Preserve Your Family History by Writing Your Family Stories
by LeAnn R. Ralph

"Everyone has a story to tell." It seems like a cliche, but it's true.
After working as a newspaper reporter for more than eight years, I know
that everyone does, indeed, have a story to tell.

But even before I started working as a journalist, I knew that life
experiences make interesting stories. Consider my parents.

My mother was the daughter of Norwegian immigrants, and her grandfather homesteaded our dairy farm in Wisconsin in the late 1800s. My father was the son of German and Scottish immigrants. When Dad was a little boy, his parents worked as cooks in a lumber camp in northern Wisconsin. As I was growing up, Mom and Dad would tell stories about their own childhoods. When Mom was a little girl, the whole family would sleep in the screen porch on hot summer nights. Indians also used to stop at our farm, and gypsies would camp nearby during the summer. When Dad was a little boy, he enjoyed spending time at the lumber camp kitchen because all of the cooks knew that little boys needed special treats during the day: a piece of Key-Lime pie, a slice of chocolate cake, or a couple of extra-large sugar cookies. When Dad wasn't staying with his parents at the lumber camp, he lived with his grandmother, a tiny tough-as-nails German woman who owned a German shepherd named Happy.

Unfortunately, I never wrote down any of those stories, and I never
asked Mom and Dad to sit down with a tape recorder and tell those
stories. My mother died in 1985 at the age of 68, and my father passed
away in 1992 at the age of 78. The majority of their stories, except for
the few that I remember, are lost forever. Your family stories do not
have to share the same fate.

Here are some tips for writing your family stories:


    * Decide which person you want to interview first (Grandma or
      Grandpa, Mom or Dad, Aunt or Uncle), and then tell that person
      about your plan to write a collection of family stories and ask
      for permission to conduct an interview.

    * Set a formal date and time for the interview. This will give your
      interviewee an opportunity to mentally prepare and to remember
      various stories that he or she would like to talk about.

    * Provide a list of questions several days or weeks before the
      interview. This will also give your interviewee time to remember
      various stories.

    * Focus on a single subject or event in your list of
      questions: school, holidays (Christmas, Thanksgiving, Fourth of
      July), birthdays, seasons (spring, summer, winter, fall), the list
      is endless.

    * Ask open-ended questions and not "yes or no" questions. "How did
      you get to school?" is better than "Did you walk to school when
      you were growing up?"

    * Use a tape recorder to record the interview. Taping the interview
      will help you gather details that you might miss if you are only
      taking notes.

    * Chat about something else for a while if the person you are
      interviewing seems nervous at the prospect of being tape-recorded.
      Your interviewee will soon relax and won't even notice the tape
      recorder. And once you start the interview, you will find that one
      subject will lead to another and one question will lead to another.

    * Transcribe the tape and write up your notes after you have
      finished the interview. This, in itself, will provide a fine
      record of the stories that are told "in their own words." And you
      will be in good company--Studs Terkel's oral history books are
      written that way, and they are fascinating to read. Terkel's books
      include Division Street (1967), Hard Times (1970), Working (1974),
      The Good War (1984), The Great Divide (1988), and RACE (1992).

    * After you have finished all of your interviews and have written
      down the stories, print the stories from your computer and put
      them into a three-ring binder. Make multiple copies and give them
      to family members as gifts. Or you might want to consider
      publishing the stories POD (print-on-demand). There are many POD
      companies, and for a price that starts out at a couple of hundred
      dollars, you can publish the stories as a trade paperback. To find
      POD companies, conduct an Internet search with the keywords,
      "print-on-demand."


Here are some examples of questions to help you get started with your
interviews:

Subject: school

   1. Where did you go to school when you were growing up?

   2. Tell me about any amusing or unusual incidents that happened on
      your way to or from school.

   3. What kinds of clothes did you wear?

   4. How many students were in your class? How many students were
       in the whole school? How many grades?

   5. What was your favorite subject? Why?

   6. What was your least-favorite subject? Why?

   7. Who was your favorite teacher? Why?

   8. Who was your least-favorite teacher? Why?

   9. Tell me about your best friend.

  10. Tell me about your happiest moments in school. What was your
        best accomplishment?

  11. Tell me about your worst moments in school. Did you learn
        anything from your worst moments?

  12. What advice would you give to students who are in school today?


LeAnn R. Ralph is a freelance writer for two newspapers in west central
Wisconsin, is the editor of the Wisconsin Regional Writer (the quarterly
publication of the Wisconsin Regional Writers' Assoc.) and is the author
of the book, Christmas In Dairyland (True Stories From a Wisconsin Farm) (Aug. 2003); trade paperback. For more information about Christmas In Dairyland, visit
http://ruralroute2.com

Written by: LeAnn R. Ralph
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