|
Project
1
|
Project
2 - USCT
|
|
n = 8,500
|
n = 4,500
|
Total soldiers complete
|
6130
|
1902
|
Soldiers completed during last
week
|
59
|
37
|
Soldiers w/o children (to be removed from sample)
|
567
|
330
|
% of completed soldiers w/o children
|
9.3
|
17.4
|
Soldiers with children complete
|
5563
|
1572
|
% with children complete
|
65.4
|
34.9
|
Friday, March 31, 2017
Progress as of March 29
Here is our progress report as of March 29, 2017.
Thursday, March 30, 2017
Example of SS App & Claims
During her presentation at the census meeting, Janice had wanted to show an example from the U.S. Social Security Applications and Claims Index on which a woman was listed with multiple names. She has found an example. Here it is.
If you have any questions about it, please post them to the comments, so that others may benefit from Janice's answers.
If you have any questions about it, please post them to the comments, so that others may benefit from Janice's answers.
Tuesday, March 28, 2017
Number of weeks unemployed
There was a question recently about the duration of unemployment on the 1940 census. Sandy looked up the instructions to the enumerators. Here is what she found.
525. Column
27. If Seeking Work or Assigned to Public Emergency Work ("Yes" in Col.
22 or 23): Duration of Unemployment up to March 30, 1940-In Weeks.-There
must be an entry in col. 27 indicating the duration of unemployment in
weeks up to March 30, 1940, for each person who is seeking work ("Yes"
in col. 23) and each person on public emergency work ("Yes" in col. 22).
Col. 27 must be left blank unless "Yes" is entered in col. 22 or 23. Note that all entries are to be made in weeks even if the person has been unemployed for several years. (See table in par. 529).
529. The following table will assist you in calculating duration of unemployment:
Date last job ended or date person began seeking work | Weeks unemployed | Date last job ended or date person began seeking work | Weeks unemployed |
---|---|---|---|
March 15, 1940 | 2 | June 1, 1939 | 43 |
March 1, 1940 | 4 | May 1, 1939 | 48 |
February 15, 1940 | 6 | April 1, 1939 | 52 |
February 1, 1940 | 8 | January 1, 1939 | 65 |
January 15, 1940 | 11 | October 1, 1938 | 78 |
January 1, 1940 | 13 | July 1, 1938 | 91 |
December 15, 1939 | 15 | April 1, 1938 | 104 |
December 1, 1939 | 17 | January 1, 1938 | 117 |
November 1, 1939 | 22 | July 1, 1937 | 143 |
October 1, 1939 | 26 | January 1, 1937 | 169 |
September 1, 1939 | 30 | July 1, 1936 | 195 |
August 1, 1939 | 35 | January 1, 1936 | 221 |
July 1, 1939 | 39 |
Wednesday, March 22, 2017
Notes from census meeting - Day 3, part 2
Here are Irene's notes from the last day of our census meeting. Not very many of you left comments about how good the meeting was or how much you appreciated the work Janice and Irene put into their presentations. Please leave comments for them.
DEATH INDEXES: State Archives,
Departments of Health, etc.
See what’s
available on deathindexes.com
Look at time
frames covered in the indexes
Look at the
locations covered in the indexes
Judge how easy
the index is to use
·
How fast can you
find the search features?
·
How much time do
you have left to search on your soldier’s family?
·
Use CTRL F to
search and find instead of scanning and scrolling through a lot of information
Judge how
valuable the information will be compared to what you have already from the mil
info and what you’ve found on Ancestry and Family Search.
·
Will it improve
the quality code?
On indexes that
only give a name, death date and place with no other identifying information…
·
Use cautiously
·
Use when you have
narrowed down the likely death location (county)
·
Use when you have
narrowed the death down to a relatively short time span (between censuses)
·
Best for uncommon
names
·
Double check for
others of the same name (of all ages) in the census year preceding the death
Check the URLs
before saving to the tree and VCC death screen
·
When the URL
doesn’t link to the individual records, copy and paste the URL from the search
page and enter the search parameters in the ‘Other Information’ field on the tree
and in the ‘Remarks’ field on the VCC death screen
Maryland State Archives:
State-wide
coverage from 1898 – 1944
Choose
appropriate time frame and first letter of surname
Index cards are
arranged alphabetically by last name then by first name.
Since they take a
little longer to search, make sure it will be worth your time by following the
guidelines for using indexes that only give name, dath date and death place.
Do not use them
when…
·
When they moved
around a lot
·
When the name was
very common
·
When there was
more than 1 person with the same name in the county, especially in the census
year previous to the death.
