05 September 2007

UK: Who's your great-grandpa?

Here's an interesting site. 24Hour Museum carries news, listings and features for more than 3,800 museums, galleries and art-heritage sites.

The 24 Hour Museum is the UK’s National Virtual Museum, updated daily with at least two new stories, arts and museum news, exhibition notices, reviews, features and trails. It promotes publicly-funded UK museums, galleries, archives and heritage attractions.

Today there's a story about a study commissioned by the National Trust revealing that more than 50% of respondents don't know the names of any of their great-grandparents:

"The Ipsos MORI poll showed that 57 per cent of adults aged over 15 couldn’t name their great-grandparents and a further 14 per cent could only name one great-grandparent. Findings were similar among all age groups."

It also includes information on the National Trust's Heritage Open Days 2007 on September 8:

This year it will be encouraging people to discover more about their family history with many of its venues staging special oral history events or having professional genealogists on hand to help visitors uncover their past.

Dr Nick Barratt, historian and one of the experts behind BBC TV's Who Do You Think You Are? is taking part in a presentation at Attingham Park, Shrewsbury.

"In one respect I'm really quite shocked by how few of us know about our not-too-distant relatives, given the incredible interest in family history at the moment, and the wealth of resources online," he said.

"However, in our hectic lives we tend to forget about the past and concentrate on the present. Perhaps these statistics will make us slow down a bit and think about talking to our relatives before we lose these vital links forever."

The events are part of the Trust’s Your History Matters campaign, and as well as the events has launched a ‘surname profiler’ on its website and a ‘memory map’ on which to upload and share memories.

To read more, click here

2 comments:

  1. I'd be curious to know if the percentage of those in the United States who don't know their great-grandparent's names is the same as in the UK.

    Janice

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  2. Hi, Janice,

    I wouldn't be surprised if the figures across the board are the same.

    Of course, if they survey our gen blog readers, they'll see much better results ... or so I would hope!

    Time for a poll?

    Schelly

    ReplyDelete