by Pa Rock
Weary Traveler
It's Saturday afternoon and my week in Salt Lake City is careening to a close. Tomorrow morning I will check out of my hotel which borders on Temple Square and catch the Green Line Tram to the airport. My flight is at 10 a.m and I should be back in Kansas City by 1:30 in the afternoon.
It has been an eventful week in some respects, but there were a few fizzles along the way. I learned, for instance, that my ability to get around on foot had decreased markedly during the six years since I was last in the capital city of Utah, but, on the upside, this time I became very proficient at using the tram system.
One of my "goals" this year was to watch the weekly rehearsal of the Mormon Tabernacle Choir in the Tabernacle (something I enjoyed six years ago), and I even went there early in the week to make certain that I had accurate information about the event. A couple of very nice older Mormon volunteers told me that it would be Thursday evening at 7:30. I showed up at the appointed time and was swept into the Tabernacle by masses of people who were entering and leaving and strolling around the beautiful outdoor holiday lights. Once inside two more volunteers told me that there was no rehearsal this week because of the large and extravagant multi-choir performance - community and school groups - that was happening next door. I could, if I so desired, get on the waiting list for the possibility of a ticket to that. I declined.
I did stop and drop two dollars into a can beside a very cold panhandler on my way back to the hotel. He was sitting on the sidewalk wrapped in a couple of ragged blankets - next to his faithful dog who was also bundled up against the cold. My feelings of grandiosity were quickly tempered, however, when a lady stepped up next to me and handed him a folded bill that looked like a twenty. "Merry Christmas," he said to each of us.
I don't understand why there is such extreme poverty in America. I just cannot comprehend how people wind up sitting on sidewalks on cold winter evenings, begging for survival, in the heart of the richest nation on earth.
On the plus side of the equation, my week in Utah did include some real positives. I finished a couple of small writing projects which have been in the hopper for too long, and I slept soundly every night - and now feel rested for the first time in a very long time. The trip was worth the expense just for the physical rejuvenation effects alone.
And I also had some positive results with the library research. "Family Search," the library's new name, is under the control of a group called Family Search and appears to be a part of the Mormon Church. Family Search maintains a site on the internet that is very similar to Ancestry.com, the place where I maintain my "official" family tree. Six years ago I opened a free account with Family Search and made just a very few entries in a family tree which I started at that site. My tree had grown a massive amount over the past six years with information that Family Search had collected from my personal research at that site, but also through the research of others who had connections to my tree.
Early this week I took a long and detailed look at my family tree at Family Search, expecting to encounter many errors due to sloppy research by others, but, for the most part, the information in that tree seemed to match the one which I have done completely on my own at Ancestry.com.
But I did come across one branch where I felt my information was better than what had been affixed to the Family Search tree, and I sat down with one of the many library volunteers to discuss it and to learn how to challenge information on the tree. Our conversation and some subsequent work together led to my most significant find of the week. Together the very nice lady and I managed to unearth a probate document that had been filed in Ohio in 1892 that not only added to my knowledge of my great-grandfather, whose family past even his children were unaware, but also showed that the information in the Family Search was accurate. I now know quite a bit more about this particular ancestor than I did when my plane landed in Salt Lake last Sunday.
Another discovery that I made this week as I was researching at the library was that the library was printing large (24" X 36") family tree charts and handing them out to individuals. They were in full-color and I assumed would be quite pricey. On Thursday as I was visiting with another library volunteer regarding another problem, I asked about the charts. It turns out there were 9-generation fan charts - and I have several lines that go back nine generations and even further - and it also turns out that they were free, one to a customer - and we printed mine right as I sat there! It was gifted to me in a sturdy cardboard tube for a safe flight back to Missouri.
(For my Missouri kin, a nice poster frame would be a very appropriate Christmas gift!)
Time to get packing - literally! It's been a very good week in Salty City!