Cheryl,


Here is an actual example from my personal file to give you a better idea.  
This gives the main page for GenealogyBank as the web address in the source 
citation and not a link to the specific page within GenealogyBank.



"Ernest Lee Lewis dies at Martinez," The Augusta Chronicle, 22 February 1946, 
p. 5, col. 3; digital images, GenealogyBank (http://www.genealogybank.com : 
accessed 05 October 2013).



I am thinking that an average genealogist would be able to go to the 
GenealogyBank website and find this article even though I didn’t put the link 
to the actual page.





Michele
Technical Support
 <mailto:[email protected]> [email protected]
 <http://www.legacyfamilytree.com/> http://www.LegacyFamilyTree.com





On Mon, Sep 15, 2014 at 1:45 PM, singhals <[email protected] 
<mailto:[email protected]> > wrote:

"I found it on Family Search" isn't what I'd call pinpoint
accuracy or reliability as a source.  It's right up there
with "It was on-line somewhere."

IMO.

Cheryl

Michele/Support wrote:
> Jenny,
> This is why when I input a website into a source citation I always use the 
> address of the main page.  For example, when I download images from a records 
> collection from FamilySearch.org such as the Georgia Death Certificates 
> 1914-1927 found here https://familysearch.org/search/collection/1320969   The 
> actual source citation will only have http://familysearch.org because the 
> internal structure of the website could easily change.
>
> If you look at Evidence Explained, the census models give the website address 
> as  http://www.ancestry.com and not a link to the specific census page or 
> even the census collection.
>
>
> Michele
> Technical Support
> [email protected] <mailto:[email protected]>
> www.legacyfamilytree.com <http://www.legacyfamilytree.com>
>
> -----Original Message-----
> From: Jenny M Benson [mailto:[email protected] 
> <mailto:[email protected]> ]
> Sent: Monday, September 15, 2014 12:30 PM
> To: [email protected]
> Subject: [LegacyUG] Shifting Sources
>
> Well, it's not actually the Sources which have shifted, but the names of 
> Collections change and/or Search methods change and I'm wondering how other 
> LUGgers handle this.
>
> Here's an example which illustrates exactly what I mean.  In the Good Old 
> Days when searching FindMyPast for a marriage in the English county of 
> Cheshire one could select "Parish Records" from a a menu, then select the tab 
> for Marriages and then enter the search parameters.
>
> I set up a SourceWriter Source (using the template for Church Record Books 
> created at local level, online images) called Parish Registers - FMP.  I put 
> the website details into the Master Source and entered "Parish Records 
> Collection" in the Collection field.  The name of the specific Church and its 
> location and whether the record is from PRs or BTs and whether a Baptism, 
> Marriage or Burial, I included in the Source Detail.
>
> Now the FindMyPast site has been completely re-vamped and the easiest and 
> quickest way to find a marriage in Cheshire is to use the All Records list to 
> select either Diocese of Chester Parish Registers of Marriages or Diocese of 
> Chester Bishhop's Transcripts of Marriages.
> There is no longer a facility to search "Parish Records" generally.
>
> So, the question is this:  would you continue to use the "Parish Registers - 
> FMP" template and have any following-on researcher muddle through to find the 
> same record which I did,  or would you set up a new Master Source for the 
> specific Collection (and corresponding new Sources for the Baptism and 
> Burials Collections, PRs and BTs in each case and for each County)?  And 
> supposing you create a new set of Master Sources, would you update all your 
> old citations to the new Sources or leave them as they are?
>
> I think I know what Elizabeth Shown Mills would say, but I am not asking what 
> is RIGHT, but what do most people actually do?!




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