For the complete article, courtesy of the APG Quarterly
Transcription
For the complete article, courtesy of the APG Quarterly
Writing Adding Muscle and Sinew Spicing Up a Family Narrative by Peter Haring Judd, ph.d. Y ou might put it this way: vital and property records and court, estate, and other official documents provide the skeleton of a family history; the more complete they are the stronger the structure. Often that is enough, and solving or at least explaining the lacunae in the records in some cases is sufficient challenge. However, curiosity can prompt further investigation of the social and economic context that will create a richer, more character-filled narrative. Curiosity prompted me to expand my investigation into the lives of forebears in New York and New England from colonial times to the present. As I proceeded, I found myself progressively wanting more detail to answer basic questions: What was involved in being an attorney in an eighteenth-century Connecticut town? Why and how had places been settled? What did the people look like? How different or alike were the families from others at the time? These and any number of other ques- March 2008 Association of Professional Genealogists Quarterly 23 tions popped up each step of the way. I’ll use this article to explain my approach and to give examples of what I call “adding muscle and sinew.” Notice that I didn’t use the more familiar “flesh” as a quality to be added to the narrative; flesh can be fat, padding in a narrative, fictionalizing, sugarcoating. I’d like to have the “muscle and sinew” of context brought into family history to be every bit as focused and disciplined as the building of the genealogical skeletal structure itself, that is, fact- and document-based. Believe me, however, it is a challenging task, and when I started out on the research that led to The Hatch and Brood of Time,1 I had not a glimmer of what the book would be like or even that there would be a book. The material about these members of the Phelps family of Windsor and Hebron, Connecticut, stimulated questions; research to answer them led to other questions and month-by-month the project grew. Curiosity is the mother of investigation. From this effort to develop a coherent and well-documented narrative I can list broad categories of interest for the family historian: • Social—how individuals and their families fit into the social structure of the era in which they lived, and the changes over the generations. • Economic—how people made a living, their relative wealth, education, how their economic activities relate to those of the local area, region, nation. • Historical—wars, depressions, immigration patterns, political events, culture (ethnic, place of origin, locality), emphasis on what closely affected the families. That is, not events far off, that however much they changed the world—an example is the Hiroshima bomb—had no direct relevance to, say, a child born in 1945 in Connecticut unless it meant the dad was soon to return from the Pacific. Other topics could be: the construction of the dwelling, furnishings, lighting, media. I would often begin with the scholarly literature and follow the trails pointed out in bibliographies and footnotes. • Geographic—the places where people lived, what brought about their settlement, principal activities, transportation, appearance, changes over the generations. • Kinship of the experience with published biographies, memoirs—that is, accounts by others of a similar occupation to that of the subject. An account of life as a mill worker, for example, or of a Civil War soldier, could mirror the experience of a subject; social histories, such as studies of immigrants, Levittown, robber barons, can illuminate. • Artifacts—personal portraits, miniatures, silhouettes, photos, letters, ornaments, clothing, tools, cutlery, dishes, coins, souPeter Haring Judd, The Hatch and Brood of Time: Five Phelps Families in the Atlantic World, 1720–1880 (Boston: Newbury Street Press, 1999). 1 24 Association of Professional Genealogists Quarterly March 2008 Figure 1 While no miniatures or portraits of Samuel Haring (1776-1830) and his wife Sarah Clark (1780-1841) have come down in the family or been found, these spoons have passed through the generations. The mark shows they were made by silversmith Robert Wilson, at 23 Dey Street, on the west side of the island, not far from Samuel Haring, grocer at 5, Cortlandt. The monogram “SH” in an expansive scroll, the S for Sarah (and Samuel), the H for Haring. They remind one of the modest affluence and gentility the family had achieved in the city. venirs. Each one can tell a tale, perhaps of the person, likely of the time and place. • Writings—letters, memoirs, genealogies, Bible records, alumni records, obituaries in newspapers or published by organizations with which the individual was affiliated. The challenge is to weave the material into a narrative that has a fundament of genealogy. There is an art to this, and it develops in the process of drafting and redrafting. It is demanding but satisfying, and