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I have cited a lot of military pensions for soldiers, widows, and minors. However, this pension contained the widow's application under two different soldiers. The first died during the Civil War and she applied as his widow in 1865. She quickly remarried, and her second husband, also a Union veteran, applied for a pension on his own behalf, as an invalid. The second husband died in 1886 and the widow applied as his widow. She married a third time and applied on behalf of her minor child from the second marriage. Then one last version was her third husband's application, as appointed guardian of the minor child.
So there are two soldiers to be cited in the same file.
I've written a citation, but would like to hear how others have handled it.
Janis Walker Gilmore
Pawleys Island, SC
Janis, I'm assuming you've
Janis, I'm assuming you've read p. 603 of the 2nd revised edition (EE 11.40), where this situation is discussed. The file that you would first identify in the citation is the file of the last pensioner, because that's the name under which one has to look to find all the preceding applications.
Am I correctly interpreting you to say
If so, then
Within this basic framework, you will also be citing individual documents: the widow's affidavit, the stepfather's letter or affidavit, or appointment or whatever. The specific document and date should be cited before the identification of the file, as shown in that Scoville example.
Yes, my "book" (electronic)
Yes, my "book" (electronic) has been open to page 603-604 for a couple of days now. : )
I do know to cite the individual documents.
I feel like I should have a better handle on citing this pension doc, as many as I have used.
Adeline's story:
The file was originally located through the pension index, under the second veteran, John Blackmer, which gave the following:
However, when pulled (by Nicole LaRue--thank you, Nikki), the file had the name "Lafayette Stauffer" written across it. This proved to be a previously unknown first marriage.
Adeline's application for her first Stauffer veteran was in the same file with the subsequent applications under Blackmer's service. So the number that I cite should be based on which original file the doc is from? If an affidavit from Adeline's widow's pension on the first vet, then cite those numbers, then append the Blackmer numbers? Etc.?
My favorite phrase in this very useful pension file was found in an affidavit attesting to the broken health of the second veteran: " . . . he was a small, scrawny, weakly man not able, nor did he ever to my knowledge pretend, to do a day's work."
Janis,
Janis,
In the original file, each claim would have been bundled, with a wrapper holding that set of papers together. Then all three would have been put into a single jacket. Normally, the jacket name would be the name of the last pensioner, with the earlier pensions filed within. But, of course, the file is likely to have been handled by many researchers down through the years and the arrangement is quite likely not to have be what it originally was.
Your record-puller, we assume, imaged everything. So: What does the jacket image say?