Forums
I've read EE 2.24 - 2.31, but it didn't seem to answer how to cite film numbers for online images of film at FamilySearch.
Then I saw the first reference note on page 439, EE 9.6, where the film number is part of the quotation in the citing part of the note.
Then I looked at the fourth reference note on page 469, EE 9.42, where no film number is given as part of the quotation in the citing part of the note. Checking the FamilySearch website, I saw that a film number was given for the image, it being 2,138,819.
Any reason why the film number is in one reference note but not the other? Is it just personal preference? The focus of the 9.6 example is the actual document while the focus of the 9.42 example is the database; is that the difference? If so, why does that lead to the film number being included or not included?
Newonash,
Newonash,
Which edition of EE are you using? I'm on the road tilling in other fields this week--with a laptop that has only the 2012 edition. There, under 9.6, p. 439, neither of the first reference notes on that page deal with filmed material.
To answer your question as a general principle: It depends. The providers differ in the data they provide and the manner in which they provide it. For example:
If, perhaps, your 9.6 reference intends to refer to the Sebring-Shown database entry from Ancestry on p. 438 (rather than 439) of the 2012 edition, then that is yet another instance in which Ancestry has reworked its collection, given it a new title covering a new time frame, and created a database entry that doesn't identify the original book and page.
I used the third edition for
I used the third edition for my question.
EE 9.6, page 439:
1. Vigo County, Indiana, Marriage Records, vol. 62:16, Lee Shick - Alice Taylor, 28 March 1923; image, "Indiana, Marriages, 1811-1959," FamilySearch (https://familysearch.org/pal:/MM9.3.1/TH-1961-31704-3114-65?cc=1410397 : accessed 1 April 2015); citing "Vigo County; FHL microfilm 001905907."
EE 9.42, page 469:
4. "Texas Deaths, 1890-1976," database with images, FamilySearch (https://familysearch.org/pal:/MM9.3.1/TH-1951-25172-124198-11?cc=1983324 : accessed 1 April 2015), certificate image, Walter Preston Morse, 31 January 1942, no. 2908, citing "State Registrar Office, Austin."
Dennis, I'll respond this
Dennis, I'll respond this weekend, when I'm back in my office wearing my EE3 hat.
Dennis, thanks for your
Dennis, thanks for your patience in waiting until I returned to my office. You have noted that the source-of-the-source portion of the example at 9.6 includes an FHL microfilm number, while the source-of-the-source portion of the example at 9.42 does not. You ask: "Any reason why the film number is in one reference note but not the other? Is it just personal preference?"
No, it's not just personal preference. The fundamental difference is this
Therefore, when we create the source-of-the-source layer and we say that FamilySearch is "citing" thus-and-such, we cite what FamilySearch actually identifies.
Yes, we can go sleuthing in the FHL catalog and find a set of film that appears to be the same, but the film is arranged by volume numbers and FHL's identification of the digitized image does not identify a volume number. If we are at FHL we can do trial-and-error to find the right roll, by which we can confirm that the document on the film is the same as the digitized record we've used that does not identify the film roll. However, if we're logging onto FamilySearch from Kalamazoo, Podunk, or Peoria and we assume that one record set is the same as another—simply because the title seems to be the same—then many times we will be matching apples with peas and end up creating Mississippi caviar instead of applesauce.
Bottom line:
Thanks for the clarification.
Thanks for the clarification.
Sure, Dennis. That's the
Sure, Dennis. That's the point of this forum.