Lucy
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So the long-awaited TMI installments have been shown and will be up for a week or two. Both glad and disappointed to see Natalie Sudman featured so much, especially in two. It is interesting to see her talk about her experiences and disappointing that others were not also featured.
Guess you can't do that much in 20 minutes, which is probably why the story they do follow seems a little fractured.
So in retrieval #1, Natalie has a guy run up to her. He has on a uniform...perhaps her not so distant experiences with the US military in Iraq made her look safe to a military person in spirit?...he says his name is Jerry Cranz (sp?) and he is blind (and she had suffered eye problems due to injury in Iraq) and he was killed at Shiloh (which she somehow is not familiar with, but I am originally from Tennessee so maybe I assume incorrectly that "everyone" knows about Shiloh).
So the program shifts to a geneologist, J. Mark Lowe, who has initials after his name, related to Geneology: CG and FUGA, the latter of which has to do with Utah, where a lot of geneology is done, so I assume that is supposed to mean he is very good at his work.
And he finds a Jerry Cranz (Kranz? they don't really tell us, so they?) from Illinois, 43rd regiment, 1/3 of whom were killed at Shiloh, skipping exactly how Lowe pinned that down, but that's his job, and then Lowe gets to 1930 using public records and a diary and then we shift to the present. In the present, we find descendents whose name has shifted to Almcrantz. It is frustrating to me to skip how they got there, both 1930 to now and Kranz to Almcranz, but the family seemed satisfied. It seems like a good "hit" to me, some kind of validation. It must have been interesting to the family to get this info out of the blue.
Sudman's second hit was a man named Josiah Smith from an area of NY state now apparently in NJ. Because she got a location, and dates the "Smith" name was not a problem here. In fact, Lowe turned up really good info here. Then the family moved to the Michigan area to farm. The commonality of the name would have eeb a challenge but became less so as Lowe had known someone who had researched his own SMITH family information, and that connection turned up a present-day family who turned out to have lots of info (in a box in the attic or someplace like that). So the family had lots of confirming information, including the location of graves.
Well something is going on here.
I do wonder what happened with the retrieval of another participant, who found a guy named Twitchell from Chicago. Was there not enough information for Lowe to find anything on this person? Did they find something but the family did not want to be on video? The viewer is left hanging. Maybe the point is that not every retrieval produces verifiable information.
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