. Within a few hours, three of the photos had been claimed. I'm sending the original images to the first people who asked for them, but I also scanned both high- and low-resolution (300 and 72 dots per inch, respectively) copies for anyone who wants one.
Doesn't it feel great to know family photos are making their way back to the fold? I only wish every photo in that box had identifying information, as I hate seeing family treasures lost to time.
The unidentified photo that bothered me the most was an 11x17-inch print of about 40 people all lined up at what I think was a family reunion. When I picked up that picture, I had a fantasy that I'd turn the image over and every family member would be clearly labeled. But it wasn't to be; the back was blank.
My grandmother Roselan Dearing always labeled photographs, and for that I'm grateful. I could always count on the back of Grandma's pictures having a name, usually a year, and sometimes the person's age. She may not have been 100 percent accurate, but her notes almost guarantee my generation will know which family members are in the photos. If you decide to start labeling your family photos, be sure to use either a soft lead pencil or an archival photo-labeling pen, and write gently.
Want to find your own family photos online? Use these resources:
Family Photo Web Site
www.familyoldphotos.com
DeadFred
deadfred.com
Preserving Family Photos
www.epfl.net/slrc/special_collections/ewg_preserve.html#Photographs
Ancient Faces
www.ancientfaces.com/site/research/submit
P.S. The family photos I found are Clymer, Springer, Hause, and Hurlburt (just in case one of them belongs to you!).
Nancy Hendrickson is a contributing editor for Family Tree Magazine. She also is a family historian, freelance writer
and the author of two astronomy books. Her Web site
is at www.ancestornews.com. E-mail her at stjoemo@pobox.com.