How many times have we as family historians been drilled in
the necessity of documenting our sources? Okay, “blue in the face” isn’t a
number, but that’s what I think genealogy webinar instructors would look like
if I could see them instead of just
listening in on the pitch.
Thankfully, I learned my lesson well in the case of Simon Snider, my connection to First Families of Ohio designation for my husband’s
family. Years ago, I had transcribed for my own records the census
report for Simon Snider and his family in 1850, complete with every detail of names, birth years—all the way down to page and line numbers of the family record.
That 1850 census, as you well know, is when the United States
crossed from the enumeration Cone of Silence into that great governmental
frontier of violation of personal privacy.
Or, in less radical terms, 1850 became the census year which
gave people back their names—at least those in the rest of the family.
When I was writing down those family names in Simon Snider’s
census record—a task surely done with such Stone Age implements as a pen and paper
precariously positioned to the side of a microfilm reader—I remembered to
include one simple routine. Not wishing to have to go through the excruciating
pain of reeling my way through the entire county’s records again, I took down
the details of state, county, and township locations. And I noted not only the page number but the line numbers for each
of the household members named.
Thankfully.
Now that I’m transferring my data onto a family tree online
at Ancestry.com, I’m trying to go back and clean up little messes like lack of
such notation. Ancestry has this handy mechanism for attaching useful items
like census records to each person’s readout. Since I was working on Simon
Snider’s family yesterday, I thought I’d take care of that little housekeeping
item.
I hadn’t yet attached the 1850 census record to Simon’s
name, so I quickly scrolled down the page to the button labeled “Search Records” so I
could get straight to the business of connecting records to names.
I can’t imagine why I was flabbergasted to not find Simon’s
name in Perry County for that year. Believe me, I had no worries of
somehow yet again missing the mark of achieving First Families status. I knew he was in Ohio now!
But he certainly wasn’t in the census results. At least not
on Ancestry.
Not to be stymied, I scooted over to FamilySearch.org. I’d
find it there for sure! And—no surprise—there it was, in Reading Township,
just as I thought.
Could I somehow be missing something? I went back to my own
database, looked at the notes I had stored there, wondering if my eyes had deceived
me. But no, it was in Reading
Township. By now, it was
me and FamilySearch against Ancestry. How could Ancestry be missing something
so obvious?
Ever get caught in one of those tight research loops, where
you know where an item is, but though
you stare at the record umpteen times, you can’t seem to find it?
Well, that’s not what this is.
It’s the reverse.
Ancestry was not
staring at my item. And since I was locked in to determination’s grip by this
time—never give up! (thank you, Sir
Winston Churchill)—I was determined to get to the bottom of this. How could Ancestry not know this? It was
plainly right there…see?!
Thankfully, Ancestry allows members to search through those scanned records
on their own. They don’t insist on locking us into playing with their-search-device-or-no-game.
So I took a meander through what they call their “Browse” feature. I selected
1850 census, state: Ohio, county: Perry,
township: Reading.
This is where I exhibited some pre-Thanksgiving
gratefulness: I had written down the page number in my records, remember? So,
to page 350B, lines nine through eighteen it was.
Surprise. Simon Snider was not home. His possessions were
now under the proud moniker of “Semon Swider.”
Really?
And Mr. Swider was born in Pennsylvania in 1795.
Really?
Well, I’ll be kind. I’ll grant that it was an honest take on
that place of birth. The census did read “Pa” for place of birth. But the age
seemed to clearly read “35” to my eyes. Not “85.”
Relieved that Simon Snider did, in fact, still exist in Ohio, I made sure to
duly note my objections on Ancestry’s handy form for such issues. I’m thankful
for Ancestry’s openness to crowdsourcing the right information, so others can
also find records through their search engines. Otherwise, how useful would a
device like the Ancestry service be?
And with that, I handily clicked the “Save” button and added
that 1850 census record where it should have been all along. Simon Snider is
now back on his farm and all is right with the documentation world.
Above left: Samuel Dirksz van Hoogstraten, Self Portrait, oil on canvas; courtesy Wikipedia; in the public domain.
Above left: Samuel Dirksz van Hoogstraten, Self Portrait, oil on canvas; courtesy Wikipedia; in the public domain.
Such a great example for why we cite our sources as we go. Yes, I'm guilty of not doing this in the past and it always led to extra work. Developing our documentation habit is so important. Thanks for reminder.
ReplyDeleteLisa, believe me, I've done my fair share of forgetting, too. It's the motivation of not having to take up valuable time to go back and retrace steps that is so convincing.
DeleteVery interesting article. I don't know how many times I have had to go back and look up a source because I didn't write it down at all, wrote only part of it down, or just could't find it later.. Now that I know how to link words in my blog to the source on the internet that will help a great deal. Thank You for you response to my request for help on linking.
ReplyDeleteYou're quite welcome, Grant. I like using hyperlinks much like an author might use footnotes in a book--only more streamlined, allowing readers to go there and see the item for themselves. Now that you mention it, it also becomes a way for us to bookmark records for ourselves, too. Anything that streamlines and systemizes the process is a plus in my book!
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