Ward,
Note that in "Normal Duplicate Search" that the Surnames are compared as either 
"Exact Spelling" or "Sounds Like".

It is the Given Names that are compared for the number of beginning characters 
and those have to match exactly...there is no "Sounds Like" for the given names 
match.

Set the "Check birth dates, Day range" to 0 for an exact match or some other 
number of days that might find differences.

The more criteria you specify, the fewer results will be found.  Un-check 
"blank birth dates", "birth locations", and all the other date fields so that 
only birth is being considered.

Take into account "Compatible Gender", "Ancestral File Number", "FamilySearch 
ID" if you wish but almost always un-check "User ID".

Set the "Compatible Parents" and the same parameters you used for the 
individual.

Click "Continue"

Resolve any possible duplicates that are found.

Adjust the parameters to use the death date and blank the birth date.

Resolve any more possible duplicates.

Adjust the parameters to use the burial date and blank the death date.

Resolve any more possible duplicates.

You should have a fairly clean file now.  Additionally you may want to look at 
the Name List sorted by Surname and resolve any possible duplicates you see 
there.

Lastly, look at the Marriage List sorted by Husband, resolve duplicates and 
then sort by Wife and resolve duplicates.

Now only those really hard ones will still remain.  Others may have some tricks 
they've developed for finding additional duplicates.

Then you might want to tackle duplicate marriages, duplicate events, duplicate 
sources, duplicate pictures, etc.  It's all fun.

Ron Taylor


On Saturday, June 14, 2014 11:31 AM, Ward Walker <[email protected]> wrote:



Well, with some digging, it turns out that my example was not valid, but I
think I have some other examples that are.

In my example, the actual missing match was with Ruth Emma Cook and Ruth E.
Cooke. So the surname did not match within 5 characters.

I now spot the following duplicates in my file, which were brought in via
the drag & drop merge of the mothers line:
  - Isaac J. Walker and spouse Angelina Carmon; and Isaac John Walker and
spouse Angeline Carmon.
  - Hannah Ann Walker and spouse Joseph Farquhar; and Hannah Anna H. Walker
and spouse Joseph Farwuhar.

The two Isaacs have births one year apart. The two Hannahs have the same
birth year. They all have the same parents.`

I see no reason why the Isaac/Angelin* couples were not presented as
potential duplicates.

For the Hannah/Joseph couples, the spouse's surname does not match within 5
characters. Certainly the parents could have had two different Hannahs,
although it would be unlikely that both lived to marriage in that case, and
they do have the same birth year. (One has a month and day as well.) Is it a
requirement that the spouse must also be a potential match, for this to be
presented as a potential duplicate? I've had way more far-fetched potential
duplicates presented to me, including twins with different given names.

  Ward

-----Original Message-----
From: Brian/Support
Sent: Friday, June 13, 2014 1:41 PM
To: [email protected]
Subject: Re: [LegacyUG] Find Duplicates does not handle middle initials

If that is the case do your Ruth E. and Ruth Emma have the same husband
in both files so they can be considered due to family relationships?

Brian
Customer Support
Millennia Corporation
[email protected]
http://www.LegacyFamilyTree.com




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