Family History/Genealogy/ Videos An Emerging Niche Market

Genealogical research is a popular hobby all over the world and the Web has made the research easier, faster and more accessible.  It’s a rewarding process, but hobbyists and professionals can find themselves overwhelmed by the bulk of information gathered, and how best to condense it into a palpable and transferable package.  I’ve been involved in the research of my own family history for nearly 20 years.  I’ve traveled to distant locations to explore the places my ancestors lived, worked and died. On these trips I always take photographs and video, and through the years I’ve compiled a good deal of material.  Of course, the problem becomes, what do you do with this material once you have it?  And how do you share it with family members?

Many people are turning to video professionals such as myself to compile their research into long or short form videos.  The video may take on a documentary look, as if Ken Burns has finally set his sights on your family history with interviews of living family members recounting family lore; or, simply pictures set to music with graphics.  Most valuable are the words and memories of elderly relatives who can recount the early days of their lives.  If these stories aren’t recorded in some fashion, they may be lost with the passage of time.  I know this all too well.  Back in 2000 I scheduled a visit with my 92-year old grandfather in Wheeling, West Virginia to talk to him about his memories of his early life in Ohio and West Virginia.  Sadly, he fell and broke his hip several days before my visit and died a day after the surgery to repair the break.  The memories and stories were lost.

Video is a great way to share and preserve the information that you’ve spent years gathering for this generation and those to come.  If you would like to pursue a video project of this sort, please give me a call.  I would love to help you.  You don’t have to live in the DC area to use my services.  It makes a great gift, too!


The Roots of My Photography

photo by Kenneth A. Linn

For many years I have been exploring my ancestry, and I recently made an interesting discovery. It appears my love for almost all things related to photography may run in the family.  My grandfather’s cousin, my first cousin twice removed, was, and is, a relatively well-known photographer in New York whose work is still sought by collectors and galleries. His name was Kenneth A. Linn and he studied and taught at The Clarence H. White School of Photography in New York City which was the first school to teach photography as an art form.

Allen and Sadie Linn

Photographic collections from this prestigious school, which operated from 1914 to 1942, are held in the Library of Congress and in private collections such as the Coville Collection. This small school is credited with producing some of the most celebrated photographers of the 20th Century who were innovative in their approach to this evolving and emerging medium, which incorporated design, aesthetics and illustration.  I wonder what their reaction would be to today’s imagery, and the viral, visual bombardment from the television and the Internet?

Kenneth A. Linn

Kenneth A. Linn was the son of Allen and Sadie Linn.  Allen was a silk salesman in New York and Sadie, formerly Sadie Neafie McCollough, came from a well-to-do family, I’m told.  My side of the family through Robert A. Linn, Allen’s brother,  stayed in Ohio and West Virginia selling life insurance–need I say more!

Since being given my first old camera I’ve loved the sound of the shutter.  I would walk around taking pretend photos, no film in the camera, just to hear the shutter movement.  Somehow even though the direct lineage should have made me a salesman, I got the photo gene.