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It's Saturday Night -- time for more Genealogy Fun!!
Of course, I'm at Jamboree and completely forgot about writing this post until someone said "what's our Genealogy Fun tonight?"
Tonight at Jamboree is the Geneabloggers Pajama Party, and everyone knows that fun folks play games at their pajama parties. So, for SNGF tonight:
1) Play "two truths and a lie." Tell us three facts about your family history -- two have to be true and one has to be a lie.
2) Put them on your own blog post, in a Facebook status or in a comment on this blog. Ask readers to guess which one is a lie.
3) After one day, be sure to put the right answer as a comment to your blog. or Facebook status.
Thank you to Susan Kitchens for suggesting this topic. We're going to play it tonight at the Geneablogger pajama party too!
Here's mine:
* I am a 20th cousin once removed to Queen Elizabeth II of England.
* My ancestor Thomas J. Newton (1798-1837) committed suicide.
* I found my great-grandfather's holographic wlll in the Treasure Box 56 years after his death.
Which one do you think is a lie? Please comment!
The URL for this post is http://www.geneamusings.com/2011/06/saturday-night-genealogy-fun.html
(c) 2011. Randall J. Seaver. All Rights Reserved. If you wish to re-publish my content, please contact me for permission, which I will usually grant. If you are reading this on any other genealogy website, then they have stolen my work (RSS feed readers excepted).
UPDATED 14 June: I want to reveal my lie here - it is #2, as reader RBrass189 guessed. Someone pays attention to the details! good job. Janet Iles, Linda McCauley and Julie Cahill Tarr aslo guessed #2. You all win a lifetime subscription to Genea-Musings - just put your email address in the field and Feedburner will send it to you every day there is a blog post.
Too easy, Randy! Holographs haven't been around that long, and a 3-dimensional image of a 2-dimensional document would be a silly thing to do, and a waste of money. I'm calling BS on the holographic will.
ReplyDeleteHere is my contribution: Truth & Lies
ReplyDeleteHere is my contribution: Truth & Lies
ReplyDeleteThe Thomas J. Newton item is the fake. You've posted a number of times in the past about how he is one of the mysteries you are trying to solve.
ReplyDeleteI wasn't familiar with the term Holographic will until I searched for it, so thanks for making me look that one up.
Not so easy ... a holographic will is a signed, handwritten will without witnesses. I'm suspicious about the Queen Elizabeth connection :-)
ReplyDeleteMy choice for fake is the Thomas J. Newton statement.
ReplyDeleteHere is my list: http://tinyurl.com/43qdlxr
ReplyDeleteAnd I think #2 on your list (Thomas J. Newton) is the lie.
My fun for the night:
ReplyDeletehttp://gatapleytree.blogspot.com/2011/06/saturday-night-genealogy-fun.html
Here's mine, Randy:
ReplyDeletehttp://tinyurl.com/3e8n6nh
I think #2 is the lie.
ReplyDeleteI'll go with nunber 1 because nobody else picked it! :)
ReplyDelete