Plattsburgh, NY FamilySearch Center

Plattsburgh, NY FamilySearch Center Plattsburgh, NY FamilySearch Center
Genealogy teaching and guidance
Free and open to the public. It is free and open to the public.

The Plattsburgh FamilySearch Center (FSC) is a satellite of the main FamilySearch Library in Salt Lake City. We are open on Wednesdays from noon until two, and from 10-Noon The Second and Fourth Saturday. Please enter through the side rear door by knocking (follow signs). Check this page for special events and/or closings due to weather, holidays or illness; also check: http://fhcplattsburgh.blogs

pot.com. FamilySearch Centers (FSCs) are branches of main FamilySearch Library in Salt Lake City, Utah, and are located all over the world. Their goal is to provide resources to assist you in the research and study of your genealogy and family history by:
• Giving personal one-on-one assistance to patrons
• Providing access to those genealogical records available only through authorized FamilySearch Center computers.
• Offering free how-to classes (varies by location)
There are more than 4,000 FHCs in 134 countries. There is no cost to visit a FamilySearch Center or the main FamilySearch Library. They are open to anyone with an interest in genealogical research. While they are operated by The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints (LDS), no proselytizing is allowed within the library.

The parent thinks: “My grown child isn’t interested in my past.”The adult child thinks: “My parent doesn’t want to talk ...
06/05/2026

The parent thinks: “My grown child isn’t interested in my past.”

The adult child thinks: “My parent doesn’t want to talk about their past.”

Often, they’re both wrong.

For many, this startling misunderstanding explains why a grown child may be reluctant to ask his parents to write their life stories and why parents are reluctant to ask if their children are interested in their life stories.

We think we understand family members far better than we actually do, according to psychologists Thalia Vorauer and Jennifer J. Cameron.

“People show a robust illusion of transparency about close others,” they wrote.

On the one hand, most parents admit they wish their adult children would ask them more about their lives.

On the other hand, many adult children regret not asking more about their parents’ lives before it was too late, according to the Hospice Foundation of America.

“People consistently underestimate how much others are interested in their thoughts and feelings,” says Nicholas Epley, a behavioral scientist who studies how badly we predict other people’s social desires.

That’s not all.

The literature is full of ways in which people misread each other. Family members are a bit better at understanding each other compared with others but there is still plenty of misjudgment.

This phenomenon of miscalculating others goes even deeper.

“People underestimate how much their conversation partners like them,” says Erica Boothby, a social psychologist whose research on the “Liking Gap” explores how severely we misread our everyday social interactions.

In fact, Ancestry surveys have found that more than half of adult children wish they knew more about their parents’ happiest moments. And 82 percent wish they had talked to older relatives more.

“Many older adults feel a strong desire to share their life experiences with younger generations,” according to the National Institute on Aging.

Adult children and their parents often both want deeper disclosure, but each side mistakenly assumes the other doesn’t. This mutual misreading leads to decades of missed stories, unasked questions, and a kind of emotional stalemate.

Adult children may hesitate to ask parents for their life stories for many reasons including:

They think they already know their parents’ stories even though research shows we dramatically overestimate how much we know about close others.

Each person privately wants more openness and more stories but assumes the other person doesn’t want it. Both are wrong, but neither side corrects the misunderstanding.

A parent may have brushed off a question a decade or two ago because the child was too young, the topic felt too complex at the time, or the parent wasn’t ready. Now, the adult child thinks the topic is off limits but the parent has matured and may now want to talk.

We get stuck in old roles: kids think they shouldn’t pry. Parents think they shouldn’t burden their kids. Both sides adhere to outdated parent-child roles long after they’ve stopped being useful.

“Most parents say they wish their adult children asked more about their lives,” according to Pew Research Center.

Solution: Write a Letter Inviting Your Parents to Share their Life Stories

There are ways to correct the mutual miscalculation and emotional stalemate that prevent parents and grown children from getting on the same page.

For instance, grown children might write a letter to their parents.

The letter should convey respect, gratitude, and genuine interest in learning more about the lives of their parents beyond their roles as parents.

The letter presents the idea of the parent disclosing stories about their lives as a request.

By expressing genuine interest in knowing more about the parents’ lives, grown children can correct any impression that such disclosure might be burdensome.

Over the last several years, I’ve created a simple way people can write their life stories for posterity even if they can’t type. Rather than expect parents to start drafting a complicated memoir or autobiography — if they have no such inclination – my method shows them how to begin with the day of their birth and to continue writing basic details of their lives chronologically, decade by decade.

For more details subscribe below.

By Maureen Santini © Copyright 2017-2026. All Rights Reserved.

Maureen Santini, a former journalist, created a simple way for everyone to write their life story. Subscribe here or at

A simple method enabling everyone to write their life story, one decade at a time. Click to read Write Your Life Story for Posterity, by Maureen Santini, a Substack publication.

Let us help you explore your family tree!
06/02/2026

Let us help you explore your family tree!

Frustrated that your elusive person isn’t showing in the census? You can make a good case by following them through time...
05/21/2026

Frustrated that your elusive person isn’t showing in the census?

You can make a good case by following them through time in city directories (which became phone directories later when phones became popular) and track their address and occupation.
For example, the mysterious Miss Cecelia, a music teacher, lived in Youngstown Ohio. Her sister and parents also are listed under that last name, at that address for that year - 209 S Pearl - over a period of several years.
Occupations also help distinguish individuals through the directories. One man of a name may be a butcher, the other a glassblower!

BACK BY POPULAR DEMAND! Let us help you on your family history journey! (Please note: We will not be open on Wednesdays ...
05/04/2026

BACK BY POPULAR DEMAND!
Let us help you on your family history journey!

(Please note: We will not be open on Wednesdays anymore)

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Plattsburgh, NY

Opening Hours

6pm - 8pm

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