the result adds facets to the perspectives on forebears and their times. Curiosity Is the Mother of Investigation The talisman that initiated my pursuit was a black notebook with scrawly handwriting—that of Julia Phelps (Haring) White, my great-grandmother. It contained the American ancestral lines down to her parents and was a present to her granddaughter, my mother’s first cousin, on her thirteenth birthday in 1919 and from that cousin to me on my fifty-first. I was a late starter, however, and since I was then fully occupied, it stayed in a garden house along with shoeboxes of family letters. This reprehensible custodianship of the documents came to an end with my retirement, and I read through it. Questions tumbled out. Some of the names I knew a little about: John Davenport of the New Haven Colony; Eleazar Wheelock, founder of Dartmouth; Peter Haring of New Amsterdam and Tappan, New York, after whom I was named. A cousin proudly showed me a photo of the house in Fairfield, Connecticut, of George Alexander Phelps, his second great-grandfather, my third, in the style of the Greek Revival with magnificent columns and several figures visible, including a woman in black, said to be Julia in mourning for her parents from whom she was orphaned in 1868 when she was eighteen. As I am sure others have experienced, I promptly felt it urgent to find out more about these and the others in the numbered columns that Julia had so carefully laid out. And that began the first foray into the literature. The 1899 Phelps genealogy where there was a chronology from the immigrant ancestor, William Phelps of the Mary & John and Windsor, was a giant step forward and provoked an array of new questions about the places where people lived and what they did.2 (I later discovered that great-grandmother had letters from A. T. Servin, the genealogist who put together that volume and assume that Julia was his source for some of the information about her contemporary Phelps relatives.) Experienced researchers will smile at my excitement at finding just about the easiest bit of resource available, the pages in a post-Centennial compiled genealogy about a reasonably well-documented family. But it did what any solid nugget of research will do, stimulate curiosity. What was Hebron, Connecticut, like in the early 1700s where Nathaniel Phelps and his son lived and died? What brought about the move of Col. Alexander Phelps to New Hampshire, and where was Lime where he died in 1773? Was there more to the Wheelock story, a connection with the founding of Dartmouth? Alexander’s son, Eleazar Wheelock Phelps, was an attorney and judge in Stafford, Oliver Seymour Phelps and Andrew T. Servin, comps., The Phelps Family of America and Their English Ancestors with Copies of Wills, Deeds, Letters and Other Interesting Papers, Coats of Arms and Valuable Records, 2 vols. (Pittsfield, Mass.: Eagle Publishing, 1899). 2 Figure 2 These silhouettes were located in the Tamworth, N.H. Historical Society after the publication of both books. The man was identified as Eleazar Wheelock Phelps (1766-1818), the boy as his son, George Alexander (1803-1880). A family note, included in the 1899 Phelps genealogy, referred to E.W.P.’s sojourn in Europe during the War of 1812 years. No documentary evidence of this was found, but Brenton Simons, upon examining the silhouette, concluded that it was of the type that was practiced in England, thus a confirmation of the sojourn. From his profile, note E.W.’s dress and grooming. Connecticut, in the early nineteenth century and unaccountably was stated to have died in Havana, Cuba, in 1818. How could this be? He married the daughter of a half uncle, Benajah Phelps, who was termed a “Rev.” in the genealogy, said to have lived in Cornwallis, Nova Scotia—not on present day maps—and to have been an “unrepentant Whig” during the American Revolution. It didn’t take long to find that the Rev. Benajah Phelps was a figure in Nova Scotian history, that he served the “planters” who moved to its west coast in the 1750s and 60s from southern New England. There was surely a story, and indeed there was, including Benajah’s flight in the midst of the war, capture by a British man-ofwar, and being put out in an open boat to make Passamaquoddy and thence through the “wilderness” of Maine back to Connecticut. A look in the New York City directories for George Alexander Phelps, the owner of the great Fairfield house, revealed addresses that over the years moved up from near lower Broadway to West Fourteenth Street, and his occupation was listed early as “fruiter,” later as “merchant.” What did those occupations mean at the time? What was the city like then? Did he have views about slavery, the Civil War, and the debates that preceded it? There was a 1926 letter to my mother from Julia, his granddaughter, who March 2008 Association of Professional Genealogists Quarterly 25 Figure 3 Eliza Ayers (1808-1880) married George Alexander Phelps (son of Eleazar Wheelock Phelps), Connecticut-born, who became a fruit importer in antebellum New York City. Their daughter, Caroline Eliza (1828-1868), married James Demarest Haring (1819-1868), Samuel’s son. This is a portrait of Eliza to commemorate her 1825 marriage to George in New York City; her wedding band is noticeable on her left hand. In addition to revealing a beautiful young woman, her dress, earrings, and coiffure denote that her family was well-to-do and that her young husband must have been deemed to have prospects. Figure 4 James Demarest Haring, husband of Caroline Eliza Phelps, in his prime. 