SFAA Newsletter June 1998
"Murphy's law for genealogists"
*The public ceremony in which your distinguished ancestor participated and at which the platform collapsed under him turned out to be a hanging.
*When at last after much hard work you have solved the mystery you have been working on for two years, your aunt says, "I could have told you that".
*Your grandmother's maiden name that you have searched for for four years was on a letter in a box in the attic all the time.
*You never asked your father about his family when he was alive because you were not interested in genealogy then.
*The will you need is in the safe on board the Titanic.
*Copies of old newspapers have holes occurring only on the surnames.
*John, son of Thomas, the immigrant whom your relatives claim as the family progenitor, died on board ship at age 10.
*Your gr grandfathers newspaper obituary states that he died leaving no issue of record.
*The keeper of the vital records you need has just been insulted by another genealogist.
*The relative who had all the family photographs gave them all to her daughter who has no interest in genealogy and no inclination to share.
*The only record you find for your gr grandfather is that his property was sold at a sheriffs sale for insolvency.
*The one document that would supply the missing link in your dead-end line has been lost due to fire, flood or war.
*The town clerk to whom you wrote for the information sends you a long handwritten letter which is totally illegible.
*The spelling of your European ancestors name bears no relationship to its current spelling or pronunciation.
*None of the pictures in your recently deceased gr mothers photo album have names written on them.
*No one in your family tree ever did anything noteworthy, owned property, was sued or was named in wills.
*You learn that your great aunt's executor just sold her life's collection of family genealogical materials to, a flea market dealer "somewhere in New York City".
*Ink fades and paper deteriorates at a rate inversely proportional to the value of the data recorded.
*The 37 volume, sixteen thousand page history of your county of origin isn't indexed. *You finally find your gr grandparent's wedding records and discover that the brides'father was named John Smith.
Author Unknown