Think of every fact (or event) that you record for an individual as something 
that needs to be proven ‘beyond a reasonable doubt’. Your source citations are 
your effort to build a case for a particular conclusion (fact or event). The 
quality of the source can make or break your case.



It helps (for me, anyway) to remember the reason that you record sources. Your 
memory is not going to perfectly remember everything, especially as your tree 
gets bigger. You will find records with information that contradicts or 
conflicts with other records that you have gathered and you’ll want to figure 
out which is the most accurate. Sometimes you’ll discover that one paper trail 
is following someone who is not the person that you thought it was.  Your 
source citations will help you come to a reasonable conclusion.



Let’s say that you received an image of a birth certificate from a cousin who 
attached it to an email to you. The email may have said that she, or a 
genealogist that she hired, made a copy of the original document on a visit to 
xyz County Courthouse, sometime during the Summer of 2010. You could create a 
new Repository with your cousin’s name, say Sarah Rubenstein, recording her 
address, phone #, website (if she has one), and email address. If she is the 
source of several facts in my tree, I might create a master source calling it 
something like ‘Sarah Rubenstein’s research’. I would use that source and 
record the specifics of the email as they pertain to the birth certificate.



In other words put as much as you can in writing, in a consistent way, so that 
you or others can follow how you came to the conclusion that a certain birth 
date is correct, for example. Unless that person can see the document 
themselves, what you or your cousin say is simply hearsay. The idea is to make 
it easier for that person to find the original document. In that respect, the 
‘form’ is less important than the ‘substance’. Where did you get it? What do 
you know about it? You will have the opportunity to Analyze Source Quality on 
the Detail Information tab of the Source Citation detail screen.



You add source citations on the same screen that you add events or facts to a 
person (click the paper/pencil icon in the middle of the icon bar below the 
general person facts or…click on the books icon to edit the Sources assigned to 
the person. Or…from the View tab>Master Lists dropdown, choose Source… As is 
usually the case in Windows programs, there are several ways to accomplish the 
same task. Use whichever is most intuitive to you.



BTW, use the Help tab > Help Index and begin typing the term that you want help 
with into the box. I typed sour and had a list of “source” related subjects 
come up.

Don Hanson



From: Kirsty M. Haining [mailto:khain...@comcast.net]
Sent: Monday, December 09, 2013 1:18 PM
To: LegacyUserGroup@LegacyUsers.com
Subject: [LegacyUG] sourcing questions



I’ve been trying to figure out the answer to a sourcing question and have not 
been able to figure out the answer through the SourceWriter templates or 
through flipping through my copy of Evidence Explained, so I thought I’d ask 
here and see if someone else knows the answer.



When you have a digital image of a vital record, the SW prompts you through the 
documenting the website source of the image, collection name, yada, yada, yada. 
You are also prompted to put in the date you accessed the website. So here’s 
the question:  what if you received the image from a friend or family member?  
The birth certificate image or census image may originally have come from 
Ancestry or HeritageQuest or maybe even ScotlandsPeople, but YOU are not the 
person who accessed the website.  How then do you cite the digital image of the 
record if you got it secondhand?  As far as I can tell from the book, you’re 
supposed to source your source (the individual) as well as the real source of 
the digital image (the website vendor). I’m just not sure how to construct the 
source citation to show that.  And what if you don’t know the source of your 
source, but you have a census image or a vital record image in front of you?



And finally, once I’ve figured out the output format I’m supposed to have, how 
do I get that result in Legacy?



Thanks in advance for the help.



cheers,

Kirsty Haining

Seattle, Washington

J








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