| I have been
                  doing genealogy research for  20 years now and I am
                  enjoying it as immensely today as when I first began. 
                  The facts that are "unearthed", (no pun intended),
                  are so interesting and you begin to almost feel your
                  ancestors' presence.  
                   My brothers and I made a
                  trip to Arkansas a few years ago and finally got to visit our
                  Grandfather and Grandmother WALKER's graves.  We never
                  knew where the graves were located.  While standing at
                  their headstones, it was as if I had finally gotten to meet
                  them.  What a wonderful feeling.  I have gotten to
                  "know", in a way, the grandparents I never really
                  knew before, as well as great-aunts and great-uncles.  I
                  have met many many cousins on the internet who just happened
                  to find my site and was researching the same lines that I am. 
                  Oh, there have been
        difficult times when I was ready to give up.  The old proverbial "brick
        walls" kept popping up, but then I would get a renewed motivation and resume my
        digging again.  I am at one of those brick walls right now, but I am determined to
        find who I'm looking for or, at the very least, find out WHY that person can't be
        found.  Sometimes your kin-folks seem to just vanish from the face of the earth for
        one reason or another.  They are out there, just hidden somewhere. 
        The hardest ones to locate seem to be the
        American Indians of every tribe.  There are some very good sites to get information
        on the different Indian Nations.  Just be very SURE of the information you gather. 
        The Surnames I am researching are: ADERHOLD/T, HAGGARD, MORRIS, LILLARD,
        OWENS, WALKER, and WHITE.  There are others linked to these name, but I am not
        researching them fully. 
        Enjoy yourself, good luck, and good hunting! 
        The following poem says it all! 
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