On 9/18/2012 1:01 PM, Brian L. Lightfoot wrote:
> This is a subject that comes up every now and then so I thought I’d
> re-ask it again just to see what the current opinion seems to be.  It
> concerns location names that have changed since a genealogical event has
> occurred.
>
> For example, a certain person was born in Richland County, Ohio in 1845.
> The US Census of 1850 now shows the family living in Ashland County. Did
> the family move? No, the boundaries were redrawn. The exact spot where
> the person was born is no longer called Richland County, but rather
> Ashland County. In some cases, I’ve got families living on the same
> exact farms and nothing has changed other than time and the location name.
>
> So the question becomes, how do you show his birth location: the old
> name or the new name?
>
> If you choose the old name for his birth location, the collective data
> and any generated reports make it seem as if the family moved. And in a
> few isolated cases, those location names may no longer exist. If you use
> the new name, Legacy complains at the time of entry that the county did
> not exist at the time and was not formed until 1846 (or whatever year).
> It’s kind of a “gentle warning” which you can easily dismiss and then
> everything would seem right in the universe.
>
> I just had a similar situation come up in which an individual was born
> in Fargo, Dakota Territory (before it was a state), but sure enough, all
> later census, military, and marriage records show his birth location as
> Fargo, North Dakota. I’m trying to be a purist and use the original
> location names but judging from what I’m seeing on other people’s
> genealogical reports, I get the feeling that I’m swimming upstream on this.
>

Brian,

First, welcome back. I remember you to be a purist. I am also a purist.
I always use the location at the time of the event.

Example:

Akron, Michigan in 1800 = Wayne County
Akron, Michigan in 1822 = Sanilac County
Akron, Michigan in 1850 = Tuscola County

Geneva, Oregon in 1843 = Champoeg County
Geneva, Oregon in 1850 = Lyne County
Geneva, Oregon in 1900 = Crook County
Geneva, Oregon in 1975 = Jefferson County


If Great Grandpa lived in Geneva Champoeg County Oregon in 1843, then
one was to use the master location list, then looks at Geneva Oregon, it
will show Jefferson as the County and 'swim upstream'. What County did
good ol Great Grandpa live in ? They can look at that that county for
maps and records.

I put ol grabdpa in the location at the time of event. Sure others will
come will look for a city in Champoeg. My thinking will the genealogist
sees it looks different, so they/I would know to look for further
research, and put further locations in the notes.

I currently do not have AniMap loaded ... Swim Upstream


--
Tim Rosenlof
Utah, USA
Swedish Research



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