Genealogy Tip of the Day: July 2, 2015

Let’s talk about accuracy.

We want to believe that our ancestors and everyone who wrote down data about them always used the same spelling, but if you have been working on your family history for any length of time, you know that’s not true.

In my great-grandmother’s case, I have seen her name spelled so many different ways, it nearly makes my head spin. Augusta Hermanie Meyn …

Agusta
Gusta
Gussie
Meyne
Maine
Mayn

These are a few of the permutations. I go with Meyn because that’s on the gravestone of her parents and some of her siblings.

So when I’m trying to find information about her, I am kind of liberal about how her name is spelled, but I still try to make sure that I have the right person when accepting hints on Ancestry or Family Search, especially when accepting information from someone else’s family tree.

Because you simply don’t know — unless that person has cited accurate sources — if the information is correct.

I was recently looking up my paternal grandfather (Alfred Charles Snyder) on Ancestry and found him and his parents (Samuel Grant Snyder and Susan Hoffman) listed in someone’s tree.

The Susan Hoffman in the other tree was actually Susan Spencer Hoffman, married to William Hoffman, and they had several children. The other person believes that because Susan Spencer Hoffman was Susan Hoffman, she must be the same Susan Hoffman as the one that married Samuel Grant Snyder.

Which is simply not the case.

Susan Hoffman married Samuel Grant Snyder and they had several children. The only one who is in the other tree is my grandfather, born in 1900. The 1900 census has Samuel and Susie Snyder, along with their sons Wallace and Glen (Grandpa was born in September, so not listed in the 1900 census). The other Susan Hoffman was listed with her husband William Hoffman and their children. In addition, William and Susan Hoffman had another child after 1900, so she clearly couldn’t be married to Samuel Snyder.

No, she wasn’t a bigamist. It’s just a case of mistaken identity.

So, try to be accurate when you enter information. Try to determine as positively as you can if you have the right person. Maybe write things down on paper until you are sure, before adding a person to your family tree. A timeline would probably help, as well.

I did message the person who added my grandfather and his parents to her family tree, but she hasn’t been on Ancestry in three months. At this point, there’s nothing I can do except try to make sure my research is as accurate as possible.

Oh, and cite my sources!

Links:
Gritting My Teeth About Online Family Trees
5 Ways To Tell If Your Genealogy Research Is Accurate
7 Common Genealogy Research Mistakes to Avoid

This tip has been brought to you by WCGS President Carol Foltz.

Genealogy tip of the day: July 1, 2015

We will begin posting a Genealogy Tip of the Day or Genealogy Link of the Day on a daily basis.

Today’s tip is this article on backing up your genealogy.

How are you doing your genealogy? Do you only work on paper, only on a computer, only online, or some combination of those methods? What would you do if you had a fire, flood or some other disaster that erased or destroyed your work?

Many people use a combination of methods for various reasons. You can work in a genealogy program and create a GEDCOM file for backup and upload that to cloud storage or download to a flash drive that you keep with you. You can email it to yourself (another form of cloud storage). If your genealogy program syncs with an online tree (Ancestry or Family Search, for example), you don’t have to worry about your work being lost.

If you only use paper files, consider making copies and keeping them in a different location than your home. (My family’s home burned down when I was 5 and we lost nearly everything, including family photos.)

Another issue is what to do with your genealogy when you die, but we’ll cover that another day.

Happy ancestor hunting!

Swedish research workshop

There is a research workshop this weekend: Hands On ArkivDigital Workshop with Kathy Meade, the North American representative for ArchivDigital. The workshop will be held from 9 a.m. to 4 p.m. on both Saturday and Sunday in the computer lab at the Stratford Community School. You may bring your own laptop or use one of the school’s computers. Register at http://www.swedebend.com/events/arkivdigital-registration.html. There is no mandatory fee, but they do suggest a donation of $25 per day to the Swedish Immigrant Museum and $10-15 freewill donation for the lunches.

More information available at http://www.swedebend.com/events/arkivdigital-information.html.

Swedish Genealogical Research Workshop May 2015

February meeting

Our monthly meetings are usually on the first Monday each month, at 1 p.m. in the society’s room at the Fort Dodge Public Library, 424 Central Ave.

This weekend we are expecting several inches of snow. It will probably be fine by Monday, but just in case, here’s the rule: If the Fort Dodge schools are out because of weather, the Webster County Genealogical Society will be closed. If that is the case on Monday, the meeting would be moved to Feb. 9. We will post a notice on our website and on Facebook if that happens.

Annals of Iowa now online

You can access the Annals of Iowa online now. The publication is a quarterly, peer-reviewed journal of history published by the State Historical Society of Iowa.

Issues published from 1863-1969 and 2006-2013 are online at: http://ir.uiowa.edu/annals-of-iowa/.

This article was published in the Fort Dodge Republican in September 1863. It was posted in the Annals of Iowa in January 1905.

buffalo_hunt

I did a couple of searches, using the “in this journal” option. You can download a PDF of the whole article, with a cover page and end page. It’s another resource for Iowa history.