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Profiles

  • John Field, of The Hill, Hemel Hempstead (1535 - 1615)
    links FamilySearch AFN 8GWB-0D FamilySearch AFN 191R-DB2 content to clean up BIRTH: John is identified in the will of his father, Thomas Field of Hemel Hempstead, 18 Oct 1559, proved 19 Mar 155...
  • Jane Margery? Bonython (1518 - 1585)
    'Full text of "The Bonython family of Maine"* . RALPH1 BONYTHON, of Bonython, Cornwall, paid a subsidy in the parish of Cury, 15 Henry VIII. He married twice, probably, (1) Elizabeth Downe, and (2) Eli...
  • Esther Broom (1722 - 1760)
    changes to be made by a manager/curator Religion: Quaker (Religious Society of Friends) links content to clean up Esther Broom (born Willis) MyHeritage Family Trees Hardman Web Site, manag...
  • Noah Bowker, Sr. (1724 - d.)
    concerns detached from Catherine Bowker on May 1, 2024 comments Date and place of birth have also been (erroneously?) reported to be circa 1727 at Grafton, Worcester County, Massachusetts . conten...
  • Private Thomas Wire (aft.1741 - 1800)
    Reference: Find A Grave Memorial - SmartCopy : Apr 27 2024, 20:19:17 UTC brief biography and family a Patriot of the American Revolution for Connecticut with the rank of PRIVATE notes DAR Ancesto...

This project relates to cleaning up copy-paste dumps from external websites on historical profiles.

Please add profiles with copy-paste issues to this project.


Can repeated information in the "about"-field easily (by Geni automatic functions?) be edited and the "biographies" thereby shortened?

Cleanup tools

The example I gave when I started this discussion was Robert de Mortagne, Earl of Cornwall who had a bio-text I too fast doomed out as repeating parts of the information.

So, when I now took the first half of that long text and pasted it into the left field of this program https://countwordsfree.com/comparetexts and then copied and pasted the second half of that long text the answer came within seconds and was as fast converted into a pdf-file I'd like to forward but don't know how. But, you can yourself test this program in some any smarter ways than the first attempt I tried to check if the software is what's needed for the job to CLEANUP the "About:"-fields in Geni

programs on line:

Tested https://www.browserling.com/tools/duplicate-lines Worked great. - EH, 11 March 2024


Master Profiles

An excellent template for how to write up an "About" narrative is provided by Erica Howton here:

http://www.geni.com/discussions/92632?msg=689908

Erica's Master Profile Cheat Sheet, notes in parentheses. General note: Leave off altogether if info not known by you; put in "not known" if info not known by historical source.

First Name (bold) Middle Name (bold) Last Name (bold) was born XX Month XXXX in (place name, historically appropriate, present day name), and died XX Month XXXX. (baptism / christening / burial data as known.) S/he was also known as (nicknames, other languages, etc.)

IF it applies: a nice Wikipedia type line summarizing a Notable such as "He was an Irish Politician active in the Cromwell era." "Originally a Quaker missionary, she became a noted abolitionist and public speaker." It helps orient a reader in time and place to have this kind of one liner.

Parents: (child # of) (father and mother with their dates / places) [n.b. some like father & mother on separate lines; I actually find it saves space & usually fits together fine on one line]

Married:

  1. (include date, place, name, dates of spouse, their parents, number of children with spouse)
  2. (I put in "long term liaisons" particularly if there are known children and / or it's historically interesting :))

Children of (name) and (spouse1): in date order, oldest to youngest (n.b. you'd be surprised to see how often that's not always the case when copying from a source document)

  1. full name, dates in parentheses, place, who married. More details should go in a footnote perhaps.
  2. note that the # sign makes a nice neat numbered list. You can also apply Wikimedia formatting after it's typed in.

Children of (name) and (spouse2): n.b. this is a tad controversial: some prefer the spouse and children together rather than wives together / children together. Obviously I seem to prefer a list of wives and then a list of children. :)

  1. [fn1] for instance to refer someone to a footnoted reference on source data; otherwise I assume it comes from the more general weblink

Sections are made by this:

very bold =

not quite as bold == what I use most often

boldish ===

Soooo -- my section after the Vitals is usually (but not always!)

Notes

That's where I love getting unique, including with the name of the section. Often research digs up something really cool about an ancestor, my own personal tree favorite being "Abijah Ross and the Bear Dogs Treeing a Wildcat." This is the telling anecdote that gives you the flavor of a man or woman.

I mean, wouldn't you read on if you saw:

"Red Mary was said to have 25 husbands. In truth she was tried for the murder attempt of one of them, but acquitted (see below)."

Optional but frequently used other sections include:

  • Biographical Summary (I have this as optional because unfortunately (or not) we have plenty of obscure ancestors we can only build the biography *after* we get the facts such as events into the profile).
  • Immigration (to dig up the ancestral embarkation point / ship and actual data on it? Are you kidding? So important!)
  • Wills (a gold mine)
  • Land transactions
  • Quotes (if they said something cool)
  • Quotations about (hagiography lives!)
  • Events (nice neat list using the asterik * which starts a new line)
  • Grave Inscriptions (a tear jerker)
  • Career (can be as short as "was made Freeman and might be covered in events).
  • Not* so optional are your sources! I feel pretty strongly about this. If there isn't a link how would I know if you're making it up? Of course if you have documents such as census attached I'll see that -- but it doesn't hurt to note that the census is attached (I cover that in "events" usually as it is documenting "residence/ year" most of all).

Sources can be done in a variety of ways and it's all good. But I like breaking it out sometimes.

  • web page, aliased or bold
  • I also like to put in links to "official" websites, youtube search results, google / flkr image search results, etc. The interweb is hyperlinked & dimensional, let's use that
  • I also like *place* orientation and there some good websites on places - towns, houses, histories, etc.

References

particularly important for book references. I copy & paste a paragrph from a google book / archives.org book result for instance for the bio section and give the full reference here.

Citations

how is this different from links? Wikipedia could be your link, and within the Wiki article are citations. So you copy & paste that source info.

Footnotes

The devil is in the details and footnotes are the place for the devil! They're not nice & easy (yet) like Wikipedia but doesn't mean they don't come up and shouldn't be used.