Tuesday, January 14, 2014

Abel Davis

I’m trying to do two things at once.  Only two you say?  Well, then, only two to write about.  Cousin Pam and I are working on our Davis line.  Make that ONE of the Davis lines in our family.  We have two of those, both in Virginia.  Did you know that Davis might as well be Smith or Jones?  I think we’re more determined this time to find the clues.  We do have some good leads and promising correspondence initiated with researchers.  Can you believe we’re back to letter-writing to discover our family?  

My other current Serious Project is to whittle my library to fewer than two-hundred books.  I will need to move one of these days soon, and it would be better if I didn’t have so much to cart around.

It shouldn’t be so hard to let go of books.  They’re stories put to paper that at some point in my life have meant a good deal to me.  The trick is to find out if they still do, which really requires reading them again - each one.  If they are still resonant, they stay. 

The other trick to a book earning keeping-status is whether or not I could ever find it again, if I decided in future years that I needed to hear that story one more time.  The libraries these days often disgorge from their shelves the most wonderful older books to make room for general faddish printings or just pure garbage.  I wish they would leave the pop philosophy, politics, health crazes, etc, for bookstores to fend off on people (I love you, book smiths!), and spend their money instead on books that will “stand the test of time”.


Here’s why I love old books.  

Bess Streeter Aldrich.  I’m starting, again, “Song of Years”, printed in 1939, and this is part of her opening chapter:

The author is describing a pathway . . . 
      "But if the corn is high you must come to the second gate before you can see the tall white tombstones,the close-clipped grass of the plots, and the graveled paths that lie between.
       Here rest those first settlers.
       It is a place of utter peace. . . . But though there is a deep peace about them now, almost can you hear their loud laughter that this is so.  They would tell you that peace may be here at the end of the trail, but there was very little at the end of that other one which led westward from Dubuque.
       Because they who lie here are all connected by blood or marriage or neighborhood ties, the life of one in its bare outlines is the life of all."  


I can read that section over and over; it makes such an impression in my mind.  It’s the core of genealogy.

I can hardly wait to re-read this one.  I guess it has earned a place in the bookcase.


I’m going to add here a bit of the record of Abel Davis of Maryland, of Monongalia Co, Virginia (he was long-gone before it became West Virginia), of Champaign Co, Ohio, and finally of White Co, Indiana.  If this trail sounds familiar, please let me hear from you (address in right panel, under the flowers).  There are a lot more guesses and probabilities in my file for Abel, but these are the things we are now pretty sure of.

~~~~~I've come back to take Abel away.  He is on a separate posting.~~~~~~