26 Association of Professional Genealogists Quarterly March 2008 recalled being in Palermo in December 1868 where she visited his son. What were each of them doing there? (George Jr. ran the family’s office importing citrus fruit to New York and Liverpool, and Julia was in Palermo at the beginning of a nine-month tour of Europe that was intended to help her recover from the sudden loss of her parents—knowledge of this took time to discover.) The Phelps’s were a Puritan-Yankee family. George Alexander’s daughter Caroline Eliza married James Demarest Haring in Fairfield, Connecticut, in 1846. That was how the New York Haring family came in, and Julia’s notes traced James (her father) back to Jan Pietersen of New Amsterdam, and to Peter, Alexander, and John Haring. The last was a member of the Continental Congress and had a short nineteenth-century biography written about him. I knew I could find out more about him from a number of sources. The Revolution in New York looked to be a fascinating subject, and I had only faint notions about the details. Surely there was (and indeed there is) an abundance of useful material on the politics and military engagements in the city and region in those years. But what about John Haring’s son, Captain Samuel? What service, when? Early nineteenth-century addresses in New York City show him as a “grocer.” What did that mean? And an easy check showed that there was a pension record from service in the War of 1812. The outline of that war did not come readily to mind. Where was he in it? He was a quartermaster. By tracing the movements of his regiment and the accounts in his pension application, I found he was in the Northern campaign in 1812 and was at Fort Niagara and at the taking of Fort George and Newark in Upper Canada (present-day Niagara-on-the-Lake) and fell ill; he was a figure in the all-but-forgotten, thoroughly botched attempt to invade Canada in 1813—a look at Henry Adams’s History of the Madison administration showed me there would be an abundance of sources. What Happened to the Past? There was another impetus to the family history in my books: even to my four score and ten. The worlds of childhood and youth seem as remote as if three or four generations had passed. My overall questions were (and are): What happened to this past? Why and how had its conditions vanished? The Waterbury, Connecticut, where I grew up in the 1930s and 1940s seemed to a child a place within an understandable frame. There was Mrs. Wade who wore a black choker and nodded her head as Grandmother and I passed her window on the way downtown on a Saturday morning. I didn’t know her, but I knew she fitted into the constellation of family, as I was told she was my godmother’s grandmother. We regularly met Captain Kellogg whom I was told had been in the Spanish-American War. Dancing school was at The Elton, the best hotel in town, and my father often took one or both of my grandmothers there for a family Sunday dinner in its Copper Room. The public library was a permanent-looking building that had an aura of age. (Richardsonian, it was, now long gone.) The City Hall was beautiful, with a bell tower, and fine brass fittings within. (Designed by Cass Gilbert and still there.) The railroad station had a tall tower made of brick and within was a sign reading “The Brass Center of the World” with displays of shiny metal objects. (The building was saved by the local newspaper and is its office; the sign is long gone.) When we passed by the factories, the sound of their machine and belt drives seemed to flood the street. Cousins lived in nearby houses; I could walk to and from school and play guerillas with pals on vacant lots and on the grounds of Grandmother’s house. On rainy days its third floor was the place to present plays and magic shows. Nothing of that frame is left but some of the buildings. How did this apparently stable, prosperous place and society come to be? What were the paths from William Phelps of Windsor and Jan Pietersen Haring of New Amsterdam to the Hillside section of Waterbury, the houses and people who were there in the 1930s and 40s? Since all of the presses, screw machines, fourslides, and plating tanks are gone, and most of the buildings that held them too; since no family members live in that city, no one anywhere in the family is involved with the manufacturing that sustained their forebears for 150 years, the task was to recapture and understand people—Grandmother, her mother and father, the eminentlooking man with a full beard who was a great-great-grandparent, and, closer to me, my mother who