Ron

Is there a good source for UK current location hierarchy on-line anywhere, or 
published?



After a bit of research, I think we are hung up on semantics.  In the UK, the 
top-level entity is the “United Kingdom of Great Britain and Northern Ireland”. 
 That is the formal name and how it is listed on the list of member “countries” 
of the United Nations.  At the second-level are the Countries of England, 
Scotland and Wales, the region/province/country of Northern Ireland (none of 
which are independent members of the United Nations), and also the British 
Crown Dependencies of Isle of Man, Bailiwick of Guernsey, and Bailiwick of 
Jersey (latter two are separate parts of the Channel Islands), and 14 British 
Overseas Territories (Bermuda, Cayman Islands, Falkland Islands, etc).  So 
while we need to be mindful of the terminology, the top 2 levels of the 
structure still work for both the US and the UK.



In case you hadn’t noticed, locations are a bag of worms even within the US.  
The US also has territories such as  Puerto Rico, Guam, and  American Samoa.  
The District of Columbia is a special case.  None of these are states, but all 
of them are second-level locations.  Louisiana doesn’t have “counties”, they 
have “parishes”.  There are plenty of towns and cities that straddle county 
lines, some states have townships which fall somewhere between a town and a 
county, and then there is New York City which encompasses 5 counties usually 
referred to as boroughs.  The state of Virginia has “Independent Cities” which 
are not considered part of any county, even if they’re geographically located 
fully within a county.



Bottom line is, I think John’s hierarchy for UK locations works well and is 
accurate (except for the Channel Islands which should be separated to Guernsey 
and Jersey).  BTW, I think “shore” name was just a typo for “short” name.



Perhaps we should change our terminology for the top-level to “Nation” 
(consistent with UN) and the second-level to 
“Country/State/Province/Territory”.  That’s a bit long, so maybe it needs to be 
a location specific option.  Probably need location specific labels for the 
remaining levels as well.



From: Ron Ferguson [mailto:ronfergy....@tiscali.co.uk]
Sent: Thursday, December 05, 2013 6:18 PM
To: LegacyUserGroup@LegacyUsers.com
Subject: Re: [LegacyUG] Burial Location as a Cemetery Event





Oh dear, John. There are times when I wonder where you are coming from. Take 
your first  two paragraphs, you mention Georgia as being an exception, you may 
be right, I don’t know, or even care, but the rest of the world do not know 
what states the abbreviations stand for. Then you go on “That said, leaving out 
the country name in the US, is sort of chauvinistic”, well it is not sort of 
chauvinistic – it is!



You go on with respect to ourselves, The Brits, and Ireland:



“I personally append country UK to England, Scotland, Wales, Northern Ireland, 
Channel Islands, Isle of Mann, and Ireland (pre-independence) and use those 
country names as States. (The GeoDB allows for this...) However, in the shore 
name, I clip off the ", UK" as that reads better in reports.”



Well, I don’t know what a “shore name is, perhaps an American GeoDB invention 
to cover countries which do not fit the American pattern. But then I don’t use 
the  Geo9DB for anywhere outside of the USA, because for most places it doesn’t 
work.



You illustrate this perfectly by adding UK to its constituent COUNTRIES, and 
even worse append it to two countries that are not, and never had been part of 
the UK viz. The Isle of Man and the Channel Isles.



For Information, We are The United Kingdom of Great Britain and Northern 
Ireland. The geographical area (not political nor state) of Great Britain 
comprises England, Scotland and Wales. Got it – A united *kingdom* – a place 
united under a king (or to be non-sexist a monarchy).



The Principality of Wales was created by William 1 who gave it to his son. and 
subsequently Scotland in 1707 and Ireland joined, initially the Kingdom of GB 
and subsequently the UK.



I very much regret if the facts interfere with convenience, but then we have 
never accepted the rewriting of history by anyone.



Ron Ferguson

http://www.fergys.co.uk/





From: John B. Lisle <mailto:leg...@tqsi.com>

Sent: Thursday, December 05, 2013 8:48 PM

To: LegacyUserGroup@LegacyUsers.com

Subject: Re: [LegacyUG] Burial Location as a Cemetery Event



Paula,

I think with the exception of Georgia, the names of the states in the US are 
different from any current country in the world, so the confusion should be 
minimal when leaving out the country for US locations.

That said, leaving out the country name in the US, is sort of chauvinistic. but 
is reasonable if the bulk of your audience is US based.

I personally append country UK to England, Scotland, Wales, Northern Ireland, 
Channel Islands, Isle of Mann, and Ireland (pre-independence) and use those 
country names as States. (The GeoDB allows for this...) However, in the shore 
name, I clip off the ", UK" as that reads better in reports.

Global organizations like FamilySearch will require the United States be added. 
It is all personal choice in the long run, unless you are working as a 
professional for a client and have to conform to their standards.

The key is to be consistent. They you can change it more easily!

john.



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