Not all journals change history, though. Some are just great reading. So great, in fact, that history would probably be everyone's favorite subject if only it could be taught exclusively through reading personal diaries. Letters of a Woman Homesteader, by Elinore Pruitt Stewart, paints a picture of what life was like a century ago.
Stewart, a self-described washerwoman, thought she could have a better life if she claimed a homestead in Wyoming. To get a start, she took a job as the housekeeper for a man who was already there, a bagpipe-playing Scotsman (whom she later married). Here's how she describes her early impressions of him:
Mr. Stewart is absolutely no trouble.
As soon as he has had his meals he retires to his room and plays on his bagpipe, only he calls it his "bugpeep."
It is "The Campbells are Coming," without variations, at intervals all day long and from seven until eleven at night. Sometimes I wish they would make haste and get here.
No matter how much you read, though, it won't do the one greatest thing that keeping a journal can do for you: capture your personal thoughts and history, for you and others to devour.
As Anne Frank put it, "When I write, I can shake off all my cares."
Shaken off onto the page, your cares can become a time capsule of who you are and the world you live in. The best journals are great precisely because they create this sense of time and place. There are some old journals that, while historic, are extremely dull. "Mr. Johnson stopped by today. I fed the cows." Boring! This could have happened anytime and anyplace that has both cattle and Johnsons.
What's better is when journals tell stories. Let's say the cow butted Mr. Johnson into a pile of manure. Suddenly, the reading is getting good. It would be even better if Mr. Johnson decided at that moment he was a vegetarian and that he was going to eat tofu from then on. That little detail helps place Mr. Johnson in the late 20th century (if not the 21st).