died young and who was often away with “nervous breakdowns.” My father lost his battle to keep his factory viable in the changing economy of the 1960s. How had that enterprise developed and what happened to it? So, I had curiosity and a desire to understand to spur my research, and I knew that to be satisfied I would have to find out more than the bare bones. The second of my two books, More Lasting than Brass, begins with the Haring family in preRevolutionary New York and comes to the family and Waterbury in the late twentieth century.3 Here are a few examples of how I expanded my research for that book and its predecessor to give strength—muscle and sinew—to the narrative. I should add that I had no idea at the outset of the richness of materials that was available in public repositories to supplement what I had of inherited letters, images, and objects. Military A pension application is not only interesting in itself, but it is a mine from which other details about the individual’s service can be developed. James Clark (1756–1814) was twenty years old in 3 Peter Haring Judd, More Lasting Than Brass: A Thread of Family from Revolutionary New York to Industrial Connecticut (Boston: Northeastern University Press and the Newbury Street Press, 2004). Figure 5 The Manhattan East River docks in the 1850s shown in a Panorama of the time. (Library of Congress) The Haring offices were close by. Figure 6 Julia Phelps Haring (later White, 1850-1928), only surviving child of Caroline Eliza and James Demarest Haring, in 1859. The image was created by applying color to the back of a photograph, and affixing the image to glass. The short-lived technique (by some practitioners termed Ivorytype) was meant to compete with oil portraits. The dress and pose reveal a cherished child. Both parents died in 1868, leaving her an orphan. March 2008 Association of Professional Genealogists Quarterly 27 1776, a resident of New Windsor, north of the Highlands on the west bank of the Hudson River. He and his militia unit answered the call to defend New York City. From the account in his widow’s pension application, we learn that the unit was dispatched by Washington as a rear guard during the evacuation of the Americans across the East River on the foggy night of August 29. We also learn that James was in the party sent to bury British and American dead after the Battle of Harlem Heights, that he was at White Plains at the time of that battle, and that he then returned home and was occupied occasionally at building cheveaux de frise in the river. The bare facts are exciting enough, but each led to far more detail. There are good histories of the engagements around New York in 1776 for the larger picture, and the recently published edition of the Washington papers includes accounts of engagements by participants, including a lad of the same age as James, who also was in the rear guard. His account can testify to the fusillade from the British sentries as they realized in the dawn that the Americans had tricked them and made a getaway. General George Clinton’s papers provide more on the burial party at Harlem Heights, and accounts of the Battle of White Plains—including the position of the units—add to the bones of the pension application. The War of 1812 is far less familiar to most people. Samuel Haring (1776–1830) served as a Captain in a U.S. unit activated in the months prior to the war. The pension application tells us that it was the 13th U.S. Regiment, that it was activated in Greenbush across the river from Albany, and that it and Captain Samuel participated in the campaign that took the regiment to the Niagara frontier (where it—but not Samuel who was at Fort Niagara—participated in the Battle of Queenston Heights in 1812). Samuel took part in the amphibious action against Fort George at the western end of Lake Ontario the next summer, and the pension application notes that he was taken ill with “lake fever” and invalided to quarters at Henderson Harbor at the eastern end of the lake. There are excellent Canadian histories of the battles of this campaign to enrich the narrative. The 1813 campaign to take Montreal by moving the Americans across Lake Ontario was a fiasco. The commander was General James Wilkenson, one of the rogues of American history, who conspired against Washington after Saratoga, conspired with the Spanish in Louisiana, and was court-martialed. His 1816 three volume memoir—which includes the transcript of the court martial—was a mine of information about the campaign; it was meant to self-justify, but it included documents such as medical reports from the Henderson Harbor field hospital where Samuel was. From resources such as these—and memoirs of others, such as Winfield Scott who planned the attack on Fort George—an account of the actions in which Samuel’s unit took part can be reconstructed, as can a broader picture of the northern campaign in that war. 28 Association of Professional Genealogists Quarterly March 2008 Figure 7 George Alexander Phelps gave his grieving grand-daughter, Julia, a nine month grand tour of