·
When you already
have a death date and place from the mil info or another source like Find A
Grave.
Wednesday, March 15, 2017
Information from public family trees
Here is a note from Sandy about getting death information from public family trees.
Don't intermix public family tree info with better documented sources for your obits. Public tree info is QC 4, so you'd have to make your QC a 4 if you use any information that is found only on the public tree. For example, If you have only year of death on Find A Grave, and you find month and day of death in a public tree, you should enter only the year in the obit screen. You can put day and month in the remarks, but do not enter it as data.
Don't intermix public family tree info with better documented sources for your obits. Public tree info is QC 4, so you'd have to make your QC a 4 if you use any information that is found only on the public tree. For example, If you have only year of death on Find A Grave, and you find month and day of death in a public tree, you should enter only the year in the obit screen. You can put day and month in the remarks, but do not enter it as data.
Monday, March 13, 2017
Notes from census meeting - Day 3
Here are Janice's notes from "death day" at our census meeting. There might be more notes later. We'd like to thank Janice and Irene for all the work they put into preparing their presentations. They did an excellent job, and I think we all benefited from their knowledge. Additionally, Annie, Coralee, AnnaLisa, Chris, and Giles all presented to everyone or a small group and gave us some great information. Please use the comments to thank Irene and Janice for their great work.
DEATH RECORDS
Use
deathrecotds.com covers all 50 states and District of Columbus
● Statewide indexes are listed first
Ancestry
FamilySearch
State Archives and other sources
● Large cities generally have their own
listing
● Counties are listed following
statewide indexes
Types of death
records
● Mortality Schedules
List of people who died between June 1
of the year preceding the census to April 31th of the census year.
Mortality schedules
were taken along with population schedules during the 1850, 1860, 1870, and
1880 censuses, and in six states (Colorado, Florida, Nebraska, New Mexico,
North Dakota, and South Dakota) in 1885.
Information included the deceased name, age, sex, race,
marital status, birthplace, month of death, occupation, and cause of death.
Though part of the federal censuses, mortality schedules are separate from the
population schedules.
NATIONAL HOME FOR DISABLED VOLUNTEER SOLDIERS
Information we can get from the NHDVS
1.
Name of the hospital, admission and discharge dates
2.
Date of enlistment
3.
Company
4.
Age at time of enlistment
5.
Place of birth
6.
Occupation
7.
Marital Status
8.
Name and address of nearest relative
9.
Medical condition at time of admission
10. Date
and cause of death (if died in Mil home)
The records for 12 of the branches are covered in databases in
ancestry and family search
1.
Bath Branch, Bath, New York
2.
Battle Mountain Sanitarium, Hot Springs, South Dakota
3.
Central Branch, Dayton, Ohio
4.
Danville Branch, Danville, Illinois
5.
Eastern Branch, Togus, Maine
6.
Marion Branch, Marion, Indiana
7.
Mountain Branch, Johnson City, Tennessee
8.
Northwestern Branch, Milwaukee, Wisconsin
9.
Pacific Branch, Los Angeles, California
10. Roseburg
Branch, Roseburg, Oregon
11. Southern
Branch, Hampton, Virginia
12. Western
Branch, Leavenworth, Kansas
Don’t forget to use FamilySearch as a source for death records
SOCIAL SECURITY DEATH INDEX (SSDI)
Information we can get from the SSDI
1.
Name
2.
Date of birth
3.
Date of death
4.
Place and year social security number was issued
5.
Last residence or last benefit
Last Residence
is the last known address the SSA knew about when paying benefits
Last benefit
was the benefit paid to qualifying survivor, such as a spouse or a child
SOCIAL SECURITY APPLICATIONS AND CLAIMS INDEX
Information we can get from the SS Apps and Claims Index
1.
Name
2.
Race
3.
Birth date
4.
Birth place
5.
Parents
6.
When application was made and the name that was used
GOOGLE
When all else fails you might try Google
Wednesday, March 8, 2017
Notes from census meeting - Day 2
Here are the notes from today's presentations by Irene & Janice.
UNCERTAIN MATCHES: Sometimes the challenge is not finding children, but determining
if the match you found is good enough or if one possible match is better than
another.
Look for clues that might
strengthen a match or narrow down the number of possible matches
·
Birth month
·
Middle names and initials
·
Residence
·
Street names and addresses
·
Birthplace of parents
·
Race
·
Naming patterns -
·
Are children in census households named after the vet or anyone in
his family?
·
Surnames -
·
Does anyone in their census household match the vet’s surname, his
wife’s maiden surname or any other surnames seen in other family households?
