Russ,

Of course it is, but the question which was asked had nothing to do with
sourcing, but how, and/or whether, to include persons of unproven
relationships into the Legacy database - especially if there were multiple
possibilities. In my original response I simply said that one should not.

Ron Ferguson
http://www.fergys.co.uk

-----Original Message-----
From: my genealogy email
Sent: Wednesday, August 10, 2011 5:07 AM
To: LegacyUserGroup@LegacyUsers.com
Subject: Re: [LegacyUG] Possible parentage

Yet, the "source" of the information is where you got the information and
that information was "Personal knowledge of" the person who gave you the
info. You would just change the surety level to a lower level if you don't
trust the source.
Russ

-----Original Message-----
From: Ron Ferguson
Sent: Tuesday, August 09, 2011 5:16 PM
To: LegacyUserGroup@LegacyUsers.com
Subject: Re: [LegacyUG] Possible parentage

Jerry,

I am not particularly averse to taking personal knowledge as being accurate,
but one should always remember it is not inevitably true. Take your example
of grandparents, sure someone may remember that a grandmother was named
Mary, because she has always been there. But she might not be - she could be
a second wife and the daughter being the issue of a first marriage.

I am sure that you can also think of other alternative scenarios as well,
and in the case of personal knowledge I am only advising caution.

Ron Ferguson
http://www.fergys.co.uk

-----Original Message-----
From: Jerry
Sent: Tuesday, August 09, 2011 9:46 PM
To: LegacyUserGroup@LegacyUsers.com
Subject: Re: [LegacyUG] Possible parentage

Well, that's what so great about Legacy - it allows you to develop a lot
of things according to what makes sense to you.  For example, we have
been having an annual family reunion in Michigan for 61 years straight!
So, on our 50th annual, when I was President of the reunion, I
circulated data sheets and obtained a great deal of information at that
point and subsequently.   I do not have proof of much of the
information, so as the source writer template indicates many of my
sources are:  Personal Knowledge of:  Last Name, First Name, etc.  I'm
pretty sure these folks know who their grandparents are.  Proof would be
the census, birth certificates, etc., but I don't see that it makes
sense to withhold this information from my website because I don't have
a birth certificate or other proof.  Of course, apparently I'm sure
genealogical standards allow for personal knowledge of, as evidence of
Legacy including that in its source writer template.  Just my thoughts,
but I realize the case in question is a bit different.   --Jerry /
http://www.MerriamFamilyTree.org/

On 8/9/2011 3:43 PM, Connie Sheets wrote:
> Jane,
>
> I'm with Ron on this.  I never link anyone where I don't have substantial
> evidence, generally from more than one source, that A's father is B.  I
> use the Note feature to explain my suspicion, and make very clear it is
> only a hypothesis.
>
> When I have several possibilities, I not only use the Note feature for A,
> but I enter B, C, and D as unlinked and develop research plans for each
> using the "To Do" feature.  I haven't found this to be a problem at all,
> so long as I have Notes for all four unlinked individuals that
> cross-reference each other.
>
> Connie
>
> --- On Tue, 8/9/11, Jane Sarles<sarlesinsi...@gmail.com>  wrote:
> How do you all handle the situation where you suspect person A;s  father
> is person B, but you cannot prove it.  Or, for that matter, you  have 2 or
> 3 possible candidates for person A's father.   One does not want to list
> them as though it is certain, but just putting the candidates in as
> "unlinked" does not allow for connecting them when wanted, say for
> research purposes..
>
> Ideas?
> Jane S.
>



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