Brian, I do much like you do. Long place description is fully written, but I 
use abbreviations in the short descriptions. I also have an example like yours 
for Kasota, Le Sueur County, Minnesota and Kasota Township, Le Sueur County, 
Minnesota, (among quite a few others). Like many other users, I found it 
difficult to know where a particular event really was until I cleaned up my 
location list by writing them out in full. I also agree with someone else's 
point that it is more useful this way for other people who look at my work.

 

Thanks,

 

Trevor Carlson

Edmonton, AB

 

 

From: LegacyUserGroup [mailto:[email protected]] On 
Behalf Of Brian Lightfoot
Sent: 2-Apr-17 6:31 PM
To: 'Legacy User Group'
Subject: Re: [LegacyUG] Master Location list, Place names

 

I started adding the additional word “County” to all my county descriptors, 
regardless of if the city or township was also known. I found that I have a 
great deal of ancestors in and around Ashland County, Ohio so I noticed many 
docs from a variety of sources merely stating “Ashland, Ohio”. But a close 
examination of the source itself revealed some were from the city of Ashland, 
some were from the Township of Ashland, and others were merely describing the 
county of Ashland. I found other citations giving the location as “Ashland, 
Ashland, Ohio” which by many others’ convention would seem to be describing the 
city of Ashland in Ashland County but in reality was describing the Township of 
Ashland (not all parts were within the city limits) in Ashland County.

 

Thus I end up with the following variations:

Ashland, Ashland County, Ohio (meaning in the city of Ashland)

Ashland Township, Ashland County, Ohio (self-explanatory)

And finally “, Ashland County, Ohio” meaning a location somewhere in the county 
with the township not known.

 

 

From: LegacyUserGroup [mailto:[email protected]] On 
Behalf Of Sherry
Sent: Sunday, April 2, 2017 3:58 PM
To: Legacy User Group
Subject: Re: [LegacyUG] Master Location list, Place names

 

I add "County" only when I don't know the city.

, King county, Washington, United States 

Seattle, King, Washington, United States.

Although I can understand how confusing it might be if the city and county are 
the same.

Plus I'm not a fan of abbreviations so I spell "county" out. There might be 
those who aren't sure what "Co." means.  It's a common abbreviation for 
"company"....

The WA abbreviation for Washington state is also the abbreviation for Western 
Australia and there's a town there with the same name as where I live in 
Washington!

 

Sherry

 

On Sun, Apr 2, 2017 at 3:49 PM, Leonard J. McCown <[email protected]> wrote:

Years ago I learned to leave a space for a place that was
missing, to mark its place, and also to tell the person that
it is a town, village, etc., and the next is the county (at
least in the USA). I have continued that, but have started a
no-no also, by adding Co. to the county so it is clear. Too
many places and counties are named the same . . . Dallas,
Dallas Co., Texas. I decided what's best for me and to make
it clear when I am dead and others might be using my
database. If they don't like it, they can change it then.

Personally I think it is a good idea. Was there an option to
remove that in the set up for Legacy?

 

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