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anny

anny cook


Last Updated: 11/22/2009

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Gender: Female
Status: Married
State: Maryland
Country: US
Wednesday, March 04, 2009 





Yesterday
morning my son called to deliver a message. Seems a former genealogy
correspondent tried to call me, using my old New York phone number.
When she discovered that was no longer valid, she called my son--he
uses the same name as the house hunk--and asked him to pass her phone
number on to me.

I don't remember the last time I talked to this
woman. She says it was in 2001. But we have shared considerable
information on a particular family line since I first married--and
that's quite a while!

I called her back, wondering what had
spurred her to get in touch with me. After the usual catching up that
you do in this type of situation, she revealed the purpose of the call.
It seems that my mother-in-law, now deceased, had shown her a picture
many years ago of a mutual ancestress who was purportedly an Indian
"princess".

Now, I'm sure that there were many early Americans
that intermarried with various Indian tribes. We have historical
records as proof of that. And it's even possible that there would be a
comparable title to princess in the tribe hierarchy. But I find it a
bit far fetched--in the time period that this was supposed to have
taken place.

In any case, my mother-in-law was always less than
helpful when I was working on the genealogy for that side of the family
and definitely never showed me that picture. I explained to my friend
that when she died, all of my mother-in-law's papers, pictures, and
other belongings went to my sister-in-law. All efforts to get her
permission to look through them have been unsuccessful. Eventually, the
house hunk and I obtained the information we needed from other sources
and quit worrying about it.

Now my friend wants a copy of the
picture of the Indian princess. Hmmm. Well, I explained the
difficulties, gave her my sister-in-law's phone number and wished her
luck. It will be interesting to see if she's more successful at prying
information from my sister-in-law than I was.

Genealogy is a
touchy subject with some. Clearly there are deep, dark secrets in this
particular family line. What I find interesting is long after all the
relevant people are dead and gone, the secrets are still worth
defending. It doesn't make the house hunk and I less curious, for sure.
But neither is it worth the effort to retrieve that hidden information.
For us, it was a shared interest that we enjoyed.

An experienced
genealogist is discreet and respectful with family information. While
it might be amusing to discover that an ancestor from the eighteen
hundreds was a bank robber, the same would likely not be true in the
late twentieth century. So whatever the secret is--its safe. And if my
friend does indeed obtain a copy of the picture from my sister-in-law,
I will be most curious to see what the princess looks like.

Families realities are often stranger than fiction.

anny


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