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Rootsworks: SpreadsheetsCensus Readers of this series have endured many basic and generic Excel tips, wanting to get a better example of a genealogical application of spreadsheets. Today, we'll do just that.(*Note: Almost every article results in a note from someone asking if Mac Users can do this, too. It is my impression that my friends using Office 2001 for the Macintosh computer can do everything in this series, except the maps.)
How Bad is Your Census-itivity? You should know your census before you try to organize your census data. One of the great identifying things about the census is the collection of names in a household. There might be many Jesse Littrells, but they won't all live with a woman named Sarah and with a child named Robert. Even common first names are often distinguishable by the company they keep.
Every Story Tells A Picture It turns out there are at least four people named Jesse Littrell who were born between 1825 and 1840, who lived in either Lauderdale Co., AL, or Carroll Co., AR or both, and three of them were with a Sarah and the fourth was with a Sabra. Only by looking at their ages and the children's names was I able to reasonably tell them apart.
Where's the Data, We Want Data In the worksheet for each "Family" I listed the names of individuals, their birth and death dates (if known), and their birth state (if known) with a column for each person, and a row for each item. Below that, I started with the 1830 census and went through 1880 tracking each person from each of those families. I played around with using conditional formatting to tell me if a person aged less than nine or more than eleven years from one census to the next, or if (after 1850) the census said they were born in a different state from the previous census. I abandoned this practice as "Too Much Work" after proving the concept to myself. It was very easy to look at a given column and see for whom I needed to continue to look up records. If you have nothing under a given person for 1860, and you have good reason to believe that they were alive then, you would reasonably conclude that there was a census record someplace.
Can You Make a Positive Indexification?
Year - the census year
Link Me Up (more stars is better) Earlier in this series, I demonstrated that I'm the most Southern person I know. Using Excel maps, you can imagine my interest to learn that many of the people in Lauderdale and Carroll counties sympathized with the Union side, and that all of Jesse Sr's sons joined the 1st Arkansas Union Cavalry. By comparing Census and Military records, I learned that Joseph N, the son of John, was killed in action on 13 April 1864 at Carrollton, AR, in his home county. I reeled at the family's loss, and wondered again why they can't make a cigarette that makes you healthy, ice cream that makes you thin, and a war that doesn't take young men and women from their families. Excel is a great program, and genealogy is a wonderful pursuit, but things really fall into perspective sometimes. From what I can tell, Joseph, 20 years old at his death, lived almost three years after his father died in the same war.
Beau Sharbrough is the president of GENTECH, the founder of the GENTECH and FGS Web sites, and a founder of the Lexicon Working Group. He would like to hear from you at beau@sharbrough.net, but due to the volume of e-mail received, he is unable to answer every e-mail message received. Please note that he cannot assist you with your individual computer problems. Visit Beau's Web site for information about speaking engagements. Beau is the father of two college-age girls and is a proud graduate of Texas A&M University.
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