Actually, you can enter latitude and longitude manually in Legacy. If
you don't know them for a specific place, and it's not in Legacy, you
can try to find in online...
One place I use is the US Geological Survey national mapping information
site. This link takes you to a query form:
 http://geonames.usgs.gov/pls/gnis/web_query.gnis_web_query_form and you
can select state, county, and for feature select one (like cemetery),
and see what comes up. Not every cemetery is listed there, but a
surprising number are. If they don't have it, you can try TopoZone to
see if they do. And if the cemetery isn't listed at USGS, they will
happily add it if you ask them too (but they are slow about it). I did a
quick search in Callaway Co, MO and there were 71 cemeteries listed. If
your cemetery is very small, it's likely not on the list, but you may
want to check anyway. And then, out of curiosity, I went to the Missouri
Gen Web site, and selected Callaway county- right on the first page is a
link to the USGS map showing all of the cemeteries they have on a map.
Great map... But, if what you are looking for still isn't there, try
contacting the county coordinator for suggestions on how you can locate
those tiny cemeteries... Maybe a local town/county historian, or a local
librarian... Perhaps you can try contacting the county land office and
see if they know what the coordinates are for a parcel of land? 
If that doesn't work and you really want to have the lat and long in
your database, then I might try a google search for geocaching and see
what you can find. Maybe you can find a source for more coordinates, or
a volunteer from the area where you want to know the coordinates and see
if someone will go there and give them to you (like out at a farm). Just
a thought. 
And of course, there is always the possibility of taking a trip to the
site, with a gps and see what the coordinates are and recording them
yourself for your posterity :-)
Best wishes,
Susan

-----Original Message-----
From: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
[mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED] On Behalf Of Ed
Barnard
Sent: Friday, May 20, 2005 11:48 AM
To: [email protected]
Subject: Re: [LegacyUG] What good is the geo location database?


Susan and Sandra,

I'm still missing something.

1. I can see how it's useful if I have exact latitude and longitude,
either from GPS or from studying online maps, satellite, and arial
photos. I'll try that.

2. It seems useless - which means I'm missing something - for historical
locations. Let me give a couple of examples:

A. Andrew is from Albemarle County Virginia, and shows on the
Fredericksville Parish section of the 1820 census. The geo location
thing shows no listing for Fredericksville Parish in Albemarle County.
For my location I have typed "Albemarle County VA" and don't see any way
of improving on that.

B. I have various single-family pioneer cemetaries for Callaway County
Missouri. They aren't in any town that Geo Location lists for Callaway
County. They're simply on someone's family farm. I have plat references,
which I could convert to latitude/longitide,

no... wait... I don't see any way to enter latitude/longitude.

Okay... perhaps it's useful when I have a specific current-day township?

  Ed

> I use it every time I find a new location in my  files. Just the other

> day I had a location in Germany and entered what I  had then clicked 
> on the geo and ta-da got the correct wording. When I first imported 
> "ALL" of the locations into my files, I decided that  I was going to 
> do it however geo data base did it thus where I live is now  
> Sacramento, Sacramento, California, USA, I had it Sacramento, 
> Sacramento, CA
> 
>  but with the way that geo lists it I know instantly if I have checked

> it against the geo location list or not because there is an USA at the

> end .So, I guess I use it to make sure that I have the right county 
> and the right spelling for the location I WOULD NOT BE WITHOUT IT
> 
> Rootsweb.com Admin: {for} Caplinger, Duncan, Forsythe, Mounce, 
> Schoonover, Tyler, Vanscoy, Wilmoth, Zane
> 
> Sandra Tyler Duncan
> [EMAIL PROTECTED] http://www.gencircles.com/users/purplevw1/1
> *-* THE GREATEST*-*
> http://www.progenealogists.com/genealogysleuthb.htm
> ================================
> Work like you don't need the money.
>  Love like you've never been hurt.
>    Dance like nobody's looking.


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