Pat,

Your Basic source Footnote/Endnote Citation and Subsequent Citation are 
identical.  Your Bibliography is also the same except for omitting the Source 
Detail.  With SourceWriter the all three are different.  The Subsequent 
Citation will be shorter, often much shorter, than the Footnote/Endnote 
Citation.

A deed using sourcewriter:

Footnote/Endnote Citation:

Stark County, Ohio, Deed Books, C: 53-54, Henry Bortner to Leonard Shroyer, 31 
May 1815; FHL microfilm 956004.



Subsequent Citation:

Stark County, Ohio, Deed Books, C: 53-54.



Bibliography:

Ohio. Stark County. Deed Books. FHL microfilm 956004. Family History Library, 
Salt Lake City, Utah.



Is there a “List of Citations”.  All I can find is a List of Sources and I can 
then click Show List (of people with source).  That eventually takes me to 
citations.



Barbara



From: Pat Hickin [mailto:pph...@gmail.com]
Sent: Sunday, January 18, 2015 6:10 PM
To: legacyusergroup@LegacyUsers.com
Subject: Re: [LegacyUG] Some questions about getting rid of Sourcewriter sources



Barbara,



You write "They [Source Writer] also have the Full Citation, Subsequent 
Citation, and Bibliography while Basic does not."



Where is it that Basic does not have these??



If I go to my list of citations [mostly Basic}  and highlight the very first 
one [Basic], this is what shows at the bottom of the window:



Footnote/Endnote Citation:

1785 Census VA BOT - TAXES - VA _BOT - 1785     Anc, Botetourt County, VA, 
Virginia, Compiled Census and Census Substitutes Index, 1607-1890 (Plus the 
missing counties for the 1810 Census)Reconstructed 1790 and 1800 Federal 
Censuses using Tax List Microfilm Images with Every Name Indexes (Source 
Information:Ancestry.com. Virginia, Compiled Census and Census Substitutes 
Index, 1607-1890 [database on-line]. Provo, UT, USA: Ancestry.com Operations 
Inc, 1999.Original data: Jackson, Ron V., Accelerated Indexing Systems, comp.. 
Virginia Census, 1607-1890. Compiled and digitized by Mr. Jackson and AIS from 
microfilmed schedules of the U.S. Federal Decennial Census, territorial/state 
censuses, and/or census substitutes.).  Rec. Date: 27 May 2014. "Everyone knows 
that the Federal Census Schedules are an excellent source of genealogical 
information. Unfortunately the Virginia Censuses for 1790 and 1800 are lost and 
can never be replaced. But the early tax records of the Virginian counties 
still survive and list all individuals charged with a tax. They may also 
contain names of young men who were tithable, or taxable, much like a male 
dependent of a household. Names of recently deceased individuals whose property 
was still in estate are also listed. There are many clues in tax lists that 
suggest family relationships that can not be found in the early censuses. 
Therefore these tax lists can be used as an alternative census for the missing 
1790 and 1800 Federal Censuses of Virginia."Here you will find FREE online 
images and indexes of the Virginia Tax Lists (Land and/or Personal Property Tax 
Lists) for each of the individual counties and cities that would have been 
included in the Federal Censuses. These tax list images and indexes are used to 
reconstruct the 1790 and 1800 censuses. The years of "1790" and "1800" are 
considered an approximate year. In some cases the actual year 1790 or 1800 tax 
list was very hard to read on the microfilm so we went up or down a couple of 
years to find better quality images."As a BONUS we have added a new section for 
the missing Virginia counties of the 1810 Federal Census. This Federal Census 
is missing 18 Virginia counties. The tax lists are an excellent substitute for 
these missing counties."Each list will be indexed as time permits. We are 
constantly gathering tax lists and will post updates as needed. If you do not 
find your particular tax list here today it may be here tomorrow."



Subsequent Citation:

1785 Census VA BOT - TAXES - VA _BOT - 1785     Anc, Botetourt County, VA, 
Virginia, Compiled Census and Census Substitutes Index, 1607-1890 (Plus the 
missing counties for the 1810 Census)Reconstructed 1790 and 1800 Federal 
Censuses using Tax List Microfilm Images with Every Name Indexes (Source 
Information:Ancestry.com. Virginia, Compiled Census and Census Substitutes 
Index, 1607-1890 [database on-line]. Provo, UT, USA: Ancestry.com Operations 
Inc, 1999.Original data: Jackson, Ron V., Accelerated Indexing Systems, comp.. 
Virginia Census, 1607-1890. Compiled and digitized by Mr. Jackson and AIS from 
microfilmed schedules of the U.S. Federal Decennial Census, territorial/state 
censuses, and/or census substitutes.).  Rec. Date: 27 May 2014. "Everyone knows 
that the Federal Census Schedules are an excellent source of genealogical 
information. Unfortunately the Virginia Censuses for 1790 and 1800 are lost and 
can never be replaced. But the early tax records of the Virginian counties 
still survive and list all individuals charged with a tax. They may also 
contain names of young men who were tithable, or taxable, much like a male 
dependent of a household. Names of recently deceased individuals whose property 
was still in estate are also listed. There are many clues in tax lists that 
suggest family relationships that can not be found in the early censuses. 
Therefore these tax lists can be used as an alternative census for the missing 
1790 and 1800 Federal Censuses of Virginia."Here you will find FREE online 
images and indexes of the Virginia Tax Lists (Land and/or Personal Property Tax 
Lists) for each of the individual counties and cities that would have been 
included in the Federal Censuses. These tax list images and indexes are used to 
reconstruct the 1790 and 1800 censuses. The years of "1790" and "1800" are 
considered an approximate year. In some cases the actual year 1790 or 1800 tax 
list was very hard to read on the microfilm so we went up or down a couple of 
years to find better quality images."As a BONUS we have added a new section for 
the missing Virginia counties of the 1810 Federal Census. This Federal Census 
is missing 18 Virginia counties. The tax lists are an excellent substitute for 
these missing counties."Each list will be indexed as time permits. We are 
constantly gathering tax lists and will post updates as needed. If you do not 
find your particular tax list here today it may be here tomorrow."



Bibliography:

1785 Census VA BOT - TAXES - VA _BOT - 1785     Anc, Botetourt County, VA, 
Virginia, Compiled Census and Census Substitutes Index, 1607-1890 (Plus the 
missing counties for the 1810 Census)Reconstructed 1790 and 1800 Federal 
Censuses using Tax List Microfilm Images with Every Name Indexes (Source 
Information:Ancestry.com. Virginia, Compiled Census and Census Substitutes 
Index, 1607-1890 [database on-line]. Provo, UT, USA: Ancestry.com Operations 
Inc, 1999.Original data: Jackson, Ron V., Accelerated Indexing Systems, comp.. 
Virginia Census, 1607-1890. Compiled and digitized by Mr. Jackson and AIS from 
microfilmed schedules of the U.S. Federal Decennial Census, territorial/state 
censuses, and/or census substitutes.) Rec. Date: 27 May 2014."







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