Member Login
Username Password (Forgot?)

Message Boards

You are here: Message Boards > Topics > Methods > Genealogical Numbering System > Ahnentafels as IDs, Sharon Carmack
Names or Keywords
All Boards   Genealogical Numbering System - Family History & Genealogy Message Board

Ahnentafels as IDs, Sharon Carmack

  Replies: 17

Re: Ahnentafels as IDs, Sharon Carmack

calvinculver  (View posts) Posted: 22 Apr 2007 7:15PM GMT
Classification: Query
Jillaine -

Sounds like we've worked out pretty similar systems. I organize my documents primarily by family, secondarily by document type. I don't have enough documents, in most cases, to justify a separate binder for each family name, so I generally keep several names together in one folder (in separate sections, not mingled).

To each document I assign a code consisting of the first three letters of the family name, a three-letter code for the document type, then a 3-digit document number assigned sequentially as I add documents. If the document is multi-paged, I add a fourth field indicating page number. Thus, for example:

CUL-COR-017-002

would be page 2 of a correspondence (letter, e-mail, etc.) about Culvers.

(Later, it occurred to me my 3-letter name code should be the first three consonants of a name; this would facilitate keeping variant spellings -- e.g., Colver/Culver -- together. But it's too late to change now.)

I also digitize everything. This both allows me to easily share copies of documents, and minimizes the need to handle fragile stuff (e.g., my collection of 200-year-old family letters). My digitized scans are organized into folders by family name, and sub-folders by document type. Each computer file is just given the document code as its filename.

In my folders, I manually maintain an index page for each sections with the document name and a brief description. (On computer, the index is given document number 0; e.g., CUL-DEA-000 is the index of Culver death documents.) Again, I don't generally have so many documents that a quick visual scan of the index sheet won't locate things for me.

The system works well as long as a document is specific to a family; rather less well when it either relates to multiple families or is, say, geographically based (e.g., Atwater's The History of New Haven, Connecticut). In that case, I usually just choose a family to assign it to, then include a cross-reference to it on each concerned family's index sheet (e.g., my Bartsch index might have an entry saying "See also RIC-BIR-022").

-CJE Culver
  << Prev  |  Viewing 11 - 18 of 18
SubjectAuthorDate Posted
leekaiwen 5 Jul 2004 3:46PM GMT 
Hugh_Watkins 5 Jul 2004 4:09PM GMT 
Dina_Grozev 3 Jul 2004 6:09AM GMT 
leekaiwen 4 Jul 2004 7:25AM GMT 
Hugh_Watkins 4 Jul 2004 8:32AM GMT 
Jillaine_Smit... 20 Feb 2005 9:40PM GMT 
christiedunna... 22 Apr 2007 2:03AM GMT 
calvinculver 22 Apr 2007 7:15PM GMT 
   
Results per page    << Prev  |  Viewing 11 - 18 of 18

Find a Board

Page Tools