Search found 2094 matches
- 20 Mar 2024 21:26
- Forum: New Wish List Requests
- Topic: Templates: Input form labels
- Replies: 22
- Views: 388
Re: Templates: Input form labels
So basically, so far as I can see now, after looking at Template snippet1.pdf in particular, we're just looking at a convenient, permanent , label, for a group of fields appearing on a Templated Source Record. Seems eminently sensible to me - especially if you're someone like me who likes a long ser...
- 16 Mar 2024 13:13
- Forum: Sources, Citations & Repositories
- Topic: Overriding ":REVERSE" in a bibliography
- Replies: 26
- Views: 285
Re: Overriding ":REVERSE" in a bibliography
... If you used the template {Principal:SURNAME}<, {Principal:GIVEN}> then using /Great Western Railway/ works fine as well as John /Smith/ . ... Yes, that might well work where just one name is involved. It requires forgetting about :REVERSE which might be thought perverse. (sorry!) ... The proble...
- 16 Mar 2024 13:06
- Forum: Sources, Citations & Repositories
- Topic: Overriding ":REVERSE" in a bibliography
- Replies: 26
- Views: 285
Re: Overriding ":REVERSE" in a bibliography
Gary - I'm getting further tied in knots considering how to process multiple authors. If I enter the "author" as "George Jackson Churchward and Charles Collett" then, as you will guess, the default Bibliography (with Reversed Author) appears as "Collett, George Jackson Churc...
- 16 Mar 2024 12:50
- Forum: Sources, Citations & Repositories
- Topic: Overriding ":REVERSE" in a bibliography
- Replies: 26
- Views: 285
Re: Overriding ":REVERSE" in a bibliography
The crux of the matter is surely that organisation names appearing in a :REVERSE "author" item get treated as if they were a human name. In other words, "Great Western Railway" gets shown (by default) as "Railway, Great Western". Which isn't the end of the world in that...
- 14 Mar 2024 22:30
- Forum: Research
- Topic: England & Wales Probate Calendar images
- Replies: 25
- Views: 2996
- 14 Mar 2024 22:28
- Forum: Research
- Topic: FindMyPast: Northaw parish registers
- Replies: 6
- Views: 267
Re: FindMyPast: Northaw parish registers
Tamara - for some reason I felt compelled to have a look at the Northaw registers. You may know this already but there appears to have been a serious fire there - the 1769-1812 register is only present on FMP as a transcript because the original was so badly burned. Some of the marriages are from a ...
- 14 Mar 2024 22:11
- Forum: Research
- Topic: England & Wales Probate Calendar images
- Replies: 25
- Views: 2996
Re: England & Wales Probate Calendar images
... I'm starting to see a disturbing trend. To cite the same type of type of collection for different countries, it's already clear that I pretty much need to create a separate template for each country. Now I'm also finding that the search parameters on each site, for a given collection, can diffe...
- 10 Mar 2024 21:04
- Forum: Ancestral Sources
- Topic: Question about scope of records handled by A.S.
- Replies: 35
- Views: 2303
- 10 Mar 2024 18:21
- Forum: Ancestral Sources
- Topic: Question about scope of records handled by A.S.
- Replies: 35
- Views: 2303
Re: Question about scope of records handled by A.S.
... From what you said, it sounds like the constituent items were normally filed separately and the court kept track of when it had enough to issue the final paperwork. Not really - everything's down to the executor. They have to gather the stuff (such as it is) and then go to the probate authority...
- 10 Mar 2024 16:37
- Forum: Ancestral Sources
- Topic: Question about scope of records handled by A.S.
- Replies: 35
- Views: 2303
Re: Question about scope of records handled by A.S.
Most of the Irish stuff was destroyed in the 1922 fire. Post 1858, some wills were filed in local probate offices first, rather than the central office in Dublin, so the local copies survive but I would have guessed that they follow basically the same process as England & Wales. Other possibilit...
- 09 Mar 2024 21:10
- Forum: Ancestral Sources
- Topic: Question about scope of records handled by A.S.
- Replies: 35
- Views: 2303
Re: Question about scope of records handled by A.S.
... The documentation systems for some countries tend to be so different that one may just find it faster and easier to create a separate template set for each country. Indeed - even between England & Wales on the one hand and Scotland or Ireland on the other. I've never tried to concoct one fo...
- 29 Feb 2024 12:09
- Forum: General Usage
- Topic: Adding a "remembrance" note about a person
- Replies: 12
- Views: 805
Re: Adding a "remembrance" note about a person
Can I suggest that your Biography fact is very similar to my "Dated note" fact? The important fact for your Biography fact is what goes in the Note, I suggest - that's exactly what my "Dated note" is intended to be - just a Note that appears amongst the other facts (I don't think...
