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Organize Your Family History

Stay focused and happy while exploring your roots

How I handle married women in my files

March 29, 2022 By Janine Adams 8 Comments

Today I had what I thought was a great idea to write about how I handle married women in my digital files in my own research. But I searched my blog and discovered I’d written about just over a year ago! I still think it’s an interesting topic, so I’m re-running the original post, slightly edited. One thing I discovered with the comments to the original post is that the way I do it may not be the standard way! Most, if not all, of the commenters last year said that they organize the women in their family trees by their birth surname. (I object to the term “maiden name” so will stick to my preferred term, “birth name.”)

I’m by no means saying my way is the right way, but it’s worked well for me for years. I encourage you to read the comments to the original post (linked above), to see how the dozen or so commenters are handling their female ancestors and relatives.

Handling the females in your family tree

Most of the women in our family trees changed their name at some point or another. That can present an organizational conundrum in the files we keep for them. I thought I’d let you know how I handle it in my digital filing system. As always, I’m not telling you the right way to do anything. I just want to share how I do it, because it’s worked well for me.

In a nutshell, I file women under their married surname. (By contrast, in my genealogy software, Reunion, all the women are listed by their birth names and if I don’t know their birth name, I leave the surname blank.) As I describe in the post How I Process a Downloaded Document, I have surname folders on my hard drive for each of the surnames I have researched and within each folder I have folders for individual people. The folders for individuals contain the source documents pertaining to that person. (I have a separate Collateral folder within which the surname folders for collateral relatives are filed using the same folder structure.)

Here’s how I name women’s folders:

Last Name (Birth Name), First Name (YOB-YOD). So the folder for one of my second great grandmother’s folder is called Garlock (Ten Eyck), Anna (1832-1910). It resides in the Garlock Surname folder, as shown in the screenshot above.

If I find a relative before she’s married, I’ll use her birth surname for filing purposes. But once I’ve found marriage documents, I’ll rename and move her folder to her married surname.

It seems pretty straight forward, but of course, things like multiple marriages can make it more complicated. For my direct-line ancestors, it’s easy. I use the surname associated with the spouse who is my direct line. (If it’s a second or later marriage, I don’t typically use the first married name in the folder name, I just use the birth name.)

But for collateral relatives, where there isn’t necessarily a married name that is more relevant to me than the other married names, I typically just use the first married surname that I find and leave it like that.  Sometimes I make exceptions, especially for women who were married multiple times and for whom I have trouble keeping track of their various married names. For example, Leonora Adams, the daughter of my much-researched second great grandfather George Washington Adams, was married four times. I file her within the Adams Collateral folder using the folder name “Adams, Leonora (Lochry Stevens Good Ward), 1877-1962.”

Again, I’m not suggesting this is the best way to do it, but it works for me. I pretty much developed my system as I went along. And, as in almost all things, I allow myself to be imperfect about it. That means that  there may be inconsistencies in my folder structure. But I have enough of a solid infrastructure that the inconsistencies don’t bother me.

Writing this makes me want to go through my folders–particularly for the collateral relatives–and perhaps correct any inconsistencies. But I’m comfortable leaving them as is until I get around to doing that.

I’d love to hear in the comments how you handle the name changes of women in your files. And are there any situations I didn’t cover here that you’re curious about? Feel free to ask in the comments.

For more in-depth information on how I organize my own genealogy, check out How I Do It: A Professional Organizer’s Genealogy Workflow, a 37-page downloadable available for $19.99.

Filed Under: Challenges, My family, Organizing Tagged With: electronic files, organizing aids

The bright side of the backlog

March 25, 2022 By Janine Adams 2 Comments

I often post here about having a backlog of documents that I need to deal with. When I get on a roll, I tend to download documents willy nilly, rather than pausing to process each one before downloading another. I do always rename the file as soon as I download it and put it in my Surnames folder. That list of unprocessed documents used to stress me out or at the very least make me feel like a bad genealogist.

Before I focused on my backlog during the January 30 x 30 challenge, I had 88 documents to process! (By process, I mean extracting facts from the document, entering them into my database on Reunion and creating a source citation that is used for each fact.)

