Quote History Quoted:
Real world example:
My father was born in 1945 and is still alive.
His father was born in 1904 and died in 1979.
His father was born in 1829 and died in 1912 (he also served in the South Carolina Cavalry)
His father was born in 1792 and died in 1865.
His father was born in 1762 and died in 1829 (he served in the Continental Army starting at age 14)
His father was born in 1722 and died in 1796.
I'm only 5 people from when we were still a colony.
The past is closer than it seems.
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Interesting ages to have kids. I thought most men until recently had kids in their mid-20s, but based on your response and others it appears mid-30s or even 40 was the norm? Then again, maybe that's not peoples' first kid. My parents and siblings all had kids between early 30s and 40.
I'll use 1772 as Gen1 and your father as Gen6
Age of parent when kid was born:
Gen 1 - 40 (1762-1772 = 40)
Gen 2 - 30 (1792-1762 = 30)
Gen 3 - 37 (1829-1792 = 37)
Gen 4 -
75 (1904-1829 = 75)
Gen5 - 41 (1945-1904 = 41)
Congrats on Gen1 living to their 70s in the 1700s. Looks like most of the men there made it to their 70s.