One of the frustrations of genealogical research can be the absence of images of our forebears and relatives; the dry account offered by (precious) vital and other records may render an ancestor doubly unknowable. Often the images that do survive fall towards the end of a lifetime, when financial resources will stretch to a trip to the photographer — or a portrait by an accomplished painter. I often feel that those artistically valuable images overlay the youthful portrait — the one we all carry inside of us — with a misleading patina: one of age, no doubt, but also one that buries features that may be seen in present-day descendants.
With this in mind, I thought I would page through photos of my parents and grandparents, all of whom (with one exception) I knew, although in the latter cases after they had been working on their patinas for some time.
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These snapshots were taken on a visit to my paternal grandparents, about a month before my parents were married in the winter of 1959.
Here they are following the wedding.
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These images are likely more resonant to me than they will be to others who did not know them. Still, in one or more there will be a flash of recognition — “I get a sense of what she [or he] was like.” It all helps to situate the dry facts of birth, marriage, and death when one can see Barbara and Campbell, or Gil and Anne, or Pauline and Fred as they looked at the time they first met and got married.
Continued here.