Crankypantsing

Seriously, Agatha?

Seriously, Agatha?

Sweep, sweeping, swept. The curving bits are only marginally better. Was she sleepwriting? Was her editor drunk?

I don’t read Agatha Christie often. The racism, sexism, and classism may be dismissable as typical for her social group at the time, but the older I get, the more appalling they become. But it was $1.99 in the Kindle
store, so I thought, “What the hell?”.

The hell, indeed. It has plenty of our old friends, sexism, racism, and classism, along with some new isms. It also contains some shockingly bad writing.

Genealogy

Double Entered

1861 Census of Canada

1861 Census of Canada

Both of these snippets are from the 1861 Census of Canada. Both of them are for my great great grandparents, Louis Charles Couvrette and Philoméne Chauvin. I wasn’t even looking for the second one, because I’d already found them, presumably living with her parents. But then I found a record that had been indexed under the name Celia Couvrette. Who the hell is Celia? So I looked, and lo and behold, Celia is really Louis C.

I don’t know the specific dates each census page was taken, so it’s possible that a small amount of time elapsed between them. Maybe they were visiting her parents, were enumerated there first, went home, and were enumerated a second time? Or maybe they were actually living with her parents, were enumerated, then moved to their own home before that area was enumerated?

We’ll never know. But either of those scenarios would reasonably explain why they were double entered. It would also sadly explain why some people get missed. Move in the opposite direction, and you don’t get enumerated at all.

Oh, and I’m totally amused at the description of his occupation: Capt. de Steamboat. Holy creole, Batman!

Photography

Feeling Virtuous

Big Salad #salads #veggies #food #holycarrotsbatman

Brussels Sprouts #brusselsprouts #food #veggies

Supper is a big salad with romaine, carrots, baby cucumbers, yellow pepper, and celery. I thought I had tomatoes, but I didn’t. Hmf.

Also shredded brussels sprouts sauteed in butter and olive oil, then drizzled with fresh lime juice.

Crankypantsing, Genealogy

Adventures in Genealogy

Minnesota State Population Census Schedule
1895 Minnesota State Population Census Schedule

Today’s adventures in genealogy haven’t been very exciting. I did turn up a great-great uncle who apparently spent some time in a mental hospital. (Lots of those in my family tree. Eeep!)

I’m not sure what the 0 in front of Alfred’s name indicates (or whether it’s an O or 0). It’s a code, and it surely has a specific meaning. For now I’m assuming it was used for folks who are not actually present in the household at the time of enumeration, but who the enumerator felt needed to be recorded.

I wish there were a way to find out more about why our ancestors were institutionalized, just to satisfy my own nosy curiosity. Alfred was supposedly a patient at what was then known as Fergus Falls Insane Asylum, which doesn’t look to have been a horrific place, but pictures can be deceiving. I’d love to know why he was there, and for how long. (The first photo was taken just five years after the above census, so it’s roughly contemporary with when Alfred was a patient there.)

Fergus Falls State Hospital circa 1900
Fergus Falls State Hospital circa 1900

Fergus Falls State Hospital
Fergus Falls State Hospital

Other than that, the most exciting part of my day was having a minor brain hemorrhage over how Legacy handles federal level census citations. It creates a master source for federal censuses at the county level. Totally bizarre. And I couldn’t get an explanation for why that was a good idea, when I asked about it in the Legacy user group.

The reason it’s a problem (in my opinion), is that instead of one master source for the entire US census for any given census year, Legacy will create a master for every single county. You could end up with hundreds of master records for every census year.

Why don’t they put the state and county level information in the source detail, where any logical person would expect it to be? That way you would have just one master source for each census year, the way the good lord intended.

I expect this is a “different people think differently” issue. Person A will solve a problem in a way that would never occur to Person B, but both will end up at the same end point eventually.

I wish someone could explain to me what benefit there is in Legacy’s handling of census master sources. Surely there has to be one? And it’s within the realm of possibility that there’s a good reason to do it their way, but so far, no one can explain it. The responses I’ve gotten have mostly been in the vein of, “You don’t have to do it their way.” No shit, Sherlock.

Genealogy

Logic Fail

Happy 2016! I’m starting the new year with a genealogy do-over. Since I had to migrate from Family Tree Maker to Legacy Family Tree, and since my sources and notes didn’t transfer as cleanly as I would have liked, I decided this was a good time to start over from scratch.

Assistant Preacher

Treasurer Assistant
1930 United States Federal Census, entry for Louis C. Couvrette

I am forever grateful to the folks who transcribe old records. Without them, searching for genealogical information would be a nightmare. However, sometimes I have to wonder what they’re smoking. The above transcription at Ancestry.com indicates that Louis Charles was an assistant preacher at a theatre. Does that make even a tiny bit of sense? No. No, it does not. Treasurer assistant makes much more sense, yes?

The scan of the original census page at Ancestry.com is really light and difficult to read, so I understand why the transcriber had trouble. Luckily for us researchers, though, all of the big repositories have made their own individual US census scans, so we aren’t stuck with the crappy scan available at Ancestry.com. I checked Family Search and Find My Past. Family Search had the best of the three, so that’s the one I used here for my illustration.

Lesson 1: Don’t trust transcriptions. They are several times removed from reality.

Lesson 2: If the US census scan provided by the repository you’re searching is illegible, try a different repository.