Europe with his son, Howard, (and her uncle) as a companion. (Above.) The first stop in December 1868 was Palermo where another son had opened an office for the fruit importing business. We know of the trip from the letters that Julia saved from her paternal aunt, Catharine Teller (Haring) Kip (1808-1872). Aunt Kate was the last of Samuel’s children to be alive and was a link to the family past, with references to other members of the family and warm support for her young niece. Commercial New York American wars are richly documented with material to be culled for context and detail, the same is true of commercial life in New York City, though the resources are not so neat. Samuel Haring was shown as a grocer at various addresses in Manhattan in the early 1800s. A grocer meant a wholesaler in what were called dry goods (to distinguish them from produce and meats). A grocer purveyed a variety: grains, wines, fabrics. One approach I used was to examine the advertisements in a newspaper of the day. In the Shipping News section were columns listing what vessels in the port had for sale (and their origin), and the stock of the local grocers. The survey of ads in that one day showed that the port of New York was receiving shipments from ports in Europe and Latin America, and that the goods ranged widely, altogether giving a “feel” for the commerce at that time. A court case found later revealed the range of Samuel’s goods. The New York City directories gave an address, and, with a little work, it was pos- sible to specify the occupations of the was visiting a world that was soon to neighbors from which could be drawn vanish as the German states she visited some approximation of social status. thereafter were shortly to be incorpoThere are economic histories of the rated into the second Reich. United States that can be consulted James Demarest Haring and his to give the broader picture of the brother in the 1850s were involved economy in a historical period. The in flour, the term used for their firm’s most illuminating single book I found activity in the New York City direcfor the economy of New York City in tory. What did this mean? One useful the first half of the nineteenth century reference was to a contemporary study was Robert Albion Greenhalgh’s Rise of of the grain trade, which described 4 New York Port. This book described what was in effect the beginning how the city, in the latter eighteenth of a commodity market—brokers in century a co-equal with others on the the city committed funds to upstate eastern seaboard, after 1814 recreated farmers in advance of the season. A itself as an entrepot of trade; set up reference in a general history located an auction system for goods, instia contemporary book that described tuted scheduled service to Liverpool. just how the process worked in that The New York City merchants manday. aged to tie the cotton trade from the While New York City life is richsouth into the system, providing credit Figure 8 ly documented in a wide variety of for the southern buyers to purchase The house on Henry Street, Brooklyn Heights, where forms, there is less on smaller places. goods in New York and importing Aunt Kate lived with her second husband, Henry Kip In order to find out what economists manufactured goods from Lancashire (1807-aft. 1872). In the front parlor there remains have thought about the constellation in the same bottoms that had taken the mantle on which Henry placed Julia’s picture of metal-working industries in the between those of his two political heroes, Daniel the cotton east. By 1830 New York Naugatuck Valley in Connecticut, of Webster and Henry Clay as Julia described in a port was preeminent on the eastern letter. Kate called the house a “shack,” not how it which Waterbury was the largest, I made a successful search for dissertaseaboard. George Alexander Phelps would be referred to today. tions. One in particular pointed out (1803–1880) began as “fruiter” in the how it was the mix of numerous 1820s and 30, ascended to the status factories not just the most visible copper and brass works that of a merchant, and by the 1850s one of his sons had opened an created a symbiosis that encouraged newcomers in the metaloffice in Palermo to ship citrus from Sicily and the Levant. By working and plating industries to cluster together. Business-orithe 1860s, Phelps Brothers had an office in Liverpool. A look ented sources with personal details are the credit reports of the through the Customs reports in the Liverpool library showed the R. G. Dun and Co., which from the 1850s included reports on shipments of citrus. Its directory showed where the Phelps men family members’ activities in Waterbury and in New York. One lived, and a walk up the hill led me to the houses they occupied. of them included an observation that surely had to do with a Palermo had importance to the story because it was the first family secret, an elopement in the 1870s of the daughter in a stop of Julia Phelps Haring’s nine-month tour of Europe in highly proper household whose later husband was said to be