Re: [LegacyUG] Two "how do I record" questions

2013-02-03 Thread Lavern Hall
Hi Tony,

I am responding to your second question. I have several relatives who
resided at the same residence from the time they purchased their home until
their death. What I have done is to use the Master Source and insert a date
range. I've just done one this morning:

Event: Residence

Date: 1993-1988

The event sentence reads:
He had a residence from 1993-1998 of 0 Street, Cleveland, Cuyahoga
County, Ohio 44131-5947.

In this case my Master Source title is
Ohio: Cleveland - U.S. Phone and Address Directories, 1993-2002 . I have
others that have the same master source and cover one year or maybe 4
years. I don't see the harm in combining the same data into one source with
appropriate source detail.

This serves my purpose, however, if you want the event sentence to read
differently, then you can fill in the other event fields accordingly.

Best,
Lavern Hall
Aurora, Ohio, USA

On Sat, Feb 2, 2013 at 7:51 PM, R G Strong-genes wrote:

> Tony,
> I don't know of any way around your first question. Why not create a
> residence event for him and use the school admission as the source. For
> your
> second question since the dates are consecutive just enter the date range
> and then source that with each of the dated registers.
>
> -Original Message-
> From: Tony Rolfe
> Sent: Saturday, February 02, 2013 7:24 PM
> To: LegacyUserGroup@LegacyUsers.com
> Subject: [LegacyUG] Two "how do I record" questions
>
> Hello, all
>
> I don't like having two event sentences for the same event on the same
> date because it doesn't read very well.  I have gone to some lengths to
> provide sentences which allow me to get a lot of info into one event
> sentence (which may be several physical sentences).
>
> However, I have hit a problem with a London School admission record
> which has the following information:
>
> Date of admission, school name and address, home address of the pupil,
> father's name and a few miscellaneous bits of data.
>
> I want both the school address and the home address to appear in the
> location list, so I can track everyone who attended the school and
> everyone who lived in that place.  Obviously, I can't have two locations
> in the same event sentence.  If I use two sentences and try to run them
> together, they appear with the same separation as any two events.
>
> Is there any way round this?   Ideally, If I have to use two sentences,
> I would like the second one to continue directly on from the first.
>
> Second, and a bit simpler, I think. I have a number of electoral
> registers all of which have this person living at the same address.  Is
> there any way to record all these entries in one sentence?  e.g. The
> 1918, 1919, 1920 and 1921 electoral registers for St. Pancras show that
> she lived at "
>
> Any advice would be appreciated
>
> Tony
>
>
>
>
>
> --
> Russell G. Strong
> P. S. Check out Legacy Family Tree today! This full featured genealogy
> program can be downloaded FREE at
> http://www.legacyfamilytreestore.com/Articles.asp?ID=133&Click=1114
> Oh so many branches and not enough time to check out all the roots!!!.
> Check out my Genealogy Pages at http://www.rgstrong-genes.com .
>
>
>
>
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Re: [LegacyUG] Two "how do I record" questions

2013-02-02 Thread R G Strong-genes
Tony,
I don't know of any way around your first question. Why not create a
residence event for him and use the school admission as the source. For your
second question since the dates are consecutive just enter the date range
and then source that with each of the dated registers.

-Original Message-
From: Tony Rolfe
Sent: Saturday, February 02, 2013 7:24 PM
To: LegacyUserGroup@LegacyUsers.com
Subject: [LegacyUG] Two "how do I record" questions

Hello, all

I don't like having two event sentences for the same event on the same
date because it doesn't read very well.  I have gone to some lengths to
provide sentences which allow me to get a lot of info into one event
sentence (which may be several physical sentences).

However, I have hit a problem with a London School admission record
which has the following information:

Date of admission, school name and address, home address of the pupil,
father's name and a few miscellaneous bits of data.

I want both the school address and the home address to appear in the
location list, so I can track everyone who attended the school and
everyone who lived in that place.  Obviously, I can't have two locations
in the same event sentence.  If I use two sentences and try to run them
together, they appear with the same separation as any two events.

Is there any way round this?   Ideally, If I have to use two sentences,
I would like the second one to continue directly on from the first.

Second, and a bit simpler, I think. I have a number of electoral
registers all of which have this person living at the same address.  Is
there any way to record all these entries in one sentence?  e.g. The
1918, 1919, 1920 and 1921 electoral registers for St. Pancras show that
she lived at "

Any advice would be appreciated

Tony





--
Russell G. Strong
P. S. Check out Legacy Family Tree today! This full featured genealogy
program can be downloaded FREE at
http://www.legacyfamilytreestore.com/Articles.asp?ID=133&Click=1114
Oh so many branches and not enough time to check out all the roots!!!.
Check out my Genealogy Pages at http://www.rgstrong-genes.com .




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[LegacyUG] Two "how do I record" questions

2013-02-02 Thread Tony Rolfe
Hello, all

I don't like having two event sentences for the same event on the same
date because it doesn't read very well.  I have gone to some lengths to
provide sentences which allow me to get a lot of info into one event
sentence (which may be several physical sentences).

However, I have hit a problem with a London School admission record
which has the following information:

Date of admission, school name and address, home address of the pupil,
father's name and a few miscellaneous bits of data.

I want both the school address and the home address to appear in the
location list, so I can track everyone who attended the school and
everyone who lived in that place.  Obviously, I can't have two locations
in the same event sentence.  If I use two sentences and try to run them
together, they appear with the same separation as any two events.

Is there any way round this?   Ideally, If I have to use two sentences,
I would like the second one to continue directly on from the first.

Second, and a bit simpler, I think. I have a number of electoral
registers all of which have this person living at the same address.  Is
there any way to record all these entries in one sentence?  e.g. The
1918, 1919, 1920 and 1921 electoral registers for St. Pancras show that
she lived at "

Any advice would be appreciated

Tony



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