As I continue sorting through more than 80 years of memories collected inside our family home, I kept discovering treasures that tell not only my family’s story, but the story of our community as well. One of those treasures is a large 1963 class photograph from W.F. Branch High School, the historic Black school that served students in our hometown during segregation. The photograph measures 18×26 inches and, after decades of being stored away, the edges have become worn and fragile. It was never framed, and I realized that if I wanted to help preserve this important piece of history, I needed to take action now.
I recently decided to have the photograph professionally framed to protect it from further damage. While it is too large to display in my home, I believe items like this deserve to be seen, appreciated, and preserved within the community they represent. I can already picture this photograph hanging on the wall of a library or historical society in my hometown, with visitors stopping to recognize familiar faces, point out relatives, and share memories of their school days and community connections.


As a family historian, I’m learning that preservation is not always about keeping everything for ourselves. Sometimes it means becoming a temporary caretaker until these treasures can find a permanent home where the entire community can benefit from them.
Click HERE to read Part 1
I recently came across a “family tree” on ancestry where someone had taken a graduation composite like this and created individuals for each person. You could access the media gallery for the tree and find a scan of the full composite and they took the time to individual crop each image and add to the person in the “family tree”. It was so great to research someone and have this pop up! I emailed the person through Ancestry to thank them and they said they had received many such emails for the two different graduation composites they had made trees for.
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Thanks for reading. That is a wonderful idea and that someone was able to research people from a composite. Genealogists really are some of the kindest people I know.
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