There is NO correct way. What works for you, but you need to be consistent.

I try and used the location name at the time of the event. The location 
database will most likely show errors, but then it is not worth much anyway.
None of the location databases with ANY family research program will have any 
of the History names. Without the correct name at the time of the event, then a 
lot of happenings just will not make sense.

As stated before, it is your call

Thanks,
David C Abernathy
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-----Original Message-----
From: singhals [mailto:[email protected]]
Sent: Wednesday, December 24, 2014 7:40 AM
To: [email protected]
Subject: Re: [LegacyUG] Data Entry.....

W. Bruce Matson wrote:
> Hello,
> Is there a more “correct” way of entering data for a person living
> during American Colonial times?
> For example, a person living in York, Maine in 1661 wouldn’t
> technically be correct. Would it be better to enter, York, York County
> (even though the County probably didn’t exist then), Maine, British
> Colonial/ North America? Certainly, the USA hadn’t been formed that
> early. .Any suggestions how others of you might deal with this.
> Thanks for any advice/input.
>
> Bruce Matson
> Mount Vernon, WA

IME, it depends on (a) what, exactly, you intend to do with the data, (b) who 
you wish to impress, (c) your personal feelings about picayune details.

If I'm compiling a tree for a lineage society, I ask them what THEY want it to 
say -- because if I do it differently, they'll reject it and make me do it 
twice.

If I'm keeping a database for family, there's NO profit/point to saying that x 
was in Virginia because everyone who looks at it will complain that it's really 
in Ohio (yeah, is now; at the time, that was Ohio county, Va, though).

If I'm using the database for tracking something, I use whatever the source 
document says.  Since I work mostly South of the Mason-Dixon Line, I've never 
seen British Colonial America or even British North America in an original 
document.  Not saying there isn't one, just that I've never seen it.  I've seen 
State of Virginia, Commonwealth of Virginia, Province of Maryland, Province of 
North Carolina, Proprietorship of Pennsylvania ... but never with "America" 
appended.

Either way, I say in the NOTES either what the doc actually said or where the 
place is today, whichever I need to clarify.

Worth what you paid for the opinion, however.  Essentially, your call.

Cheryl




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