Hi Geoff,
Just curious - in your 1720 example of Woodstock, Suffolk County, Massachusetts 
- what do you put down for the country?

Thanks,
Brian

-----Original Message-----
From: Geoff Rasmussen [mailto:ge...@legacyusers.com]
Sent: Wednesday, November 16, 2011 6:39 PM
To: LegacyUserGroup@LegacyUsers.com
Subject: RE: [LegacyUG] Locations

Hey Tony,

I wish people would disagree with me more often - we all can learn from each 
other.

However, understanding the location at the time of the event is crucial to 
research success. Woodstock, Connecticut has always had the same 
latitude/longitude. Today it resides in Windham County. If you look for records 
in Woodstock, Windham County for an ancestor that lived in Woodstock in 1720, 
you won't find what you are looking for because at that time it resided in 
Suffolk County, Massachusetts. If I were to record the person's birth as 1720 
in Woodstock, Windham County, Connecticut, it would be false - the place simply 
did not exist then. My recommendation then is to record the location as it 
existed at the time of the event AND in the event's notes, record the name of 
the place as it exists today to cross-reference each other.

Good luck,

Geoff

-----Original Message-----
From: Tony Rolfe [mailto:geneal...@gillandtony.com]
Sent: Wednesday, November 16, 2011 5:10 PM
To: LegacyUserGroup@LegacyUsers.com
Subject: [LegacyUG] Locations

Paula wants me to change the thread title, so here goes.

Hi, Geoff

I have to disagree with your statement that "it's the location at the time of 
the event that is important not the location as it is [or isn't] now."

Surely the whole point is that these two locations are the same location.  The 
names may have changed, the old location may now be in the middle of a 
motorway, under a reservoir or have fallen off a crumbling cliff into the 
ocean.  However, where it was is where it is.
The latitude and longitude are still there.

Researching people is also about researching locations.  Where they lived is 
important.  Where they lived often determined how they lived.
Sometimes reaearching the locations highlights problems.  I have a grand uncle 
and his wife who moved to Canada.  His granddaughter contacted me and told me 
that he told he that "he married his childhood sweetheart".
  Fine, until you include location details.  She was born and lived about 25 
miles South of the wide part of the Thames Estuary.  He was born and lived 
about the same distance North.  There is no obvious way from one place to the 
other in a time when travel wan't as easy as it is today.

My research shows that they didn't meet until they both moved to a third 
location.  So what is wrong?  Something doesn't add up.  Is the childhood 
sweetheart just a family story?  Do I have the wrong wife?
The wrong grand uncle? Did they both travel to the coast and meet on holiday? 
Without knowing the locations, I wouldn't know there was an issue.  It's on my 
to-do list.

Why do I prefer jpegs over PDF's?  Partly because I don't like any of the PDF 
readers and I can't afford (or be bothered) to buy a PDF editor.
  Partly because I can use photoshop to make poor-quality jpeg images more 
readable. Nothing really profound.  Just a personal preference.

Cheers

Tony


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