#1
|
||||
|
||||
Genealogy "do-over"
I've just come across this blog that suggests going back to the beginning and starting your tree all over again and doing it properly ie recording all the sources and evidence at time of "finding" etc
http://www.geneabloggers.com/announc...ealogy-doover/ He talks some sense - I own up to not having recorded all my sources and those that are cited are not always done the correct way and some are recorded twice due using different software. I have on several occasions made desultory attempts to clean up my tree but more often than not get side tracked into new research . But as much as I like the idea of a fresh start I'm really not sure that I could it, that initial thrill that I had when I started has dissipated and I think it would become as much of a chore as editing the existing tree! Has anyone here ever gone back to the beginning or considered it?
__________________
Sue |
#2
|
||||
|
||||
Well, he says his reason for doing this is "Did you start your research the same way I did, by just collecting names, grabbing stuff from other online trees, or pasting text into your genealogy software?"
I should think for anybody who started that way and hasn't thoroughly checked everything, it would be a good idea to go back and check, but if you have checked everything from the start, I don't think you would exactly need to start all over again. But I do go back through my tree reviewing it all the time, seeing if there is anything new I can add to each person's entry, any more children I can find for a couple, etc, since new stuff is becoming available all the time.
__________________
KiteRunner Family History News updated 21st May Lancashire Non-conformist records new on Ancestry |
#3
|
|||
|
|||
I haven't begun again but I'm grateful for the "Take one great grandparent" etc. threads - all my direct ancestors are quite tidy and presentable now as I have had to review them and smarten them up for public consumption.
|
#4
|
|||
|
|||
Quote:
I couldn't start again, but I do try to tidy up my direct line. For some families I draw up a timeline. It is quite interesting to see the overlap of generations. |
#5
|
||||
|
||||
Quote:
I think I have sources recorded for 99.9% of the info on my tree. That's not to say I wouldn't do it differently if I started again, but that ain't happening! One I would do differently is to use the facility on my tree program to record what I need to do next when I get stuck with a person/family. I should make more of an effort to record info about my parents as I rather glossed over them in my rush to go backwards!
__________________
Merry "Something has been filled in that I didn't know was blank" Matthew Broderick WDYTYA? March 2010 |
#6
|
||||
|
||||
Probably thirty years ago, I attended a lecture where I was told I was doing everything all wrong, and I should do it in a different way. So I started this new method. It was rubbish.
My old, pre-computer, method listed all my research in chronological order, cross referenced to index cards, supported by hand-drawn, dated trees. The new method lasted about a year, but I never went back to my old ways. To save time, I transferred the trees onto computer (pre internet) but of course not quite everything went on. In the current absence of a home computer, so no access to my computer data, I have been sorting out my papers. I have a HUGE box of unfiled materials and the answers to several urgent questions that have been bugging me. Go back to the start, AGAIN? No way. This is my tree, for my amusement. As others have said, take one x grandparent has been excellent for focussing on dim and dusty aspects of my tree, but any refinement will be piecemeal, not wholesale. Besides which, I have a certain smugness in the solutions which are not online, that I but nobody else has found, and nobody else has ever queried.
__________________
The chestnuts cast their flambeaux |
#7
|
|||
|
|||
I'm just trying to get all my paperwork filed properly and it's a nightmare - I keep getting side-tracked - so starting at the beginning would be a no-no for me.
However I am trying to tidy up my online trees (several) and seeing what's missing. As most records are attached then it should be correct. Have just gone back onto Take one x grandparent etc and Kite has already helped me. Thanks Kite.
__________________
|
#8
|
|||
|
|||
I sort of did! My tree was on paper - pre internet research. I decided to put it on Tribal Pages and because I had to enter everything that gave me a chance to check and look into holes that I'd left.
I do wish I had done proper sources and citations but it was SO BORING. My paper tree does have copious notes about where I looked and where I found things so I can usually back up my info if challenged! (Which I never, ever am). OC |
#9
|
||||
|
||||
I think the reason this blog attracted me was because I had to redo a large part of my tree earlier this year after a massive computer failure and then discovering that my perfectly backed up FTM file wouldn't open on my new, all singing, dancing Microsoft Surface. I invested in Legacy (brilliant, by the way!) and downloaded an incomplete tree from Ancestry and began the task of re-entering a large amount of my tree checking sources and citations as I went. But I still don't think I could start completely from scratch - far too soul destroying!
As an aside I found the Take 1x gt grandparent etc very helpful in re - entering my tree!
__________________
Sue |
#10
|
||||
|
||||
The thought of starting again is horrifying.
I do go back and visit the main, and interesting (not always the same thing) parts of my tree to see if there is new information online so I do check what I have done in that respect. I would not do it all again though.
__________________
Toni |
|
|