the 1868 following the death of both her parents. Palermo was then lawyer who assisted her out of the first marriage. This attorney a fashionable wintering spot for the well-to-do, and during her successfully covered the tracks of the elopement and first martime there, the young couple who later became king and queen riage. However, a Dun reported the daughter of Luther Chapin of Italy visited the city—referred to by Julia in a letter fifty-six White as having made “bad investments,” which had led to some years later. financial strain. It is unlikely that the seventeen year old would On that tour, Julia visited Rome. It was early in 1870, an have speculated, and this probably referred to cost of undoing important date, as it was still the Rome governed by the Pope, a the elopement. colorful rundown place, described in a memoir. This color was added to the narrative, but there was a greater significance: Julia Travelers’ Accounts, Guidebooks From the eighteenth century there are numerous accounts of 4 Robert Albion Greenhalgh, Rise of New York Port (New York: Charles travel in the lands across the Atlantic where a new society was Scribners and Sons, 1939). March 2008 Association of Professional Genealogists Quarterly 29 Figure 9 Julia in mourning black is likely to the right in this photo of the house that George Alexander Phelps bought for his retirement in Fairfield, Conn. (It remains, but shorn of the pillars.) The bodies of both of Julia’s parents were brought to Fairfield by train accompanied by mourners who had been informed of the funeral arrangements by a notice in the newspaper. developing so different from Europe. By the 1820s and 30s there came a flood, a series of “Strangers’ Guides” to New York and other U.S. places began to appear, describing for English-speaking travelers, full of information about Broadway and its teeming life, theaters, and modes of travel. In the 1830s de Tocqueville and Dickens both visited the city, resulting in the former case in letters back home that were a rich resource for understanding the city where Samuel’s son, James Demarest Haring, lived. Boston abolitionist L. Maria Child published letters from New York in the 1840s with vivid observations of its ever-changing character, teeming street life, and social classes. Guide books are a useful resource for places and transportation throughout the nineteenth and twentieth centuries. In the latter half of the nineteenth century, Appleton’s published guidebooks that covered smaller places such as Waterbury. One of the series was particularly useful to help describe the 1874 and 1875 transcontinental railroad journeys that George White and Julia Phelps Haring took in the first year of their marriage. Baedeker began publishing European guides in the 1860s; by using the edition that matched the year of travel, I could specify the cost of the hotel stay of a letter writer, and include the often entertainingly solemn warnings that Baedeker gave of beggars, over charging, and uncooperative custodians. 30 Association of Professional Genealogists Quarterly March 2008 Figure 10 Julia met George Luther White (1851-1914) in Minneapolis where she had gone to visit a relative’s family. It was then a rapidly growing, but still small city. It was touted in guide books as having salubrious air and a place of opportunity for easterners whose lungs had been damaged by the polluted air of the industrial cities. George was there with a touch of TB on a lung. They were married at the Fairfield house in 1874 and took the transcontinental railroad (opened in 1869) to San Francisco and to San Raphael north of there where their first child was born, Caroline Haring White (later Griggs) (1875-1969), the Carrie of More Lasting than Brass. Here they are in their sixties in a photographer’s studio in Atlantic City, prosperous citizens of Waterbury, to which George had returned to participate in his father’s businesses (button backs and cardboard boxes). at the New York Public Library, that the Family Letters archive of the abolitionist Gerrit Smith at In a window seat on the top floor of Syracuse University contained more than Grandmother’s house in Waterbury there one hundred letters from the Herring were letters she and her mother had saved. (anglicized from Haring) family to Peter Caroline Haring (White) Griggs (Carrie, Smith from the 1790s to 1820s. This 1875–1969) is a central figure in the latopened up knowledge of their business ter section of More Lasting than Brass. As and whereabouts, and gave an insight into a boy I had picked through the envelopes the connection between city merchants for stamps, and in her old age I read some and upstate traders. There were personal of the letters to her. I inherited the boxes, details too, the most striking of which but it was twenty and more years later that was a divorce, most unusual in the early I examined them systematically. The com1800s. Transcription into Word made puter and word processing had arrived in excerpts of these letters readily available the 1980s, and it was obvious that to have for the narrative. a