Paula, the age discrepancies I was talking about are for people who age 7 or so 
years between censuses!

Sent from my Verizon Wireless Thunderbolt smartphone

----- Reply message -----
From: "Paula Ryburn" <[email protected]>
To: <[email protected]>
Subject: [LegacyUG] "Facts"
Date: Mon, Aug 22, 2011 8:33 am
Thanks, Connie, for all this detail.  I run into this "calculating the best 
date based on multiple somewhat conflicting sources" issue a lot and appreciate 
your insights.

To the OP:  Sometimes the age on census is a year different just because of the 
date the census was taken, at least I've found that to be the case with some of 
my ancestors. --Paula in TexasResearching: Adair Baker Beasley Benson Betz 
Bigley Blagrave Burton Chapman Clement Clough Coppernoll Costine Daulton 
Dinwiddie Doody Ellis Exline Field Floran Floyd Gates Goodale Gordon Gump Hale 
Harbaugh Hind Hopkins Hughes Hurdle Jones Klein Koyle Laswell McDonald Misner 
Passwaters Pelton Roberts Roche Ryburn Short Singer Sullivan Weller Williams




From: Connie Sheets <[email protected]>To: 
[email protected]: Wed, August 17, 2011 4:14:50 PMSubject: 
Re: [LegacyUG] "Facts"It is perfectly acceptable to use the "best" source for a 
fact.  For example, if I have an original marriage record, I cite that for the 
date and location of a marriage, rather than a book of compiled marriage 
records.  Or, if I've been to a cemetery and saw a tombstone with my own eyes, 
I cite that for the date of death and place of burial, rather than a book of 
cemetery inscriptions or FindAGrave.  I cite the derivative sources (sometimes 
called secondary sources) only until I've found the original source (sometimes 
called primary source).The example you gave is a bit more
complicated, however, because it involves conflicting evidence, not just 
original vs. derivative sources.  For a date of arrival/immigration event, I 
would cite the steamship arrival records (assuming they are originals, or 
images of originals) and related immigration records, not the census.  However, 
I would still have a census or residence event, and I would cite the census for 
that.  In my transcription of the census, I would transcribe it exactly, and 
probably make a separate note or source detail comment that I know the date of 
immigration in the census record is wrong because of the passenger list.  This 
assumes that you're certain there wasn't a second person of the same name who 
arrived on a different date.I am of the firm belief that no genealogy program 
is the only tool one can or should use in genealogy.  For more complicated 
situations, I write a separate detailed research report, proof summary, or proof
argument in a word processing program, with tables, charts, and proper source 
citations.  Then, I cite that document in my database, with a brief summary and 
link to the document.  For example, I have this summary in Legacy:"John Doe 
could have been born as early as Jun 1807 or as late as 1 Jun 1815. Based upon 
currently available data, however, the most likely range for his birth is about 
1811 to 1812. This seems to be the most frequently calculated date, and is 
consistent with the ages recorded in the earliest available documents.Only one 
record, the 1900 census, explicitly states a birth year (1809), but given his 
advanced age, his illiteracy, and the fact that he was an "inmate" of the 
county poor farm, it is probably not as credible as the ages recorded in 
earlier census records."I entered his birth as Abt 1811-1812, and my source 
citation for his birth date reads:"Solomon Morgan Age Data," report prepared
by Connie Sheets, (address), 10 Feb 2011; compiled from ages stated in 
obituary, state, and federal census records.Because the obituary, state, and 
federal census records are entered, transcribed and cited in Legacy as separate 
events, and because my Word document also contains detailed source citations, I 
don't see the need to cite them again for his birth date.Others will choose 
differently, but this is what works for me.Connie
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