J. Hugh Sullivan wrote:
> > I was doing one of those RAOKs, looking up in my database and
> > fleshing out loose-ends for someone.
> >
> > Dropped by
wc.rootsweb.ancestry.com and ran the name. Found several
> > trees, apparently quoting one another, that appeared to have
> > conflated two women (mother and daughter) of very similar given
> > names. One had a death date a good 15 years after anything I had in
> > my database.
> >
> > Played further, checking that later death-date.
> >
> > OK, now I've got a problem. The state's Vital records says she died
> > 9 Oct 1913. But the county newspaper in an issue published in
> > October 1911 says she died the 8th.
> >
> > Cheryl Singhals<
sing...@erols.com>
>
> 1. I have found vital records that are incorrect.
> 2. If the newspaper is not the Crystal Ball I could not accept a
> forecast two years in advance.
Once saw a notice, written by a friend of the family, published on
the 28th, which claimed that 12-year-old whatsizname died 15th
proxima. Friend was using proxima to mean "nearest" not "next."
> You can't lose by using the paper and naming the source. You have
> eliminated yourself as the cause of any error and somebody,
> somewhere, will be pleased to tell you the date is wrong if they can
> prove it.
or even if they /can't/ but Momma said...
> Beyond that there is the Note section in most genealogy programs.
>
> No need to thank me...
Wouldn't like, ya know, dream of it.
Cheryl
singhals <
sing...@erols.com>