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Was a long-ago family member of yours part of an historic event

even as an onlooker?

It is family lore that one of my disreputable female, London born and raised ancestors could easily have been a victim of Jack the Ripper.
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Nitedoc · 51-55, M Best Comment
There's a written record of one of my ancestors coming to America on the Mayflower.

Thevy29 · 41-45, M
Grandpa was part of WW2. He never spoke of what he did during the war but when dementia set in, he started speaking all these languages we never knew he knew. So we looked up his war records.. The records said he was a Baker in the army. It showed when he boarded transportation which he did a lot. And when he was arrested. (Also a lot) But everything else was completely blacked out.. We think he might of been part of military intelligence.
@Thevy29

Wow - I've a feeling you'll be looking deeper into this.
akindheart · 61-69, F
William Clark of the Lewis and Clark family is my first cousin 6 generations back. 2 of the trappers are direct descendents of my family. Pocahontas, (the real one, not Elizabeth Warren) is my 10th great grandmother and one of my great uncles is one of Shakespeare's Original King's men
@akindheart

You or your family before you have done a lot of research. It was well worth that time doing so. My goodness :)
Punxi · F
My Great Great Grandma bequeathed a diary that has since been handed down. In it's pages dated 1872 is a visit to a Chicago theater to see a stage production featuring Buffalo Bill Cody.

Bout as close to history my blood has.....been.
One of my great-aunts told me of a story about our Haitian roots, apparently there was a set of twins born to a black slave woman and a white Frenchman. During the revolution, the Creoles were given the option to side with black Haitians fighting the French—or they could leave with the French.

One difference between the Americans and the French as colonizers was that the French were more likely to acknowledge their black children, send them to be educated,
bequeath them money and property. So, the story goes, one of the twins stayed and fought with Toussaint L’Ouverture and Dessalines for Haiti’s independence; the other one fled with their French father to the U.S.

I don’t know if there’s any way to track prove it other than the DNA, but subsequent sets of identical twins have occasionally been born to members of our family.
BarbossasHusband · 36-40, TNew
Most noteworthy I'm aware of is my gpaw helped clean the streets of victims of ww2 after the war ended.

Might think of something more interresting later.
My grandfather was in the Navy in WW2 and his broter was killed in the Korean War.

Also there is a potential connection with a test pilot but I can't say with 100% certainty as I've not tried doing the Ancestry.com thing to verify we are related; there are a couple of points that make it very likely though.
@BlueGreenGrey

Fingers crossed you find what you're looking for concerning your heroic family members.
SaorUladh · 31-35, M
My great grandfather was in the Royal Navy and served at the Battle of Jutland in WW1.
@SaorUladh

I've heard of that but am now going to google that famous battle for additional details 👊
@SaorUladh

!! Very important indeed -

SaorUladh · 31-35, M
@rinkydinkydoink
It's definitely worth reading about. The ship he was on was called HMS Warrior. It was badly damaged and eventually sank.
Nitedoc · 51-55, M
Wow! Thank you for best comment.
@Nitedoc

The Mayflower is numero uno
SunshineGirl · 36-40, F
My grandfather fought in the Polish resistance and airforce in WW2.
@SunshineGirl

Poland was in the thick of it from the very beginning... then you had to persist under the Soviets :(

Bless your grandfather.
DeWayfarer · 61-69, M
Great grandfather was shot, father was sent to prison camp as a political prisoner. The German takeover of Czechoslovakia in October 1938.

 
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