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    State Names Change

    I was sure this had been discussed before, but a search did not turn up anything.

    A number of my wife's ancestors were born and/or lived in West Virginia. Some of them before it was West Virginia, back when it was still Virginia. When recording an event which occurred in West Virginia prior to 1863, what is the best way to record the state, as West Virginia (which didn't exist at that point) or Virginia? Or, maybe a better way of asking the question is how to record the state with the most accuracy and the least confusion?

    -----===== Bill =====-----

    #2
    Re: State Names Change

    I have a similar issue with state changes and county changes. What is the best way to post county's when they have been subdivided more than once?

    Comment


      #3
      Re: State Names Change

      Originally posted by Bill Guion View Post
      A number of my wife's ancestors were born and/or lived in West Virginia. Some of them before it was West Virginia, back when it was still Virginia. When recording an event which occurred in West Virginia prior to 1863, what is the best way to record the state, as West Virginia (which didn't exist at that point) or Virginia? Or, maybe a better way of asking the question is how to record the state with the most accuracy and the least confusion?
      I would enter it as Virginia (now West Virginia). Others may have a different suggestion.
      Sara Bradley Mason
      kywiaz at gmail dot com

      Comment


        #4
        Re: State Names Change

        Originally posted by Sara View Post
        I would enter it as Virginia (now West Virginia). Others may have a different suggestion.
        I would enter it as Virginia

        There is not, and never has been, a place called "Virginia (now West Virginia)".

        Roger
        Roger Moffat
        http://lisaandroger.com/genealogy/
        http://genealogy.clanmoffat.org/

        Comment


          #5
          Re: State Names Change

          Originally posted by Sara View Post
          [Bill Guion

          A number of my wife's ancestors were born and/or lived in West Virginia. Some of them before it was West Virginia, back when it was still Virginia. When recording an event which occurred in West Virginia prior to 1863, what is the best way to record the state, as West Virginia (which didn't exist at that point) or Virginia? Or, maybe a better way of asking the question is how to record the state with the most accuracy and the least confusion?]

          I would enter it as Virginia (now West Virginia). Others may have a different suggestion.
          According to masters of the craft, you should always use the place name current to the timeframe involved. Thus, your example would be: for a location (now in West Virginia, and before it was a state) should be referenced as part of Virginia because that is where those state level records will be found.

          Since much of my genealogy can be accurately traced for more than 500 years, I have MANY locations that no longer exist by their then known names. One such location is Salem, Massachusetts Bay Colony (ca 1690s.) Today, that location is Danvers, Massachusetts.

          And to be truly accurate, you should make note of the date of statehood, or county boundary changes and work that information into the storyline.
          Arnold
          -----
          RESEARCHING: FRIESLAND (Holland); NEW BRUNSWICK (Canada); Maine, NYS & NJ (USA)

          Comment


            #6
            Re: State Names Change

            Originally posted by AE Palmer View Post
            According to masters of the craft, you should always use the place name current to the timeframe involved. Thus, your example would be: for a location (now in West Virginia, and before it was a state) should be referenced as part of Virginia because that is where those state level records will be found.

            Since much of my genealogy can be accurately traced for more than 500 years, I have MANY locations that no longer exist by their then known names. One such location is Salem, Massachusetts Bay Colony (ca 1690s.) Today, that location is Danvers, Massachusetts.

            And to be truly accurate, you should make note of the date of statehood, or county boundary changes and work that information into the storyline.
            Arnold,

            Thank you. This is almost exactly the idea I had developed, but two problems prevented me from going this way.

            Problem 1 you solved - how to express these facts. It is clearly easy to say "Clarksburg, Harrison, Virginia" in the data recording field, and then explain that in 1863 West Virginia was created from Virginia and Clarksburg is now in West Virginia in the comments area.

            Problem 2 I suspect is personal - How do I find out what this town, county, ect., was known as in 1850? Was it Clarksburg, Harrison, Virginia, or was it in fact known by some other name? Another aspect of this is that some sources, especially on-line sources, use the current names, not the names in effect at that time.

            Again, thanks for supporting my concept. I'll have to come to grips with the rest of this on my own. But, if someone knows of a source where I can find the names of cities and counties in the past, I'd appreciate knowing what that source is.

            -----===== Bill =====-----

            Comment


              #7
              Re: State Names Change

              Originally posted by Bill Guion View Post
              .........How do I find out what this town, county, ect., was known as in 1850? Was it Clarksburg, Harrison, Virginia, or was it in fact known by some other name? Another aspect of this is that some sources, especially on-line sources, use the current names, not the names in effect at that time............
              An awful lot of places have historical societies and local genealogy groups with websites that have such information. Many of these can be found by digging into Cyndi's List (http://www.cyndislist.com/us/) or just using Google. I have found that most Wikipedia articles about cities, villages, counties, etc., etc., have this information (https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Main_Page). Another good starting point for searching is RootsWeb (http://home.rootsweb.ancestry.com). Happy hunting!
              Last edited by Bob White; 26 April 2017, 09:06 AM. Reason: Added URL's
              Bob White, Mac Nut Since 1985, Reunion Nut Since 1991
              Jenanyan, Barnes, White, Duncan, Dunning, Luce, Hedge and more
              iMac/MacBookAir M1 - iPhonePro/iPadPro - Reunion13 & RT

              Comment


                #8
                Re: State Names Change

                Originally posted by Bill Guion View Post
                Arnold,

                Thank you. This is almost exactly the idea I had developed, but two problems prevented me from going this way.

