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I find it disconcerting that in their new cataloging scheme Family Search is disconnecting their content from the original microfilms. How can we write a proper citation without, in ES Mills' terminology, providing the "source of the source?" How do we know that a record is genuine unless we know where repositories such as Ancestry and Family Search got their images? (I know, I know: these websites are purposely setting themselves up to be publishers of record and obscuring their sources)
Here is a recent citation I created that I believe is properly complete:
Jefferson County, Ohio, Marriage Certificates, No. 4 (1831-1834), p.117; Family Search IGN 4701465, image 708; Digitization of FHL microfilm 900072, “Marriage records, v. 1-4, 1803-1838,” filmed by the Genealogical Society of Salt Lake City, Utah, at the Probate Court, Jefferson County Courthouse, Steubenville, Ohio, on 11 April 1972, from the official records (information provided on image 2 of the digitized microfilm).
Comments anybody?
Dave
Ah, yes, Dave. Change is…
Ah, yes, Dave. Change is disconcerting; and, when we’re working on a long-term project, changes by a provider can cause inconsistencies in the citations in our database. That said, it happens and we can't change that.
You ask: “How do we know that a record is genuine unless we know where repositories such as Ancestry and Family Search got their images?” In the case at hand, FamilySearch does tell us where the images came from: Jefferson County, Ohio, Probate Court. While some providers leave us without an inkling, at FamilySearch I've never found an instance in which FS did not identify provenance.
In answer to your broader concern: In our working notes, after we clearly provide the essentials, we may add to a citation any and all information that we wish to add. At publication by a journal or commercial/academic book publisher, we would be expected to follow a specific style—which means we would trim each citation to the essentials.
For the source you have used, an Evidence Style citation would be this (with alterations in red):
1. Jefferson County, Ohio, “Marriage Certificates, [Vol.] No. 4, 1831–1838,” p. 117; imaged, FamilySearch (https://www.familysearch.org : accessed 9 June 2024), IGN 4701465 > item 4 > image 708 of 792; citing Jefferson County Probate Court, Steubenville.
Or, to include the original microfilm number, we would add the layer marked in red, below:
1. Jefferson County, Ohio, “Marriage Certificates, [Vol.] No. 4, 1831–1838,” p. 117; imaged, FamilySearch (https://www.familysearch.org : accessed 9 June 2024), IGN 4701465 > item 4 > image 708 of 792; imaged from Family History Library microfilm 900072; citing Jefferson County Probate Court, Steubenville.
To highlight the layers that are involved, I’ll recolor each layer differently:
1. Jefferson County, Ohio, “Marriage Certificates, [Vol.] No. 4, 1831–1838,” p. 117; imaged, FamilySearch (https://www.familysearch.org : accessed 9 June 2024), IGN 4701465 > item 4 > image 708 of 792; imaged from Family History Library microfilm 900072; citing Jefferson County Probate Court, Steubenville.
The template that applies is Template 10: Online Image (No Named Database).
To explain the alterations:
Note also two other items: