Tag-Archive for » Indexes «

05
Apr

I recently began a quest to find descendants for a friend.  I received the basic information and off I went in search of answers to a few basic questions.   When people give me information on a family, I always like to check what they give me for accuracy (facts do get mixed up sometimes).  One of the resources I love to use are obituaries.  Getting the snapshot on someone’s life can answer a lot of questions, it can also introduce more questions.

The best thing to remember about obituaries is that the information they provide also needs to be verified.  Nicknames, incorrect relationships and dates can add to the mystery.

Let’s come back to the family I was looking for, I found this most amazing obituary that not only told me basic information, but it provided the history of this person’s life with such details, that it made it so simple to verify it.

Not everyone has an obituary, but they might be mentioned in another obituary… thank goodness for indexes.  Yes there are flaws with indexes… but that’s a story for another day.

For more information on obituaries, I recommend you check out Hidden Sources by Laura Szucs Pfeiffer.

When I looked at my first courthouse index, shock and confusion are my strongest memories.  How was I suppose to find a person hopefully listed in this index if I could not even figure out how to use the index.

Indexes are suppose to be straight forward.  Sure you might have to look for alternative words to find what you are looking for, but in most cases, you go in alphabetical order.  Not so in some courthouse indexes.  The cryptic method of finding a person can make for what started as a nice genealogical research day into a nightmare.

Come forward in time, finding Courthouse Indexes Illustrated by Christine Rose, and reading how to navigate these indexes has made courthouse research so much easier.  Knowing that not all courthouse follow the same system, understanding that indexers may have recorded the entry you seek in a different order than what you had assumed, and accepting that not all indexes survive, has made for more productive courthouse research trips.