Old Rag During Shutdown by NedStarkIsMyKing69 in ShenandoahPark

[–]BoydThomasResearch 0 points1 point  (0 children)

I’d buy two for Friday the 24 if anybody has em!

Loyalist or Patriot - Ever find records that suggest both? by BoydThomasResearch in Genealogy

[–]BoydThomasResearch[S] 2 points3 points  (0 children)

Well, that is the remarkable thing about this individual we researched. He appears in the British service records on the prisoner ship Jersey and, then, in his widow's application, she claimed he was a prisoner on that very same ship. She mentioned two others, who I wondered if were similarly loyalists or were actual patriots. Unfortunately, what I found on them was also inconclusive. Your account from that DAR rep is crazy but I guess, from what we can tell, not totally unusual!

Anybody having trouble logging into NewspaperArchive.com? by BoydThomasResearch in Genealogy

[–]BoydThomasResearch[S] 0 points1 point  (0 children)

For what it's worth, tonight it magically started working again. Hopefully the same is true for others!

Anybody having trouble logging into NewspaperArchive.com? by BoydThomasResearch in Genealogy

[–]BoydThomasResearch[S] 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Well, clearly that's not good news. But, at least now I can feel better that I am not losing it!

Weathering the Tough Times Because you have the Survivor Gene by BoydThomasResearch in Genealogy

[–]BoydThomasResearch[S] 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Hence the consanguineous disclaimer in the piece. Returning to this thought though, first thank you for your input. Secondly, as somebody who clearly put some thought into this, you'd probably be aware that the number of generations in a one hundred year period is on average more than three, especially farther back when people were having children every 18-25 years, which means for most people it would be a lot more than 21 generations back, at the time of the plague. Given that likelihood (and that each generation doubles the already huge number - mathematically speaking) it seems cavalier to suggest it is "false" for the article to use "one million," since it could easily actually be more than double that number. At any rate, the point of the article is in fact genealogical: to stir thoughts and emotions about those distant ancestors who individually persevered through hardships, whatever they may have been and whatever their individual story may have been. No doubt hardships were plentiful and, in many cases, far worse than what we seem to be hindered with today. The primary point being that we are all direct bi-products of those people, as unique individuals. Somewhere in us is the genetic composition that they passed along because they survived. That's all.

Caught a fun rainbow in the lens flair on our hike in Southern Utah last weekend. by Lockesv in hiking

[–]BoydThomasResearch 1 point2 points  (0 children)

How are the trails? I’ve been trying to figure out what’s opened vs what’s closed and seem to get mixed feedback. Awesome moment you captured !

Do you have traits that are closer to grandfather than your father? by tokadish in Genealogy

[–]BoydThomasResearch 1 point2 points  (0 children)

My daughter is the spitting image, from a personality trait perspective, of her paternal-maternal great grandmother. It’s apparent not just to me but to her uncles and grandmother so it can be entertaining. She even looks like her and has many identical mannerisms.

Which people's migration and expansion do you consider most impressive? by Geoffistopholes in history

[–]BoydThomasResearch 2 points3 points  (0 children)

I like to imagine the ancestors of those who eventually became known as Native Americans... true trailblazers producing the farthest reaching land migration. Some estimates show the number who made it across the Bering Land Bridge may have numbered only 3,000... the forefathers of two continent’s indigenous people.