·
Unique occupations -
·
Are they the same or similar to the vet’s or other family members?
·
Relatives on the same census page
·
Migration patterns -
·
Do they have the same migration pattern as other family members?
ex: They lived in Giles, TN and moved to Rostraver, PA
Search for other records that might prove or
disprove your possible matches.
WWI & WWII Draft
Registration Cards -
·
They usually include a birthdate,
birthplace (often the town or county), residence, occupation, nearest relative
or other contact person with addresses
·
Can search with an exact
birthdate
·
They can help sort out
others with the same name.
·
They can help identify a
son who moved to a different and unexpected location.
·
They can also be used to
locate the vet’s daughter if you know her husband’s name.
PROJECT 2
Searching tips:
● Use race/ nationality field with
caution
Indexed as Black, Negro, Colored,
Mulatto and even Chinese
● Extend birthdate range
● Be open to surname name changes
● As with all Southerners, First and
middle names as well as nicknames were often used interchangeably.
Freedman
Banking Records
● Established in 1868
● Failed in 1874
Cohabitation
Records
Alabama
Georgia
Kentucky
Mississippi
North Carolina
Tennessee
Virginia
Just now being digitized so states
better than others, currently Virginia records are the most complete.
Tuesday, March 7, 2017
Notes from census meeting - Day 1
Here are the notes Irene and Janice put together for their presentations.
NOTE KEEPING: Foundation for successful searching
·
Take detailed notes
·
A few extra minutes spent on keeping good notes can save more time
in the overall search for a soldier’s family and can increase find rates as
well.
·
Write information from the mil info in one color and write in
information from other sources in a different color.
·
See at a glance which info is from the mil info.
Fill in extra information as you come across it in the records
·
Names: Additional names, middle names and initials or alternative
name spellings
·
Birth info: Additional or alternative birth dates and places
·
Residences: Places lived and addresses or street names
·
Unique occupations
·
# of children living from the 1900 and 1910 censuses
·
Death dates and places
Keep track of potential relatives for later use
·
Grandchildren, nieces and nephews, spouses, siblings and parents
of the vet or his wife, witnesses, informants, next of kin, etc…
Highlight important information that you might use later.
ORGANIZATION TIPS: For smoother and faster searching
·
Bookmark all sites you use regularly
·
Search order
·
In general, search for the spouse first then work from the easiest
children to the hardest children.
·
If you’re finding nothing on a child or spouse, don’t spend too
much time on them. Put them on the backburner and move on to someone else. You
may come across them or across clues that may lead back to them while searching
for other family members. If you are able to find most family members quickly,
then you can allow extra time for going back to search that difficult family
member. However, if the search has been difficult and slow for many family
members, you will know that you shouldn’t spend much more time when you go back
to finish searching for that person.
Don’t get side-tracked
·
If you come across good information on a different person than the
one you are searching, write it down in your notes so you can refer back to it
later. If it’s a source and a certain match, add it to the tree, but go right
back to the person you were originally searching.
Use state county maps when needed
·
Use them to judge if a find is close to where the veteran’s family
was living.
·
Use them to see which counties border each other for efficient
adjacent county searches.
·
Create timelines
when needed
·
Form a mental narrative as you go
·
Use your narrative to direct your search.
·
Does the record you’ve found make sense and fit into the
narrative, timelines and patterns for the family?
·
If not, you may need to adjust your narrative or reject the
record.
SEARCHING TIPS
Be observant
and open minded
● Truncations with Ancestry
○ First and last character cannot both be a wildcard
○ There must be at least three non
wildcard characters
● Truncations with FamilySearch
○ First and last character can both be
wildcard
○ Can have as little as one letter and
a wildcard
● Types of Searches
○ First name search - works best with
unique first names or when last name is very common
○ Last name search - can search for two
surnames at a time or two truncations at a time, e.g. Sti*, Ste*
○ Parents names only search
■ Ancestry use “birth, marriage, death”
option under search
■ FamilySearch use “search with a
relationship” option
○ Street name search
■ Available on the 1910, 1920 and 1940
censuses, use keyword search in the 1930
■ Try variations, e,g, North State, No
State, State
○ Exact birthdate search
■ Use with anything that has an exact
date, e.g. SSDI, WWI, WWII draft registrations, death certificates, etc.
Things to be
aware of:
● Zero matches - Ancestry has a glitch
concerning independent cities, etc. FS doesn’t have those issues
● Conflicting results - resolve issues
by evaluating previous work and comparing evidence to new research
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