Like a teenager who brags about discovering an artist before they were mainstream, Dolores “Dolly” Merrick could boast of her interest in genealogy before it was a billion-dollar business.
“It was the ’90s; I started to realize some of the stories my mom and uncle told me about their father from Croatia — that I could possibly document those things,” Merrick, 75, said, standing over piles of documents and photographs in her Hudson’s Bay neighborhood home, where she lives with her husband.
Their “living room” doubles as a research space, where there’s a minimum of three computer screens, including a laptop situated on a rolling desk, and a large printer/scanner. Shelves and cabinets contain an unknown number of genealogy-related documents and artifacts.
“If I started counting all the pictures individually, that’d be fascinating,” she said holding up her father-in-law’s old yearbook that is stored in a fireproof case in her basement. Merrick estimates she has somewhere between 400 and 500 artifacts.
Rise in interest
In the 1990s, people were just starting to digitize mountains of old files and post them online, greatly expanding resources for what was once just a niche interest.