- 21 Feb 2024 11:35
- Forum: Research
- Topic: Citing English Census
- Replies: 73
- Views: 6192
Re: Citing English Census
I agree that sort order can be very important but it's one of those things that I am convinced I have used utterly inconsistently in various places...
- 20 Feb 2024 23:54
- Forum: Research
- Topic: Citing English Census
- Replies: 73
- Views: 6192
Re: Citing English Census
... Census returns. England. Aston, Warwickshire. 02 Apr 1911. AARON, Francis, RD 385; PN 18210; ED 21; SN 101. Collection: 1911 England & Wales Census Collection Image. http://www.findmypast.co.uk . ... The RG 14 is implicit, as the 1911 census has been identified earlier. However; adding it w...
- 20 Feb 2024 21:53
- Forum: Research
- Topic: Citing English Census
- Replies: 73
- Views: 6192
Re: Citing English Census
... The second is to use the content of the archival reference data. eg. "RG14PN4093 RG78PN158 RD50 SD3 ED1 SN44". ... I would never use that particular construction because it's not a reference at TNA but an image group key concocted by FindMyPast. FMP had a very good reason to do what t...
- 20 Feb 2024 21:21
- Forum: General Usage
- Topic: Custom Facts
- Replies: 12
- Views: 586
Re: Custom Facts
... The value of the attribute is the name of the Institution (which is not always given by the address, plus Institutions can change address and remain the same Institution). ... Hmm - interesting. I suspect I probably realised this but had never actually articulated it. The classic case for this ...
- 19 Feb 2024 23:26
- Forum: Research
- Topic: Citing English Census
- Replies: 73
- Views: 6192
Re: Citing English Census
... It looks like one or more hamlets can occur on a given page in the 1841 census. That makes me think it might actually have been treated more like an address; much as one would treat "Torwood [House]" in the Scottish Census. Yes - that would work. Fundamentally, it depends on how preci...
- 19 Feb 2024 23:08
- Forum: Research
- Topic: Citing English Census
- Replies: 73
- Views: 6192
Re: Citing English Census
... I'm not sure how geocoding sites deal with places in a parish of the same name. When I get a hit, am I getting the location of the parish or of the place in the parish. This could complicate matters, unless the sites expect just the place, county and country. I would suggest that if you try to ...
- 14 Feb 2024 14:46
- Forum: Research
- Topic: Citing English Census
- Replies: 73
- Views: 6192
Re: Citing English Census
... I have a question about using just the civil parish and administrative county. Are those something one can geo-locate for mapping purposes? County on its own is so big that I never bother with geolocating it. However, civil parish (in combination with the county) usually maps easily - I doubt t...
- 14 Feb 2024 13:05
- Forum: Research
- Topic: Citing English Census
- Replies: 73
- Views: 6192
Re: Citing English Census
(Pedant alert :) ) The correct name of the UK archive office at the time was the Public Record Office (no s). It became the National Archives about 20 years ago, so should you quote the name of the institution as it was when the record was made, or when you accessed it...? ... Oooh! I am in admirat...
- 13 Feb 2024 21:11
- Forum: Research
- Topic: Citing English Census
- Replies: 73
- Views: 6192
Re: Citing English Census
... If I take a guess at what is required, based on an example 1901 census return, I suspect that [Jurisdiction] would be the "Administrative County, "London", and [Civil_Division] would be the "Civil Parish", "Islington". ... Does my interpretation of "Juris...
- 11 Feb 2024 17:45
- Forum: Media
- Topic: Adding Ship Pictures
- Replies: 6
- Views: 565
- 10 Feb 2024 21:01
- Forum: Media
- Topic: Adding Ship Pictures
- Replies: 6
- Views: 565
Re: Adding Ship Pictures
It's ... erm ... interesting. I'm looking at a chap who served in the RN during WW1. I have images of most of his ships ("stone frigates" excepted) and they are linked to the relevant Military Service facts (the value of the attribute is the name of the ship in question). I just bring up t...
- 08 Feb 2024 20:25
- Forum: Reports, Books & Websites
- Topic: Saving Reports
- Replies: 25
- Views: 1880
Re: Saving Reports
My Acrobat reader 'allows' me to disable the new version but still has a panel down the rhs. ... Screenshot 2024-02-08 201413.jpg Yes - misleading, I now realise, to say the side-panels / floating toolbar et al will vanish with the reversion to the previous version . The new side-panels vanish but ...
- 08 Feb 2024 14:41
- Forum: Reports, Books & Websites
- Topic: Saving Reports
- Replies: 25
- Views: 1880
Re: Saving Reports
Hello Adrian where is the Menu? See screenshot: Capture.JPG Open Adobe Acrobat Reader . The "Menu" icon is the stack of 3 plates/hamburger as pointed at by the arrow. Click on that and the Reversion / Disable option is 4 options above the Preferences option. Then the side-panels / floatin...