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I often find it difficult to determine the jurisdiction level (i.e. county or state) to use when creating a citation for online imaged documents, particularly vital records.
For example, at EE 9.33 County-level Certificates: Online Databases & Images (County Level) (EE, 1st ed., p. 459), example #3 for child "Infant Day." The jurisdiction as lead element in the citation is Shelby County, Tennessee. Looking at this record online {1}, it is a typical death certificate stating at the top "State of Tennessee, State Board of Health, Bureau of Vital Statistics, Certificate of Death." Place of Death is listed as Shelby County.
Does the fact that this record is actually at the Shelby County website, gives credence to using that place as the jurisdiction? What if this same imaged certificate was found in an Ancestry.com collection for Tennessee Death Records? My tendency would be to specify the jurisdiction as Tennessee, and include the agency per the QuickCheck Model on p. 430.
{1} https://register.shelby.tn.us/imgView.php?imgtype=pdf&id=11419220511SUNKNOWN
Thanks,
Jeff
Jeff, yours is the most…
Jeff, yours is the most common dilemma researchers face when they use vital records imaged online. We’ve had a number of discussions on this in the forum across the years. This time, let’s try to dissect the issue in a different way.
EE 9.33 "County-level Certificates" (which you cite) lays out the essential elements for citing a vital record. Those essentials are
An important takeaway here is this: The creator and the repository are not always the same.
EE 9.1. “Basic Issues” (things relevant specific to the kind of records in this chapter) tells us this:
"The basic issues that determine the structure of your citations in this record category will be
With regard to the first bullet, the fact that you are obtaining this at the website of the Shelby County Recorder, not a state-level website, does tell you that you are viewing the local copy.
With regard to the last bullet, let's examine the underpinnings of 9.33's example for an online image: example 3 at page 459.
Re the QuickCheck Model on p. 430: That is for citing a record you have received directly from the agency from which you requested it. In other words: you know, from your own experience, that this exact record exists at this exact place you are citing. With online images, however, we don't know that. The provider's source-of-the-source data could (and sometimes does) err.
Thanks for clarifying,…
Thanks for clarifying, especially the usage of the QuickCheck Model on p. 430. It seems to me that FHL microfilms (and the online images of them) give good source data in the first few frames of the film.
Jeff
Yes, Jeff. The initial…
Yes, Jeff. The initial images of each microfilm (or each "item" on a film) produced by GSU/FHL provide us with information essential to understanding our source and identifying it correctly. Ditto for film produced by the National Archives. Across the past decade of online images, FamilySearch has also labored to give us sound citations for many of their offerings.