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Professor shares stories with genealogical group

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  • Professor shares stories with genealogical group

    Washington Observer Reporter, PA
    April 16 2005


    Professor shares stories with genealogical group



    WAYNESBURG - Serendipity, the seeming gift for finding good things
    accidentally, and the role it sometimes plays in genealogical
    research, was the focus of a presentation given by retired Waynesburg
    College professor Dr. Bruce Barnett at the Tuesday meeting of
    Cornerstone Genealogical Society.

    According to Barnett, there is an unseen power that helps people find
    their ancestors. He cited anecdotal evidence from Megan Smolenyak in
    her book, "In Search of Our Ancestors."

    Smolenyak believes it is not just a coincidence when we find our
    long-lost relatives, Barnett said.

    She wrote about a Florida woman who had been researching her father's
    half-brother. In Uniontown, just hours before her flight back to
    Florida, the woman found her uncle's name in a cemetery book. She
    went to the cemetery and asked at the office; the surprised office
    secretary, though a stranger, was the woman's cousin.

    Barnett said he was especially touched by a story he read in Reader's
    Digest. An American college student named Natalie Peters was staying
    in Paris. Knowing she had Armenian roots, she went to an Armenian
    church and spoke to an elderly lady in her family's native language.

    The elderly lady, who lived in Syria, turned out to be Peters' aunt,
    her father's sister, who had been trying to locate her brother for
    years.

    Barnett's enthusiasm for genealogy was evident in a tale he told of
    frustration conquered by perseverance.

    On their way back from Finland, his wife's home land, the Barnetts
    stopped in England and Scotland to do some research. Barnett
    encountered a problem common to researchers - old documents that are
    difficult to read.

    Calligraphy in the 17th century is dissimilar to that of the 21st
    century. Barnett trusted his intuition and discovered his ancestor,
    which he thought read "Wangfurd," was actually Crawford

    He also related a story in which a husband and wife decided to trace
    their roots and discovered that they are distant, "kissin' cousins.

    "Sometime an epiphany occurs when we are doing research; we know what
    we want to find and we find it," he said.

    Barnett, who has taught genetics, also said that some people use DNA
    to prove their ancestry. Or, in some cases, to disprove their
    ancestry.

    Barnett is a member of the society board and chairman of the Memory
    Medallion committee. He is a Boy Scout leader and a community
    volunteer.

    In other business, Valerie Gapen gave a report on the Memory
    Medallion, noting that 13 of the medallions were recently sold. Tonia
    Caruso of WQED-TV has completed a feature story on the Memory
    Medallion, which will be shown at the next meeting.

    Marilyn Eichenlaub announced that May 10 is the anniversary of the
    Corbly Massacre. Marilyn's daughter, Katie, a direct descendant of
    the Corblys, will be the speaker at Cornerstone on that date.

    President Jim Shriver reported improvements will be made soon to the
    society parking lot. Ruth Craft reported that Jim Fordyce brought
    Cornerstone five books including the earliest tax records of Greene
    County. It also was reported that the Observer-Reporter newspaper is
    on compact discs from 2000. The society will be getting the CDs on a
    monthly basis.

    From: Emil Lazarian | Ararat NewsPress
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