What are people's top tips for books and sites that describe the methods we can use to do genealogy and family history that's UK-based?
I don't mean books that describe the information (e.g. 'My Ancestor was an X' or 'Tracing your Z-shire Ancestors' or even Mark Herber's 'Ancestral Trails'). Rather I'm after the methods we use to stick it all together. How to develop a research plan? (What is a Research Plan?) How do you know when you've got enough proof? How to document stuff? How to write it up if you are doing that free-hand? And yes, how to format 'citations / reference notes / bibliographies, etc.'!
The Americans have Evidence Explained by Elizabeth Shown Mills but its direct applicability to UK genealogy is limited.
To start things off, I'd mention:
- 'Nuts and Bolts: Family History Problem Solving through Family Reconstitution Techniques' by Andrew Todd - possibly less useful if you're attempting to trace Smith in London, but definitely useful if you're trying to see how a rarer name might fit together in one or more families in a limited area;
- 'The Genealogical Proof Standard' on http://www.bcgcertification.org/resources/standard.html While this comes from the Board for Certification of Genealogists in the USA, it addresses the 'what is proof' idea.
- 'Skillbuilding: Guidelines for Evaluating Genealogical Resources' Another BCG page ( http://www.bcgcertification.org/skillbu ... ld085.html ) that helps us distinguish original / derivative, primary / secondary, etc - the basic aspects that give us an initial starting point for assessing how good the evidence in a source is likely to be. (The caveat here is that the UK tends to use primary / secondary in a different way from the US).
Any other major recommendations?
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