fully accessible set of letters they should be transcribed and entered in a form in Images which they could be searched and excerpts For the period beginning in the 1850s, I copied. I did some myself, recruited help, had family photograph albums, saved by a and soon the archive was visible on the Figure 11 monitor. The next step was to annotate Caroline Haring White (Carrie) at about the cousin’s husband. Most of the early ones the letters, identify the persons men- time she accompanied her grandparents on were from photographers’ studios; by the 1900s came informal photos, some taken tioned, research the hotels and ocean lin- a visit to Florida. by Julia herself. To these I added images of ers from which they were written, and tie houses and of the buildings and streets of in events in family history. There were sevWaterbury from the collection of the local historical society. eral sets of letters: a series from her Aunt Kate (Catharine Teller Panoramic images of American cities were sold from the (Haring) Kip, 1806–1872) to Julia on her European tour of 1850s and may be found on the Library of Congress website. 1869–70; there were adoring letters from a young man who fell These show as from a bird’s eye the places, with individual in love with Julia before her marriage and who in 1872 and 1873 buildings shown in the near view. One of New York City in interspersed sentiments with accounts of concerts and lectures in 1851 gave an evocative image of the East River docks near where Boston and New York; letters from Carrie to her parents from the Haring brothers had their offices in the 1850s. There was a her chaperoned trip to Europe in 1896; letters from Carrie’s Waterbury panorama from 1899 that I used to show the layout daughter, Carol (Carolyn White (Griggs) Judd, 1906–1940, my of the town around its Green and the houses on Hillside. There mother) on her chaperoned 1926 European tour; letters from were maps of the time that could have been used, but the panCarrie’s brother from the Yukon in 1899–1900; and dozens of oramic images were more vivid. letters from family members on trips south in the winter and To illustrate places, there is usually a collection in the local north or across the Atlantic in summer. It was from the familiarhistorical society, as I found in Waterbury and in Minneapolis. ity with these letters that came from annotating them that the Finding illustrations in the pre-photograph era requires more shape of the second half of More Lasting emerged. Carrie and research, with images now increasingly available online. The Julia, her mother, became characters, almost novelistic, but from hotel letterheads at the turn of the last century typically included their own words. (I subsequently have published an edition of 5 cuts showing the building in its setting, often with enhancing these letters in two volumes, entitled Affection. ) touches. These too give a sense of place and how its owners There were more letters in archives than I could have wanted it to appear. dreamed when I started out. The Dartmouth archives had The research that I did required the proximity of a major extensive correspondence between Alexander Phelps and Eleazar research library, in this case the Research Division of the New Wheelock, and some involving other members of the family. I York Public Library, supplemented for me by the New York discovered, through a random keyword search at the end of a day Genealogical and Biographical Society’s library and that of the New-York Historical Society. All of the research for The Hatch 5 Peter Haring Judd, ed., Affection: Ninety Years of Family Letters, and most of it for More Lasting was done before resources on 1850s–1930s: Haring, White, Griggs, Judd Families of New York and the Internet changed the nature of genealogical and historiWaterbury, Connecticut, 2 vols. (New York: By the editor, 2006). March 2008 Association of Professional Genealogists Quarterly 31 cal research. The catalogs of New York Public Library and the Library of Congress were accessible from a home computer and were invaluable in locating material. unimpeded by description. Thus in The Hatch “Genealogical and Biographical Notes” are included in the volume, laying out, in modified Register format, the American ancestries of the principal families in the book. The equivalent for More Lasting was too long for inclusion in an already substantial volume. I published it separately; it is also available to members on the New England Form The shape of the two books—even the concept of developing a book-length manuscript—came from the research. The Hatch began with the thought that it would be interesting to see how family members managed through one of the great transitions in American history, from colony to independence. It soon became apparent that there was such an abundance of material, and the individuals and their times were so interesting, that each of five Phelps men and their immediate families required a chapter in a narrative that covered more than one hundred years. With the wealth of the family letters available, it was obvious that its successor, More Lasting, would involve a book-length narrative. The genealogical bones can, I hope, be sensed in the flow of the narrative, but a good suggestion Figure 12 from my editors provided that they be included A letterhead from Carrie’s 1896 tour of Europe. Figure 13 George and Carrie in St Mark’s Square in 1899, photo taken by Julia. The trip celebrated the 25th anniversary of the couple. 