Family Heritage Analysis

Words: 1159
Pages: 5

Heritage has an undeniable impact on our thought, behavior, and life. Knowing and understanding your personal family heritage is vital information to live by. Mainly because that knowledge gives a better perspective on how people lived their lives and survived when times were much more demanding. More importantly, a person’s heritage helps shape them into becoming who they truly are. On the other hand, it is also considered wise not to let our heritage hold us back from what we want to become in life. In the end, it is ultimately up to us to create our own identity and lead the life we want to live.
Most of the time learning about where your ancestors likely migrated from is a tedious process people are unwilling to do. Personally, my family
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Times did not come easily for Granny growing up. Granny’s dad left when she was around the age of eight years old putting her, mother into a state of shock, and being the oldest of 4 she was left to support her family. At the age of just 10 years old she was out working and supporting her family full time. She stayed supporting her irrational mother up until Pearl’s death in 1990. Granny eventually got married around the age 30 to my Papa, Jack Allen Archer on July 5th, 1966 in which they settled down back in Murdock Kansas. They had 2 kids including my mother, Vanessa, and my Uncle Tom.
According to Granny in our interview, her great-grandparents, so that would make it my great 3x grandparents, were the ones to migrate over from Germany. One of the relatives that is unknown to the both of us had written notes from his journey over from Germany. Granny’s mother obtained a recipe from her mother called the Ellis Island Poverty Cake. Granny stated, that her great-grandparents were finally established in Murdock and Kingman Kansas to start their own wheat farming in 1900 (Buchanan).
The journey over to the United States would make sense that correlates with the recipe because of the travels through the Ellis Island port in the New York Bay. They traveled across the country and decided to settle in Kansas for the farm