My favorite one-liner came from editor Hargittai from the introduction: "Good research takes longer than you expect. . . . If one is lucky, the work will only take twice as long as planned." {3}
There's some amazing material on interviews after 9/11 and with people of different social classes and ethnicities than your own. But in the end my favorite of the individual contributions was Jason Gallo on doing archival research:
Having gained access to the collection, located a suitable desk, table, or carrel to set up your equipment, and then head straight to a reference librarian or archival specialist. This is perhaps the most important task on your first day . . . . On your first visit you will make dozens of mistakes; however, the biggest mistake that you can make is not to ask a trained professional to help you with your research. . . . A professional can point you toward that record groupo, box, series, or folder of documents that contains the missing piece -- the needle in the haystack -- of your research puzzle.
I have no idea what these people think about genealogy, but we and they clearly face, and hopefully surmount, many of the same situations.
A perfectly timed reminder for me. I and my co-founder of a small beginners' genealogy group are going to visit Western Michigan University's Archives and Regional Depository this Saturday to do a little genealogy and to scout it out for a field trip for our group
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