Hola!!! Muchas Gracias por todos los E mail que recibí de Uds. (fueron 125 E
mail) Debo decirles que no se casi nada de vuestro idioma inglés. Estoy
aprendiendo lo elemental, por lo tanto les pido perdón y paciencia para que
Yo pueda contestarles a todos ustedes en su idioma natal. Gracias, disculpen
la demora por contestarles. Hasta Pronto. Félix Adolfo Rodríguez.
P.D: Los acompaño a todos Ustedes y su país, Estados Unidos, en este mal
momento que les está haciendo pasar el temporal Katrina... lo lamento mucho.
Mucha suerte para todos en vuestro Grandioso País. Adiós, hasta pronto.


----- Original Message ----- 
From: "Tony Tooley" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
To: <[email protected]>
Sent: Tuesday, August 30, 2005 3:52 PM
Subject: Re: [LegacyUG] Census sources


> Hi Pete,
>
> Welcome to Legacy.
>
> There are various ways to log census data, and I've tried several, but
> here is what I now do:
>
> I have master census events titled 1841 census, 1851 census, 1861 census
etc
> When entering a census event in the description field I put England &
> Wales, (Scotland had a separate census); I put the date of the census
> in the date field e.g. 2 Apr 1871 and then put the town or parish
> where the census was enumerated. I then enter the detail of the census
> in the Notes field. i.e the address, name, relationshop to head,
> condition as to marriage, etc.  I've modified the event sentence to
> make it read more to my liking
> I also have sources 1851 census, 1861 census, etc in these I record
> the reference numbers, e.g RG11/117/12/50 I also have a record filing
> system labeled CEN51/xxx, CEN61/xxx for storing the hard copies.
>
> I use  exactly the idea you have suggested for checking for any
> missing persons in the census. It's simply a grid with a list of names
> down the side and across the top census years. I put the ages in the
> boxes instead of ticks.
>
> For some familes that I have a particular interest in I've designed a
> Cenus Tracker form in Word and record the familes movement through
> time on two sheets of paper. I've found this very useful.
>
> I hope you found this helpful.  No doubt you will get other
> suggestions from other members of the LUG - but at the moment this
> works for me
>
> All the best
>
> Tony
> Devon, UK
>
>
>
>
> On 30/08/05, Peter Chalmers <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
> > Hi there. I've inherited a "tree" from my parents and want to take it
> > further, but I'm new to genealogy in general and Legacy in particular,
so
> > please forgive what might be a fairly basic question. I've been using
Legacy
> > 5 [thanks to its free "standard" version - in my view a staggering
product
> > for no money! - but quickly upgraded to Deluxe, partly to gain the
> > additional capabilities, but also partly because I thought it was a
product
> > worth supporting], but mostly my database contains the individuals and
not
> > much more at the moment. I've now started to accumulate census data from
the
> > UK, and I'd appreciate your views on how best to incorporate this into
> > Legacy.
> >
> > For example, I can make the England 1871 Census a Master Source, and
then
> > add Census events to each individual with the page reference info,
> > transcription etc. in the event detail. Or I can make each page
reference a
> > Master Source, with maybe a complete transcription there, and then add a
> > Census event with just a reference to that Master Source. Of course, the
> > second way will mean I get a large number of Master Source entries. The
> > first way seems tidier, but makes a bit of extra work for me when adding
> > sources. How do other people deal with this? Is there a better way
> > altogether?
> >
> > On a related subject, I'd like to be able to produce some kind of
> > "completeness" report, which can quickly tell me who I haven't yet found
> > census entries for yet. Ideally I'd like to produce a table with names
down
> > the left, and various censuses (England 1861, England 1871, Wales 1871,
> > etc.) as columns, with a tick (or something) to show which entries I've
got.
> > It seems to me that something like this ought to be feasible (if I can
work
> > out the right way to record the census entries in the first place),
possibly
> > using advanced searches and tags. Has anyone managed anything similar?
> >
> > All suggestions gratefully received.
> >
> > Thanks,
> >
> > Pete Chalmers
> >
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