Searching For- Salome Gil In- -

I searched for her children. I found a death certificate for a man named Pedro Flores. In the margin, a clerk had written: "Madre: Salome Gil, fallecida 1889, parto." (Mother: Salome Gil, died 1889, childbirth.)

They miss the point. We do not search the past for the dead. We search for ourselves. We search because every time we find a name like Salome Gil, we pull one more person out of the abyss of anonymity. We say, "You were here. You suffered. You loved. You mattered." Searching for- Salome Gil in-

She is not famous. There is no statue of Salome Gil. No street in Monterrey bears her name. She does not appear in history books. And yet, without her—without that 27-year-old unmarried washerwoman who hemorrhaged in 1889—I would not exist. People often ask me, "Why do you care? She’s been dead for 130 years. She doesn’t know you're looking." I searched for her children

Thus began the hunt. The first hurdle is the name’s popularity. In the mid-to-late 19th century, Salome was not rare. It was the Karen or Jennifer of its day in certain Catholic communities. Searching "Salome Gil" on Ancestry.com returns 4,000+ results. Salome Gil from Chihuahua. Salome Gil from Barcelona. Salome Gil who died in 1842 of "fever." Salome Gil who married three different men in three different decades (either bigamy or bad data entry). We do not search the past for the dead