But keep in mind that in many countries more than 4 fields are needed.

 

Georges

 

De : LegacyUserGroup <[email protected]> De la part de 
Linda Greethurst
Envoyé : 1 août 2019 09:23
À : Legacy User Group <[email protected]>
Objet : Re: [LegacyUG] Location names for Pennsylvania

 

Like the others, I do use the 4 comma separations - the majority of the time.   
I was taught to always enter the location as it was called AT THE TIME OF THE 
EVENT.  I have many locations that I cannot fill the 4 sections because the 
location didn't adhere to that structure - it was a territory, a plantation, a 
hundred, a colony! Or even the parish was the record keeper of the larger area. 

But humans just love to set up jurisdictions and then apply laws. For a record 
to survive it had to be kept at some level which was located someplace. The 
local jurisdictional name is what needs to be identified. Everybody who lived 
in that locality knew that jurisdiction - it didn't have to be named on every 
document.  That would depend on the reason for the document:  Goverment record 
such as land or court usually, church records not so much.  Then, if need be, 
use the wonderful, copious places called notes Legacy has built in to the 
program to enter an explanation regarding that location at that time. 

There is not a rule that you HAVE TO fill every blank spot in the location 
fields.

 

Linda in Iowa

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

On Thu, Aug 1, 2019 at 7:43 AM mvmcgrs--- via LegacyUserGroup 
<[email protected] <mailto:[email protected]> > 
wrote:

 

 

I hope you are not inserting the the added information if it is not in the 
document.  The jurisdictions change over time. In the US what was a county in 
1850 may be another county in 1860 and still another county by 1870. The house 
did not move but the boundaries did.

 

Marie

Marie Varrelman Melchiori, Certified Genealogist Emeritus
______________________________ ______________________________ __
CG or Certified Genealogist is a service mark of the Board for Certification of 
Genealogists, used under license by Board-certified genealogists after periodic 
competency evaluation, and the board name is registered in the US Patent & 
Trademark Office.

In a message dated 8/1/2019 6:24:51 AM Eastern Standard Time, 
[email protected] <mailto:[email protected]>  writes: 

 

I do agree.   

 

My standard is:   [1. local jurisdiction/repository i.e.township, village, 
city, etc], 2.County, 3.State, 4.Country  

and apply to other countries similarly by always using three commas for all 
locations [usually each has a repository of genealogical data] .  The entry 
might between comma's might be null if I don't have the information.  For 
example born in USA might be ", , , USA".  I know I have some research to do 
but I only record what I have from that source.

 

For folder hierarchy and some naming situations I reverse the order but always 
hold to 4 elements for location.  I don't believe I have ever had an exception. 
 I am sure I will learn about one here.  So far this works for me. 

 

Bill

 

On Wed, Jul 31, 2019 at 12:20 AM Roberta Schwalm <[email protected] 
<mailto:[email protected]> > wrote:

I do the same thing, Shirley.  Most of my ancestors are from Scotland, Ireland, 
England, Germany and a spattering of French.  The only difference is I use 
"province" instead of State.

 

On Tue, Jul 30, 2019 at 9:05 PM Shirley Crampton <[email protected] 
<mailto:[email protected]> > wrote:

I use Village, County, State, Country.  Hopefully there is no more than 1 
village of the same name in the County.  If the place is rural then I put the 
name of the township in the first position.

 

On Tue, Jul 30, 2019 at 5:47 PM Connie Laubach <[email protected] 
<mailto:[email protected]> > wrote:

Trying to decide how to input the location names – I have townships that are 
made up of villages and boroughs. How are others handling it?

I have thought of the following:

Village, township, county, state, United States

or

township-village, country, state, United States (I like this as  all villages 
within the township would be listed together)

 

Thank you, Connie.

 

 

 

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