By the end of the January 30 x 30 challenge (well, actually by the first week in February), my backlog was gone. And since then I’ve been focusing on watching RootsTech classes and prepping for the 1950 census release, so I haven’t been adding to the backlog since then.

It felt great to clear out the backlog. But I realized something that surprised me: I kind of miss my backlog. What? Here’s the bright side to having a letting documents pile up. When I have a backlog, I always have a mini-genealogy project at the ready. I just pick a document and process it. (I actually enjoying processing documents, so it’s not a hardship.) I don’t have to figure out what/who I want to research in a given session.

Now that I have no backlog, I have to get focused on some research questions. Weirdly, I feel a little like I’m starting from scratch.

So here’s what I decided today: I’m going to allow myself to build a backlog of up to ten documents without feeling guilty about it. But when I hit ten, I will stop looking for more and start processing what I have. I’m calling it the Rule of Ten. I imagine there will be times when I have more than ten in a given session. But I will whittle it down to below ten in the next one.

This feels really good to me and I can’t wait to see if it works out well!

Filed Under: Challenges, Genealogy tips, Reflections Tagged With: organizing aids, research, source documentation

Quick Tips #34: Brainstorm variations of your ancestors’ names

March 18, 2022 By Janine Adams Leave a Comment

Here’s the next in my occasional series of bite-size Quick Tips. Click on the Quick Tips tag for my other Quick Tips. Because I tend to write longer posts, I wanted to provide a quick-to-read (and quick-to-write) post every couple of weeks on a small topic that pops into my head. This one might be helpful when you dive into the 1950 census.

Brainstorm variations of your ancestors’ names

With the release of the 1950 U.S. census less than two weeks away, now seems like a good time to suggest that you take a moment to come up with alternative ways your ancestors’ names may have been spelled–or interpreted by indexers–on documents. Once you have your list, you can use the different variants when searching at the various online site, like Ancestry, Family Search, the NARA 1950 census site, MyHeritage, and Newspapers.com.

Variations might include:

  • First and middle names
  • Initials in place of first name
  • First initial, middle name
  • Phonetic spellings
  • Possible misinterpretations of handwritten letters — I talk about this in my blog post, Sometimes you gotta browse.

If you’re compiling your list of ancestors to look for on the 1950 census, it might be smart to add these variations–then hang on to them for future searches.

Photo by Sam Dan Truong on Unsplash

Filed Under: Genealogy tips Tagged With: planning, quick tips

30 x 30 check-in time!

March 15, 2022 By Janine Adams 4 Comments

It’s the middle of the month. How’s your 30 x 30 challenge going? Please let us know in the comments!

I have to admit, I’m not having a great month for genealogy research. It’s disappointing, because I really do want to take in a bunch of RootsTech classes and I also want to prep for the 1950 census release in just a couple of weeks. But sometimes life gets in the way of enjoyable activities.

My 92-year-old aunt is having some health difficulties and I’m her Power of Attorney so I’ve been kept very busy arranging for and monitoring her care from afar. I’m glad to do it but after taking care of my aunt and my business I don’t have a lot of extra time.

I’m so glad I didn’t procrastinate too much on my census prep. I’ve been able to identify some enumeration districts for some of my people, in case the name indexes don’t give me what I need. I’ve managed to research or watch RootsTech classes only 10 of the last 15 days. Disappointing, but unavoidable. I’m just going to do what I can and not beat myself up.

I hope some of you have had a better go of it and that if you haven’t your being kind to yourself about it! I hope to take in at least a few classes before the end of the month.

Filed Under: Challenges Tagged With: 30 x 30, time management

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about me

I'm Janine Adams, a professional organizer and a genealogy enthusiast. I love doing family history research, but I find it's very easy for me to get overwhelmed and not know where to turn next. So I'm working hard to stay organized and feel in control as I grow my family tree.

In this blog, I share my discoveries and explorations, along with my organizing challenges (and solutions). I hope by sharing what I learn along the way I'll be able to help you stay focused and have fun while you do your research, too.

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