It can be a little unsettling at times to see things from someone else's perspective.
Marlene Frost and I are once again doing a little bit of recreational genealogy. In our research, I came across the email address of a great-grandson (Paul) of the Irish couple whose descendants we are attempting to chart. So I thought I would share with him the state of our current tree in the hope of having him correct any errors that we might have made and, moreover, contribute some particulars of his own immediate family. I mentioned that we were trying to figure out where the parents of a local minor celebrity (Bob) fit into the tree.
Paul replied that Bob was his (first) cousin. I objected, pointing out that newspaper accounts had named Bob's father as someone other than Paul's suggested uncle and, additionally, those accounts provided information that allowed one to deduce, with a little digging, the name of Bob's mother, which was not the name of Paul's uncle's wife. Paul replied that my newspaper accounts were "somewhat in error" and repeated his mantra that Bob's father was his uncle.
If nothing else, Paul's insistence did convince me that Bob was in that branch of the family tree. I now believe (for a variety of reasons) that Bob is Paul's cousin, once removed — not his uncle's son but, rather, his uncle's grandson. That an individual so close to the scene of the action can get it so wrong speaks volumes about the fictions that must permeate some of our family histories.
Friday, June 22, 2012
Perspective
It can be a little unsettling at times to see familiar scenes from an altered perspective. Maps are no exception, as I rediscovered today in examining the melting ice in Hudson Bay. How long will it take you to find Hudson Bay in this image of NASA's White Marble?
Sunday, June 10, 2012
Déjà vu all over again
The CBC's Kelly Crowe wrote an article using this Yogiism only last month. Today, Crowe storied Real water needs for The National (the print version is here). By contrast, Snopes' Eight Glasses debunk first appeared on 6 February 2001 and Heinz Valtin's 8 × 8 review on 8 August 2002. There's no news like old news.
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