Indeed, I document the names used, mis-spelled and so forth, in notes.  And
some folks will chose to do exactly what you are doing.  But to really
understand where a family has been, something like the geo location base is
a big help.  It's a choice you have to make, rather like how you use the aka
fields for names.

Besides, if the geo location database has errors for a particular time
period, submit them.  They do get fixed eventually.  Canada isn't the only
place with independent cities, name changes, and so on.  It handles that
kind of thing fairly well.

-----Original Message-----
From: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
[mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED] Behalf Of John
R. Bayle
Sent: Saturday, May 21, 2005 17:12
To: [email protected]
Subject: RE: [LegacyUG] What good is the geo location database?


syoung replied that a good reason for the geo location database was:

> The best reason is for accuracy, consistancy and completeness of location
> information.  It makes it easy to tell which county a town is in, for
> example - and even alerts you to some problems, like putting a town in
> Iredell County, North Carolina, before 1788.  It would have been Rowan
from
> 1753 to 1788 - and Anson for 4 years before that, and so on.

The Geo-base may do some of those things, but it seems to me
that it can work against accuracy!  When I record a location, I record
what the source says, even if I know the source was wrong, misspelled or
out of date.  That is being consistent to me.

For example, my database contains events that happened in Lachine, Quebec,
Canada.
They don't all say exactly that: "Lachine, Quebec, Canada".
They say what the source says.  Some sources say "Lachine, Quebec", others
say "Lachine, Canada", and still others say "Lachine, Montreal, Quebec".
All
can be correct, if incomplete.  As I understand Qu�bec history (oh yeah
forgot
about minor spelling differences for accented and unaccented characters!)
Lachine
was founded on the south side of the fairly large Island of Montreal, which
was/is
called Mont Royal(?).  For some time Lachine was an indpendent village, so
it's
location would have properly been Lachine, Ille de Montreal, Quebec,
Nouvelle France.
Then as Montreal grew, Lachine (and other villages on the island) got
absorbed
into the greater metroplolis, and these formerly independent villages/towns
are
now "merely" districts of Montreal.  So there was a time when it was a part
of
Montreal and a time when it wasn't.  So it's "correct" name depends on the
time
of the event!

But even more important to me, is that if I write that a source says that
somebody was born in "Lachine, Montreal, Quebec, Canada", then that
is incorrect if the source actually said "Lachine, PQ".  I would be
misquoting
the source.  It doesen't really depend on whether Lachine was independent
or not.  It depends only on what the source actually says.  That is a bigger
error than being consistent IMO.  In my database, Montr�al, Qu�bec is
listed about 4 or five times as a master location, because it's there under
different spellings and variations as found in the various sources which I
try to cite as exactly as possible.  Only exception is that I will expand
abbreviations, because abbreviations should be avoided IMO.  So the
above example of "Lachine, PQ" will get expanded to "Lachine, Quebec",
because I know that PQ is an abbreviation for Province of Quebec.


jr

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