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Imagine working on your family history and suddenly you’re sidetracked by a bit of information.  That’s what happened to my guest, James Castellan. His pursuit of one man’s story led to a new understanding of World War I and to his becoming a film scholar on American cinematographers in Germany.  He won a writing award fromThe International Society of Family History Writers and Editors for his article The Memoir of Eleanor Castellan: The Years in the Pacific Northwest, 1910-1919. Edited by James W. Castellan and Norman H. Clark  Pacific Northwest Quarterly Volume 91 Number 1 (Winter 1999/2000)  

Along the way, he located a lost film and Together with other scholars they researched the film and reconstructed it. Links are in the show notes. 

It’s proof that you never know where a love of family history can take you.

Related Episodes:

Episode 65: Lost Films Needs Your Help

Links:

About My Guest:

Researching his Schuette family relations immediately after retiring in 2001, James Castellan began regularly "commuting" to the Library of Congress to capture Oswald F. Schuette's WWI bylined dispatches from Berlin. Schuette covered the Central Powers for the Chicago Daily News. He noticed a headline praising Schuette as a great reporter by cinematographer Wilbur H. Durborough just back from Germany where he had filmed On the Firing Line With the Germans.


James went looking for the film hoping to buy a DVD and possibly find a few scenes with Schuette. He linked up with two WWI film scholars (Dr. Cooper C. Graham, then recently retired film curator at the Library of Congress, and Ron van Dopperen in the Netherlands. Together they wrote, "American Cinematographers in the Great War, 1914-1918" and did the research that enabled the Library of Congress to reconstruct Durborough's lost film (after two earlier attempts go

I'm thrilled to be offering something new. Photo investigations. These collaborative one-on-one sessions. Look at your family photos then you and I meet to discuss your mystery images. And find out how each clue and hint might contribute to your family history. Find out more by going to maureentaylor.com and clicking on family photo investigations

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