                // cut //

                Problem 2 I suspect is personal - How do I find out what this town, county, ect., was known as in 1850? Was it Clarksburg, Harrison, Virginia, or was it in fact known by some other name? Another aspect of this is that some sources, especially on-line sources, use the current names, not the names in effect at that time.

                // cut //

                -----===== Bill =====-----
                I have found that the Google Earth app is useful in solving border changes in that it has a historical border timeline feature. This timeline starts in the 1600s and ends in present time. As you move the timer, the borders change in accordance with governmental activity. In all, it is very handy in resolving those sometimes mysterious boundary changes one encounters.
                Arnold
                -----
                RESEARCHING: FRIESLAND (Holland); NEW BRUNSWICK (Canada); Maine, NYS & NJ (USA)

                Comment


                  #9
                  Re: State Names Change

                  Originally posted by Bill Guion View Post
                  Problem 2 I suspect is personal - How do I find out what this town, county, ect., was known as in 1850? Was it Clarksburg, Harrison, Virginia, or was it in fact known by some other name?
                  This is one of the goals of the FamilySearch Place Research Tool. It links various names for a single location together and identifies when the name changes occurred. Unfortunately, it's very much a work in progress. In the case of Clarksburg, it does show that Clarksburg, Harrison, Virginia is the same place as Clarksburg, Harrison, West Virginia, but it does not give the date of the change. It also sometimes shows connections only in one direction (for example, the record for Stettin, Prussia lists Szczecin, Poland as an alternate name, but the record for Szczecin does not list Stettin). I believe WeRelate.org was trying to crowd-source a similar place name database at some point, but I haven't checked in on that work in ages.
                  Brad Mohr
                  https://bradandkathy.com/genealogy/

                  Comment


                    #10
                    Re: State Names Change

                    This site might be helpful: Google: ATLAS OF HISTORICAL COUNTY BOUNDARIES. This is thru the Newberry Library. Choose a state and then there are some choices for interactive maps. Hope this helps.
                    Kaye
                    Kaye Mushalik
                    -Muschalik (Poland), Stroop, Small (Ireland), Fitzsimons/Fitzsimmons (Ireland) Pessara/Pesaora/Pesarro/Pizarro (from Germany)
                    -Dorrance, Eberstein, Bell
                    -Late2015iMac27"Retina5K, MacOS10.14, iOS12.1, R12, Safari12.0

                    Comment


                      #11
                      Re: State Names Change

                      Originally posted by AE Palmer View Post
                      And to be truly accurate, you should make note of the date of statehood, or county boundary changes and work that information into the storyline.
                      I've been using the notes field in the places sidebar for some of this information.
                      Attached Files
                      Dennis J. Cunniff
                      Click here to email me

                      Comment


                        #12
                        Re: State Names Change

                        Originally posted by Dennis J. Cunniff View Post
                        I've been using the notes field in the places sidebar for some of this information.
                        And it would be fantastic if we could link up media items here - pictures of olde farms or houses or other places our family members lived and worked...

                        Roger
                        Roger Moffat
                        http://lisaandroger.com/genealogy/
                        http://genealogy.clanmoffat.org/

                        Comment


                          #13
                          Re: State Names Change

                          if the document you are looking at (census, will, deed, etc.) says West Virginia, then you cite it as West Virginia. If it says Virginia, then cite it as Virginia. Best practice is to use existing place name at the time document was created.
                          Donald W. Moore
                          Virginia Beach, Virginia

                          Comment


                            #14
                            Re: State Names Change

                            So based on the above recommendations, "Ft. Boonesborough, KY" would be "Ft. Boonesborough, VA" prior to June 1, 1792, correct? What about prior to June 12, 1776 as Ft. Boonesborough was founded in 1774/1775? Colony of Virginia? Royal Colony of ...?
                            Dennis B. Swaney
                            Prescott, AZ

                            MacOS 10.13.6; MacOS 12.6; iOS 16; iPadOS 12 & 16

                            Comment


                              #15
                              Re: State Names Change

                              Originally posted by Bill Guion View Post
                              Arnold,

                              Problem 1 you solved - how to express these facts. It is clearly easy to say "Clarksburg, Harrison, Virginia" in the data recording field, and then explain that in 1863 West Virginia was created from Virginia and Clarksburg is now in West Virginia in the comments area.

                              Problem 2 I suspect is personal - How do I find out what this town, county, ect., was known as in 1850? Was it Clarksburg, Harrison, Virginia, or was it in fact known by some other name? Another aspect of this is that some sources, especially on-line sources, use the current names, not the names in effect at that time.

                              -----===== Bill =====-----
                              1. You could insert a note as explanation. But I always just use the place name as cited in the source I'm looking at.

                              2. If the author did not cite the place name as it was at the time, then the research is shoddy at best.
                              Donald W. Moore
                              Virginia Beach, Virginia

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