Is there something you think you know but for which you have no real proof other than you have always believed it?
While it doesn’t have direct genealogical bearing, I have been reading “Pillars of the Republic” by Carl F. Kaestle. One thing I learned while reading the book is that there were many schools in the 1820s-1840s that enrolled children as young as 4. This trend changed in the mid-eighteenth century. I just always assumed that there was no schooling at all for children that young until the 20th century. I never read that anywhere, I just assumed it.
Is there some “fact” in your genealogy research that you never read, never heard, but just assumed? And is it causing that brick wall in your research?
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How true those assumptions seem, too. >>I always assumed my Meyer relatives always lived at Radenbeck area and attended Thomasburg church.>>Then one day I thought maybe one Meyer brother named Hch. xtoph got ticked in some other area with another brother and moved there as he took up the lowly sherpherd career. [Or maybe the others died from a wawr or illness.] See his son has no other Meyer mentioned in his childrens’ church records. Just because I assumed he was there, I did not have an open mind to be watching and looking for him elsewhere. [Of course that is when it also got a little mind boggling for me as to where they came from. lol]>>Nice blog. I couldn’t resist a comment.