Wednesday, April 1, 2026

Children Who Died Young Throughout History Left Almost No Trace and Here Is Why That Needs to Change

 For most of human history parents expected to lose children.


Before modern medicine, before vaccines, before antibiotics, childhood was genuinely dangerous. Diseases that we now treat easily killed children by the millions. Measles. Scarlet fever. Smallpox. Whooping cough. Cholera.


In colonial America it was not unusual for a family to lose half their children before those children reached adulthood. The same was true across most of human history in most parts of the world.


And most of those children left almost no record that they ever existed.


What the Graveyards Tell Us


Walk through any old cemetery in America. Look at the small headstones. The ones with dates just months or a year or two apart. The ones that say only a first name and a brief note like "Infant Son of" or "Beloved Daughter."


Many of those children do not even have that. They were buried in unmarked graves on family land. In church graveyards where the wooden markers rotted away. In potter's fields where the poor were buried with no markers at all.


These children had parents who loved them. Brothers and sisters who remembered them. They were real. They lived. They mattered.


But history has almost nothing to say about them.


What We Can Do to Honor Their Memory


Old family bibles often recorded births and deaths including children who died young. If you have access to old family records, photograph them. Transcribe them. Upload them to family history databases so other people researching the same family lines can find them.


Old cemetery records are some of the most valuable genealogical documents that exist. Groups like Find A Grave and BillionGraves allow volunteers to photograph and transcribe headstones, including children's graves. This work is free to participate in and directly contributes to the historical record.


If you have a family story about a child who died young and whose memory was kept alive through oral history, write it down. Put a name to it. Give that child a place in your family record that they can stay in.


Every child who ever lived deserves to be remembered. We have the tools now to give them that. The only thing missing is the people willing to do the work.


Robert Lee Beers III is a writer and digital preservation advocate based in North Charleston South Carolina.


The Workers Who Built America Never Made It Into the History Books

 In the 1860s about 20,000 Chinese workers built the western half of the Transcontinental Railroad.


They worked in dangerous conditions. They used explosive powder to blast through mountains. They lived in camps exposed to brutal winters. Hundreds of them died. When the two halves of the railroad met at Promontory Summit in Utah in 1869 and the famous photograph was taken of the celebration, there was not a single Chinese worker in it.


They built the railroad. They did not make the history books.


That is one example out of thousands.


The People Who Actually Built This Country


The Erie Canal that opened New York to the interior of the continent was dug by Irish immigrant workers. Mostly poor men who came to America hoping for a better life and ended up doing brutal manual labor for low pay in terrible conditions. Many of them died of disease working in the swampy ground. Almost none of their names survive in any official record.


The highways that connected America in the twentieth century were built largely by Black workers in the South who were sometimes forced into labor through convict leasing systems. Men who were arrested on minor charges and sentenced to work on roads and railways. Their labor built infrastructure that other people got credit for.


The domestic workers who kept wealthy households running, the laundresses and cooks and nursemaids and cleaners, were almost entirely women. Most of them were Black women or immigrant women. They worked long hours for low pay in other peoples homes and left almost no trace in any historical record.


This is not ancient history. This is within living memory.


Why It Matters That We Get This Right


When we leave working people out of the historical record we create a false picture of how things got built and who did the building.


It tells a story where progress happens because of the decisions of powerful men in important rooms. It hides the fact that every single thing those men decided had to be carried out by actual human beings with bodies and families and lives outside their work.


Getting the history right is not just about fairness. It is about accuracy. The incomplete version of history is also the inaccurate version.


What You Can Do


If you have relatives who did manual labor, talk to them. Ask them what the work was actually like. Record those conversations. That kind of firsthand account of working life is exactly what the historical record is missing.


Look up the history of labor in your own area. Who built the roads and buildings near where you live. What industries operated there. What conditions workers faced. Most communities have this history somewhere but it takes someone to dig it out and share it.


Write about working people like their work matters. Because it does.


Robert Lee Beers III is a writer and digital preservation advocate based in North Charleston South Carolina.


Slave Names Were Never Recorded and That Is One of Historys Biggest Crimes Against Memory

 When enslaved people were brought to America most of them had their names taken away.


They were given new names by the people who owned them. Names that had nothing to do with who they were or where they came from. Names that often did not even appear in any written record. They were listed in ledgers as property. As numbers. As descriptions. Rarely as human beings with identities worth recording.


That was not an accident. It was a deliberate choice.


Erasing someone's name is one of the most effective ways to erase their humanity from the historical record. If you have no name you cannot be searched for. You cannot be found. You cannot be connected to ancestors or descendants. You become invisible to history in a way that is very hard to undo.


What the Records Actually Show


Plantation records from the antebellum South do exist. But what they contain is not what you might hope.


They list enslaved people by first name only in most cases. Sometimes just by a description. A woman listed as "cook, age 35." A man listed as "field hand, lame in left leg." Children listed only by age and gender with no name at all.


These are not the records of human beings. These are the records of property. They tell us almost nothing about who these people actually were, what they thought, what they felt, what their lives meant to them.


The last names enslaved people carried after emancipation were often the last names of the people who had owned them. An imposed identity built on top of an erased one.


The People Working to Fix This


There are researchers and organizations doing painstaking work to recover names and identities from these fragmented records.


The Freedmen's Bureau records from after the Civil War contain some of the most detailed documentation of formerly enslaved people that exists. Names. Family connections. Testimony about life in slavery. The Smithsonian and other institutions have been working to digitize and make these records searchable.


Projects like the African American Cemeteries and Graves database are working to document burial sites of enslaved and formerly enslaved people across the South, many of which are unmarked and in danger of being lost entirely.


Genealogy researchers have spent decades doing the hard work of tracing African American family trees back through records that were designed to make that tracing impossible.


This work matters. Every name recovered is a person restored to their place in history.


What You Can Do


If you have African American ancestry and want to trace your family history, organizations like FamilySearch, Ancestry and the Freedmen's Bureau Project have made it easier than it has ever been.


If you know of unmarked cemeteries or burial sites in your community, document them. Photograph the headstones. Report them to local historical societies. Many of these sites are on private land and in danger of being destroyed without anyone knowing they exist.


Support the organizations doing this work. The Equal Justice Initiative, the Smithsonian National Museum of African American History and Culture, and local Black history organizations are all working to recover what was deliberately erased.


History owes these people their names back. We are still working on paying that debt.


Robert Lee Beers III is a writer and digital preservation advocate based in North Charleston South Carolina.