The Return of “What is a Source?”
Note: This article was published previously on the Genealogy’s Star blog site.
I looked back on the list of my blog titles and found that the last time I wrote about what is a source was in 2015. I wrote a very long blog post that few probably understood or read completely through. If you want to try, here is the link. https://genealogysstar.blogspot.com/2015/12/when-is-source-not-source.html
1 To every thing there is a season, and a time to every purpose under the heaven:2 A time to be born, and a time to die; a time to plant, and a time to pluck up that which is planted;
As these verses imply, all that you have done on your own “private and protected” family tree will just disappear when you die. Count on it!
So what should I do to preserve what I have researched about my family? Well, that is the main purpose of the FamilySearch.org Family Tree. It is a place where information can be stored and preserved for as long as anyone can imagine ever needing to look at that information. But you say, what about all the “changes” on the Family Tree. OK, so there are changes. However, FamilySearch already has another solution if you aren’t up to working in an open family tree. You can preserve your entire file by downloading or uploading you file to FamilySearch Genealogies. Here you own precious (reference to LOTR) information will be stored indefinitely and available without possibility of change to anyone who might be interested. It can also be searched.
https://www.familysearch.org/search/genealogiesBut now we have a different issue. You entered some information about one of your family members (in public or private) and now I am going to look at it and decide if I agree or not. If you tell me where you got the information, I am more likely to agree with you than not. But if I can’t see where the information came from, I have to consider the information to be wrong, inaccurate, or a mistake until I spend the time to verify the information from the original source. You solve both your own problem of recording where you found the information and my problem of being able to see where you information came from by adding a source. Looking back at that book about the Shepherd Families of New England, here is what would be usually considered to be your source (or my source, or whatever).
Shepard, Gerald Faulkner, and Donald Lines Jacobus. 1971. The Shepard families of New England. New Haven: New Haven Colony Historical Society.
This is a perfectly good citation of a source using the following style accepted by most genealogists.
University of Chicago Press. 2017. The Chicago manual of style.