Leo McKinstry says the current craze for genealogy reflects an unhealthy combination of snobbery and inverse snobbery, and is a poor replacement for national history
Thousands are expected to converge on Olympia, but I will not be one of them. For me, family history has all the appeal of a speech by Hazel Blears on urban regeneration. I am one of the 30 per cent of the population discovered in the YouGov poll who have ‘no interest at all’ in genealogical research. When someone starts to babble about a great-great-great-uncle who is an Albanian prince or a Spanish pirate or a Galway crofter my inclination is to respond, ‘So what? How has that really got anything do with you?’
As I sat at my desk in the public reading room of the National Archives last week, I had a grandstand view of this army of family researchers, ferreting through card indexes and online catalogues and heavily bound ledgers and Victorian street directories and ancient Navy Lists... I thought to myself that there was an air of desperation about all their feverish activity, as if the discovery of a rakish uncle or a wealthy earl in their past might, by some process of genealogical transference, bring some colour to their mundane lives.
But the belief that there is something intrinsically interesting about a family’s origins is badly mistaken. Most people’s ancestry is as dull as their holiday snaps. As any reader of historical biography knows, by far the most boring passages in any such book are the early sections covering the subject’s forebears. But that does not deter the obsessives who think that their findings are ‘fascinating’. So Mary Vernon from Coventry tells the Daily Mail, ‘I have been researching my family tree for seven years now and on my grandmother’s (maternal) side can trace mine back to the time that Henry VII was on the throne. Other branches have gone back to the 1600s and 1700s and I am still searching! I have 3,435 members in it so far.... My Nan’s family, although mostly pretty well off — they were farmers and watchmakers — had a member listed as a pauper.’ Reading this self-indulgent drivel, again I want to scream ‘So what?’
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Demetrios Hadjinicolaou
May 1st, 2008 10:24amI would humbly but gladly endorse this article. You are absolutely right, Mr McKinstry.
Craig
May 2nd, 2008 11:26amI confess to being one of that growing number digging into my family history. This is not so much because I am bothered what my ancestors consisted of, so much as the actual origins of my surname. 'Oo, that's different isn't it - where does it come from?' is a frequent question and on some simplistic level I am irritated that I cannot answer.
Ann Jarman
May 2nd, 2008 12:12pmI agree with you Mr. McKinstry.
TDK
May 2nd, 2008 12:25pmThe John Hurt episode was instructive. It is strange that a man who had many known English ancestors but only a suspected distant Irish ancestor, should regard himself as being "Irish". Even if the ancestor had been found the claim remains nonsense based solely upon proportionality. Clearly the value in claiming membership of a certain group, however tenuous, ranks higher than being English. This isn't inverted snobbery so much as victimhood poker. Far better to claim to be a victim of English oppression than to be English.
The Sue Johnson episode was another that revelled in bien pensant attitudes.
Angie
May 3rd, 2008 6:08amWhat a mean spirited piece. That people have a hobby they enjoy, which harms no one and gives them a sense of achievement along with (I venture to disagree with McKinstry here) an appreciation of the lives our ancestors lived, is admirable.
Perhaps Mr Mc would like to disclose his hobbies so we can see just how superior he fancies himself to be in his spare time. Was it bonsai or stamp collecting perhaps?
William Barr
May 3rd, 2008 7:27amOur bicentennial in 1976 produced a huge interest in genealogy. As a result, no organization grew so extensively, in terns of numbers and community involvement and activism. as did the Sons of Confederate Veterans. Good luck finding anything recognizably American today outside Dixie, where probably a third of the Saxons still know who they really are and why our brave history matters now more than ever.
Josh
May 3rd, 2008 10:31pmWhy bother with the study of history at all? Or is it that the personal histories of the 'plebs' are unimportant? This smells of the snobbish arrogance of which Mr McKinstry is so reproachful.
I agree that this is no substitute for real identity but to have sat in a pub which was frequented by a man through whom my name was passed, 300 years ago - well, it was interesting and quite a good feed!
Henry Fowler
May 4th, 2008 6:51pmThe saddest (and oddest) case in 'Who Do You Think You Are?' was that of Amanda Redman, who found that her Protestant Irish ancestors were only Protestant for convenience – in divided 18/19th Century Ireland, ruled by Protestant England, this gave them a better chance of work than Catholics. When she discovered that her ancestors had really been Catholic, she celebrated this as some great triumph. She might as well have said "Hurrah! We're Catholics! We're oppressed!"
iskidmore
May 5th, 2008 8:49amI suppose if my name ws McKinstry I would be hesitant in exploring my origins. Since I have genetic proof of my ancestry over 15,000 years and documentary proof that my family came to England at the request of Edward the Confessor, provided a Gentleman of the Bedchamber to Henry 8, had a finger broken by Elizabeth the First, refused to learn French when appointed Charles 2's Ambassador to France and introduced the cyder industry to Hereford my genealogy has enlivened a love of history
SNL
May 6th, 2008 9:33amA timely article from Mr McKinstry and several pertinent comments posted so far from those who share his dislike of specious self-importance. Not mentioned, however, is the futility of ascribing significance to one's ancestry from a genetic perspective.
We have two parents and share 50% of our genetic composition with each; four grandparents with whom we share 25% each, and so on. After 10 generations (which means going back only some 200 years or so) we share less than 0.1% of our genetic composition with any particular ancestor.
So, if after much laborious research, we uncover an ancestral link to, say, William the Conquerer we can hardly bask in the reflected glory of this noble forefather as we are no more closely related to him, in terms of shared genes, than we are to anybody else in the general population.
Beyond a few generations lineage-hunting, focussing as it does on a mere scintilla of the ancestry of a living individual, is therefore not only dubious in terms of taste but also scientifically meaningless.
Gingerpig
May 6th, 2008 10:20amWhat a strange and possibly snooty piece. I am sure that many have indeed found a sense of identity through Genealogy. Where they came from, why their ancestors moved, the impact of two wars as a couple of examples let alone a better understanding of our industrial past.
laurie macdonell-sanchez
May 16th, 2008 9:34pmI agree with the Chinese--we must revere our ancestors, if for nothing else, because their struggle to survive in far harsher times, their ingenuity & their sheer tenacity are what got all of us here for our turn on the planet. It gives us a greater sense of responsibility in choosing what we do with our own lives, prompting us to give our lives more dimension & meaning.
Murray Williamson
May 21st, 2008 7:19amWhat a precious little piece!
No doubt McKinstry was engaged in something of monumental importance while he observed family historians pursuing their hobby. I'm surprised that he found time to write it.
In my expereince family history really does inspire a regard for more general history - eg, why did they leave there? Why did they go there? What was life like at that time in that place?