Kirsten,

Yes, it probably is possible to overdo the lumping, and maybe I've
done just that to a certain extent. But the thing is, at the moment I
am happy to reduce the number of Master Sources to an absolute
minimum.

With the simple word, Census as "Master Source" for example, it suits
me to just add in the "Details" simply as "England 1951". If I need to
go and check the actual census page, then I have them all stored in
the relevantly labelled Country and Year folders, and individually
named by head of household. As I say, it suits me at the moment, and I
hope I can keep getting away with it this way. I'll see how I go in a
few months time.

Thank you,
Graham





----- Original Message -----
From: Kirsten Bowman
To: [email protected]
Sent: Tuesday, April 06, 2010 9:35 AM
Subject: RE: [LegacyUG] Sourcing Treatment for Obituaries


Graham:

I think it's possible to overdo the lumping.  A major benefit to
Legacy's system of two levels in the source record is in saving
repetitive typing and speeding the citation process.  If your Master
Source is simply "Census," for example, then you must re-type all of
the information (country, year, state/province, etc.) every time you
cite a source.  On the other hand, if you have several ancestors who
lived in the same general area at the same time you can have a Master
Source for the 1911 Census for Ontario, Canada (or even break it down
by county).  In that case you enter that information only once, then
simply use the prepared Master Source and enter the details for the
specific family via the Source Clipboard.

My database of roughly 7,000 names contains over 500 sources but
they're very easy to locate by using a system of grouping.  Every
census Master Source begins with the year.  This causes them to sort
first so I only have to type "1911" to go to the proper area of the
Master Source List.  Every book that I cite has "book" before the
title in the Source List Name field so all of the book titles are
grouped together and sorted alphabetically by title.  I use similar
grouping codes for birth, marriage, and death records although these
could also be grouped under "Vitals" by using that term (or just a
"v") as the first letter in the Source List Name.

Kirsten

-----Original Message-----
From: Graham [mailto:[email protected]]
Sent: Monday, April 05, 2010 1:33 PM
To: [email protected]
Subject: Re: [LegacyUG] Sourcing Treatment for Obituaries


I am trying to do the same as Doris. When I came to Legacy from FTM, I
realised that I had over 500 different Master sources, so scrolling
through them all to find the one I wanted for a new entry was very
annoying. I am down to about 300 now and wont be happy until I have
them down to about one page. My Master sources are simply, Newspaper,
Certificate, Census, BDM index, External tree, etc, and then the
Details explain which Census, who's External tree, what Newspaper,
etc, etc. I like to keep things simple and yet explain where my
information came from in an adequate manner for my needs and those
that follow me.

Graham







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