annotate
everything.
Thank you for stopping by. We'd love to hear from you. If you wish to contribute to our '3 Tips', drop us a line at info@yourbookshop.net.au with your topic and we'll promise to consider it.
Meanwhile, Happy Reading!!