In 1900, a massive hurricane hit Galveston, Texas. It killed an estimated 8,000 people — the deadliest natural disaster in American history.
We know a lot about what the city's leaders did. What the engineers decided. What the politicians said afterward.
But the 8,000 people who died? Most of them left almost nothing behind. A name on a list. Sometimes not even that.
They had lives. Families. Favorite meals and inside jokes and opinions about their neighbors. They had whole worlds inside them. And almost none of it survived.
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This is the pattern throughout history. The further back you go, the more the record belongs exclusively to the wealthy, the powerful, and the literate.
Ancient Egypt left us the tombs of pharaohs. Almost nothing from the workers who built them.
Medieval Europe preserved the writings of monks and nobles. Almost nothing from the farmers who fed them.
Even in modern history, the bias persists. We have detailed records of presidents and generals. We have almost nothing from the factory workers, the domestic servants, the sharecroppers, the immigrants who built this country with their hands.
Their absence from the historical record is not an accident. It reflects who society decided was worth remembering.
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We have a chance to change that permanently. Right now. In our lifetime.
The technology exists to preserve anyone's life story. Photos, videos, voice recordings, written memories, documents, letters. The cost of digital storage has dropped to almost nothing. A person's entire life — every photo, every document, every recorded memory — can be stored for less than the cost of a cup of coffee per month.
What's missing is not technology. What's missing is intention.
Most people don't think about preserving their lives because nobody ever told them their life was worth preserving. They were never included in the story of history. So it never occurred to them to document it.
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But think about what future historians could learn from a complete record of an ordinary American life in 2025.
What did a working-class family eat for dinner every night? What did their home look like? What were they worried about? What made them proud? What did they argue about? What did they dream about?
That is the raw material of real history. Not press releases and official documents. Real life, lived by real people, documented honestly.
One hundred years from now, an AI trained on millions of preserved everyday lives could reconstruct what it actually felt like to be alive right now. The texture of ordinary existence. The things that mattered to regular people that never made it into any newspaper.
That future is possible. But only if we start saving things now.
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Every family has a historian whether they know it or not. The person who keeps the photos. The one who remembers the stories. The one who writes things down.
Be that person. Document your life not because you think you are famous but because you know you are real. Because you understand that ordinary lives are the foundation of history, and foundations matter even when nobody sees them.
The people history forgot didn't choose to be forgotten. They just didn't have anyone fighting to remember them.
You do.
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Robert Lee Beers III writes about digital preservation, technology, and giving ordinary people a permanent place in the historical record.
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