A series of strange coincidences
Jan. 18th, 2006 05:07 pm![[personal profile]](https://www.dreamwidth.org/img/silk/identity/user.png)
Most libraries in the US no longer have card catalogs. We use computer databases instead, and mine is no exception. We do, however, still maintain what is called a shelf list, a series of catalog drawers that contain one 3x5 card for each book we own, arranged in the same order in which the books would be on the shelf if they were all here. Various incidental bits of information may be recorded on those cards, such as the date a book was sent to be rebound (yes, we still do that occasionally) or the name of a donor, etc. We no longer type those cards up manually, but instead have them generated by our computerized cataloging system as we catalog each new book. The cards are actually printed in Dublin, Ohio on a specialized printer that does only catalog cards, and are mailed to us daily.
I do check to make sure all of them arrive. As it happens, the shipments for December 21 and December 23 have been missing, and I'm on the point of ordering them to be reprinted. I figured they got lost somewhere in the holiday mail, because they are just small envelopes. Today the December 23 packet arrived. We didn't notice the cancellation on the envelope (they are mailed using a postage meter, so typically have no cancellation.)
When I took the cards from the envelope, a small handwritten note fell out:
1/8/06
Hello, Harvard Diggins Library,
Just thought you would like to know that these cards arrived in Juneau, Alaska on Jan. 7, in a package of gifts from Norway. The Norway package had been damaged & repaired, & somehow your envelope ended up included--imagine our puzzlement when opening our Norwegian treasures!
Best Wishes for 2006;
Your friends in Juneau
On re-examining the envelope, sure enough, it was cancelled on the back in Juneau, Alaska, on January 8. I wonder where the other packet from December 21 got to...
no subject
Date: 2006-01-19 12:57 pm (UTC)Of course, when one "wall" is removed, you always find another. James son of Abraham, son of Nicholas... Nicholas was born in New York in 1783 or thereabouts, and ended up in Canada among the Loyalists. He was married twice and had numerous descendants, so a lot of people have worked on his ancestry for a long time. We're now pretty sure he was son of Nicholas Jr. who was son of Nicholas Sr. (Yes, 3 Nicholai) both of whom fought with the Loyalist Butler's Rangers in the Revolutionary War. But the ancestry of Nicholas Sr. has never been established to anyone's satisfaction. He was apparently of German descent, but how many generations had been in America is not clear. Records are poor and conflicting, mostly depending on wills and land sale records which are never really specific.