Hi again,
After having confirmed data on dead ancestors from elderly living relatives, it is an excellent exercise to go visit the cemetery where they are laid to rest. Often, headstones can reveal interesting data such as birth and death dates, the full name of the individual(s), and, if you're lucky as I was, the place where he/she/they were born.
I was able to determine, for example, that two of my ancestors, whose particulars were inscribed on a large obelisk-style headstone, were born in Nigg, Ross-shire, Scotland. As well, their ages at death were given and the date they died. From all of that I was able to determine their birth years and exactly where they had come from in the old world.
Not far from them were grave markers for three young women, all in a row, with their full names, birth and death dates, and the comment that they had died from "consumption", or as we know it today - tuberculosis. Each of them had died in their twenties. What a sad time it must have been for their parents - my great-great-grandparents.
When I finished my visit to the old family cemetery, I came away with a wealth of factual knowledge and a very deep feeling for the hard times they must have experienced. I was now ready for the next step in fleshing out the data.
To be continued . . .
Gary
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