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keeping records

February 5th, 2010 by Ari

I’ve always had an interest in my family’s history and geneology, and a few years ago I went around to all my grandparents and wrote down everything they could tell me about the family history. I initially misplaced the notebook I used, and although it turned up a few months later by then I had lost momentum and never got around to getting all my notes, diagrams and pictures all consolidated into one (digital of course) location. A few recent events have compelled me to finally move forward, so I dug up all my old notes, found a good open-source family tree program that runs on PHP and mySQL, and have started compiling data.

Now there are two sides to my family – the German side, and the sephardi side. The difference between the two is like night and day. On the German side I have specific dates for nearly every birth, death, and marriage since the mid-1800s. Both my grandparents, then in their 80s, could give me exact birthdays for every one of their parents, siblings, aunt’s, and uncles, most of whom had long since perished. On the sephardi side (Spanish descent hailing from Kastoria if you were curious), I had 3 living relatives who don’t even know their own birthdays. It’s not due to age related issue either – my grandfather essentially made up his birthday at Ellis island. My great-grandmother and her twin brother always argued about when they were born. (His response was that she was vain and lying about her age. Her response was that he came out first, so of course he was older). My grandmother appears to have different birthdates on her driver’s license and passport, and she claims to have been born on a third date.

One Response to “keeping records”

  1. Rachel Unkefer Says:

    Anyone out there from a Bachrach or Bacharach family–I’m the administrator of a Y-DNA study to see whether all the different branches of these families are related. So far, everybody tested has a common ancestor, probably sometime before 1700. Using the genetic matches and the different bits of family trees, we are trying to piece together the migration history of the family (beginning in Germany and extending into Eastern Europe, the US, South America and Israel). See the project website for more information:
    http://www.bacharachdna.com
    The more DNA samples we collect, the more complete the picture will become.

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