32 Association of Professional Genealogists Quarterly March 2008 Figure 14 A page from the wedding book of Caroline Haring (White) Griggs from 1904. From this it was possible using the Waterbury directory to specify the address and occupation of the guests and to identify the origins of the items that came down in the family. March 2008 Association of Professional Genealogists Quarterly 33 Ancestors website <http://www. newenglandancestors.org/>. In the books, I followed the genealogical practice of placing the footnotes on the same page as the text, the sadly no-longerfollowed practice for works of scholarship. If it is daunting to contemplate a multi-generational narrative with the detail I have described, and there are many—if not most—family histories that cannot be based, as mine were, on an abundant personal archive, what I have developed could also serve as an example for smaller scale projects. For example, the abundant historical and sociological material available on the nineteenth- and twentieth-century immigrations could enrich what could otherwise be a bare record. Or if a forebear was Figure 15 Carrie and her family about 1912. Robert Foote Griggs (1868-1927) was a stockbroker with a firm that bore his name in Waterbury. The children: Haring White Griggs was named for his New Amsterdam ancestor; Carolyn White Griggs (Carol, 1906-1940, mother of the author), and Robert Foote Griggs, Jr. (1908-1996). The family appears in this Bachrach photo to be fortune’s favorites, Robert in the flush of a prosperous business career, handsome children. There was much sadness to come for Carrie in her husband’s debilitating illness in the mi-1920s, her hopes of her eldest son never fulfilled, and the onset of manic-depressive psychosis in Carol when she was eighteen. 34 Association of Professional Genealogists Quarterly March 2008 Figure 16 Carrie lived in this house on Hillside in Waterbury from 1912 when she and Robert had it altered to accommodate the children, as shown by the third floor dormer windows. (In one of them was the seat where the family letters were stored.) She stayed on through her long widowhood. It had been staffed with two maids, a cook, a chauffeur and part time laundress and gardener, all but one of whom and the Pierce-Arrow were gone by 1937. involved in an industry, there will be excellent resources available to describe its conditions. The towns and cities where people lived all have their stories into which forebears can be fitted. Maintain curiosity, read widely, and follow trails should be the approach. That will awake a reader’s interest and create a legacy for a future that will be as radically different as is the past to us. It is a challenge that goes beyond traditional genealogy and encourages the development of a biographer’s skills. It is not for everyone, but my experience revealed how enjoyable and informative the process can be. I look at American history now with far more knowledge and understanding, and I would know how to start right in with these ancestors with questions if they should suddenly materialize when I look up from the keyboard. Peter Haring Judd is a graduate of Harvard College and has a Ph.D. from Columbia University. In his professional life he was with the Corporate and Environmental Planning Department of Northeast Utilities in Connecticut for twenty years and served from 1984 to 1991 as an Assistant Commissioner in New York City government. His book The Hatch and Brood of Time: Five Phelps Families in the North Atlantic World, 1730–1880, published by the Newbury Street Press in 1999, received the Year 2000 award for family history from the Connecticut Society of Genealogists. In 2001 it was given the Donald Lines Jacobus Award by the American Society of Genealogists. His More Lasting than Brass: A Thread of Family from Revolutionary New York to Industrial Connecticut was published by Northeastern University Press jointly with Newbury in 2004, and it received the grand prize in genealogy from the Connecticut Society in 2005. Two related publications are Genealogical and Biographical Notes: Haring-Herring, Clark, Denton, White, Griggs, Judd, and related families, 298 pp. (2005), and Affection: Ninety Years of Family Letters, 1850s–1930s: Haring, White, Griggs, Judd Families of New York and Waterbury, Connecticut, 2 vols. (2006), both published by the compiler. He was a trustee of the New York Genealogical & Biographical Society and a member of the Council of the New England Historic Genealogical Society. The surnames that are his principal research interest are Judd, Cowles, Griggs, White, Phelps, Haring, and their associated families.