13 Steps to Preserve Your Family History
by: LeAnn R. Ralph

Although the phrase, "everybody has a story to tell" may sound like a
cliche, it's true.

And after working as a newspaper reporter for nine years, I know that
everyone does, indeed, have a story to tell, including your family members.

Think about it.

Do your grandmother and grandfather - mother and father - aunts and
uncles - tell stories about the "good old days?"

Do they talk about going to school? The fun they had with friends?
Family celebrations and holidays? Picnics on the Fourth of July? Snow
that was so deep it covered fences? Pets that were so smart they
belonged in the Guinness Book of World Records? Making ice cream? Their parents? Their grandparents?

Have you wanted to write down those stories to share them with other
family members and to preserve them for generations to come but don't
how to go about it?

Guess what? You don't need "literary talent," special training or
special equipment. All you need to preserve those stories is a list of
people to interview, a willingness to listen, a set of questions to ask,
a tape recorder and a computer (or even a typewriter would work!).

Here are the steps for gathering and writing your family stories:

1. Decide which people you would like to interview and make a list.

2. Ask for permission to conduct an interview.

3. Set a formal date and time for the interview.

4. Provide a list of questions several days or weeks before the interview.

5. Focus on a single subject or event in each list of questions.

6. Use the "who, what, where, when, how, and why" strategy when
formulating your questions.

7. Ask open-ended questions and not "yes or no" or "one word answer"
questions.

8. Use a tape recorder to record the interview.

9. Chat about something else for a while if the person you are
interviewing seems nervous at the prospect of being tape-recorded.

10. Transcribe the tape and write up your notes after you have finished
the interview.

11. Edit the manuscript.

12. Spread out your interviews.

13. Print the stories from your computer or publish them in another way.

*Preserve Your Family History* includes step-by-step instructions for
conducting interviews as well as 30 sets of questions (more than 400
questions in all) on 30 different topics that you can print out to use
"as is" or that you can use to generate your own questions. To see the
table of contents and several sets of sample questions visit ?
http://www.ruralroute2.com/family_history.html

*Preserve Your Family History (A Step-by-Step Guide for Writing Oral
Histories)* (66 pages; $7.95) is available from
http://www.booklocker.com/books/1545.html

***********************

From the e-book: Preserve Your Family History (A Step-by-Step Guide for
Writing Oral Histories) (66 pages; April 2004; $7.95) available at
http://www.booklocker.com/books/1545.html

To see the table of contents and several sets of sample questions visit
http://www.ruralroute2.com/family_history.html

© LeAnn R. Ralph 2004

LeAnn R. Ralph is the author of the book, *Christmas in Dairyland (True
Stories from a Wisconsin Farm)* (trade paperback; August 2003). For more
information, visit http://ruralroute2.com

Written by: LeAnn R. Ralph

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