| Sitting down to write the history of one's
            family is a daunting proposition. Such an effort can require
            years of research and will never be as complete as one would
            like. There is always a new source of potential information just |   | 
        
around the next corner which
        may add some perspective to an ancestor's personality or actions.
        To leave any relevant information out of such a history
        is a potential loss that bothers all of us who have collaborated
        in it's preparation. As a result, we have decided not to write
        this narrative the conventional way by completing all research
        and then putting everything together in an organized format.
        I and the other participating cousins will write as we go--updating
        whatever part of the story that new information enhances. Our
        hope is that some day we may be able to bring this to some degree
        of closure. While my wife and children have some idea of what
        I doing, as the story grows in length it seems less and less
        likely that they will take the time to read it. Perhaps that
        is best for everyone--a story only becomes really interesting
        when its protagonists are dead and gone. When I began this family
        biography, I had hoped to have it near completion before I died,
        and to publish it in whatever state of completion it may have
        evolved. Now as other cousins seem to be interested in joining
        me in updating our genealogy database and collaborating on the
        writing of this family history, I am somewhat less anxious and
        hurried as it is my hope that there will be group of interested
        Armstrong descendents out there who will continue to work together
        on preserving and updating the family records and the family
        biography.
        I began doing genealogical research
        in 1976 but in less than a year gave it up as I ran into a number
        of stonewalls and felt that the expenses involved would be too
        great. I did nothing more until February of 1994 when I decided
        to try again. In the next two months I located a Mormon Stake
        in neighboring Rockledge, Florida, began contacting the historical
        and genealogical societies in South Dakota, Iowa, and Minnesota,
        and learned of the genealogical sources available through the
        Orlando Public library, that I also began visiting when I could.
        When I began, I knew my grandfather
        Armstrong's name but little else about the Armstrongs who, by
        all appearances, were likely to present a formidable research
        challenge. Some of my contacts in the 1970s were no longer available,
        but I managed to reestablish early links with some of my Armstrong
        cousins who in turn helped me locate other family members interested
        in genealogy. Through them I developed my information about the
        Bulens and Odekirks. I had no idea when I began writing in April
        of 1994 where my research would lead me or what I would learn.
        My goal was to leave something of value to my descendants--a
        narrative that provides images of their ancestors as they were,
        not saints to be worshipped, but real people with strengths and
        weaknesses, successes and failures, and who lived life the best
        they could given the opportunities that life afforded them. I
        intend to include family folklore when I run into it--not to
        perpetuate gossip, but to add perspective when there appears
        to be some degree of probability. This will undoubtedly displease
        certain family members still living and/or their offspring. However,
        as this is family folklore, I feel that our descendants
        would be interested in the color that it adds to the narrative.
        Ancestors and future generations share a marvelous, unique, and
        unpredictable caldron of genetic linkages that result in recognizable
        similarities as well as wholly unexplainable differences. Regardless
        of when we may have lived, we are still family, and it is not
        right that we be strangers.
        As I and the other scribes
        that prepare this narrative pass on what we have learned of the
        family history, this narrative will be necessarily flavored
        and limited by our abilities of expression and perception. We
        will also write about our own lives and experiences and can only
        hope that we will do so in a manner that is realistic, yet not
        prone to pedantry. I have wondered on more than one occasion
        what something like this should be called--a family history?
        A biography? An autobiography? Memoirs? Somehow none of these
        seems completely appropriate as it is all of these and yet more.
        An autobiography may be appropriate for someone who has led a
        life of momentous achievements, who has captivated the public
        consciousness, or has experienced an extraordinary adventure.
        Writing ones memoirs brings to mind a less celebrated or publicly
        renowned life experience such as that of a judge or wealthy,
        well-traveled socialite. My life certainly has contained few
        events or achievements that would generate that kind of excitement.
        As people are prone to placing people in categories with tight
        little labels, I would probably be classified and filed away
        somewhere under the heading of average white male (a depressingly
        mediocre and vaguely unsavory phrase which tends to express the
        sentiment that the only flatulence of value is that which attains
        high decibel levels).
        As a young boy I was struck with
        my own uniqueness. I was the only one in my head, a discrete
        consciousness, who (at least in my own mind) I felt to be as
        or more intelligent, athletic, etc. than most other folks I came
        in contact with. As unique is commonly translated to mean special,
        I gradually came to believe that my life would naturally include
        some chain of extraordinary events and undoubtedly, great wealth.
        As the years went by and great wealth and acclaim eluded me,
        I came to the understanding that it was my very own uniqueness
        which was noteworthy and that every human being is special--in
        fact, the concept of an average man is a societal myth
        perpetuated to make us feel less than we really are.
        Genealogical research has reinforced
        my premise while helping me to understand that being unique is
        not only an individual experience that may include a bright but
        fleeting moment in history, but a personal link in a human chain
        of very special people who lived and passed on both principles
        and genetics that their descendants have the distinct responsibility
        and honor to perpetuate. While it is important to contribute
        to improvement of the human condition, not all of us have either
        the opportunity or ability to do so. However, if we understand
        and respect how our ancestors contributed to our existence and
        do our best to shape the thinking, values and prospects of our
        descendants, we will have made a contribution that is, by any
        standards, both special and noteworthy.
        This is not a simple rendition
        of historical facts and dates. It contains some personal suppositions
        and interpretations of events that cannot be absolutely verified
        and is, therefore, subject to attack by historical and genealogical
        purists. This is also, however, not a fiction about a hypothetical
        family that never existed. Although almost too simple, perhaps
        it is best to just call it a Family History after all.
        Whatever we call it (who cares anyway!), I hope the ancestors
        will not be offended and that it will help our descendants round
        out their self image and perhaps understand a bit better how
        they came to be who they are. It certainly has not taken away
        my feeling of being unique, but now that I know something of
        my family and it's history, the fact that there are others out
        there whose physical and emotional genetics I share, fills me
        with a certain conmfortable pride. There are also other feelings
        and emotions even deeper down......a feeling of continuity, that
        on a nonreligious plane this is as close to immortality that
        we mortals will ever get, bouyed further by the knowledge that
        as individuals and a clan, this written legacy will perpetuate
        our memory for those generations of Armstrongs that will follow.