turf_tycoon 0 Report post Posted April 12, 2012 I expect the answer could be "whatever works for you" I have many Essex ancestors. In the past have purchased some microfiche of selected parishes and created a source for each unique register. That was ok when I was only working with 4 or 5 parishes and several registers for each parish. Now that the Essex Record Office have made images available online for virtually ALL Essex parishes, I'm re-thinking my approach. When Ancestry released it's London parish records I just created one source for each data set and then included details of the parish, record type, period etc in the Citation Detail. I suppose I could do the same with Essex Ancestors, as I am going to have many citations to enter. Sadly, in my quest for perfection I spend far too much time procrastinating over issues like these. Anyone care to offer some advice? Larry Share this post Link to post Share on other sites
Terry Reigel 0 Report post Posted April 12, 2012 Larry, Well, whatever works for you. The only case where I have lots of volumes like this is with deed books. In that case I create one source for the set at each location, and identify volume, page, and principals in the CD. Share this post Link to post Share on other sites
turf_tycoon 0 Report post Posted May 13, 2012 Thank-you to Terry for taking the time to reply. FWIW ... in the end I decided to go with one source per Register (I created a new Source Type for Parish Register - Online Images). After having done some ad-hoc lookups for Baptisms, Marriages or Burials where I already knew the date, I am now researching one Register at a time and compiling detailed lists of all entries that relate to surnames I am researching. Seeing as Essex Ancestors is neither a database nor an index, it seemed logical to treat each individual Register as a Source. I guess with many similar cases, it's "six of one, half a dozen of the other" - you either spend more time up front creating sources, or have to repeat some data in citations. Anyway, for anyone else using this great resource - that's what I decided to do! Share this post Link to post Share on other sites