Home› Welcome to the FamilySearch Community!› Ask a Question› Get Involved/Indexing

birth records

Máté70
Máté70 ✭
October 30, 2024 edited March 20 in Get Involved/Indexing

the instructions say not to try to guess someones surname based on others surnames

in the birth records i am viewing it doesnt say the childs surname only their parents

so should i write in the fathers surname as the childsmor leave it blank

also: if i am unsure about a surname do i just need to leave that field blank or is there some special way to mark it

0

Answers

  • barbaragailsmith1
    barbaragailsmith1 ✭✭✭✭✭
    October 30, 2024

    When indexing, there's a purple circle with a (?) in it. Go to the child's surname field, then click on that circle. It should tell you whether or not to use the father's name or to mark it Blank. To mark it Blank, when in the field, press ctrl B or click on the first icon with an X in the toolbar. The Project Instructions should tell you the answer also. To find the Project Instructions, click on the last icon in the tool bar. It has an (i) over what looks like a written page.

    1
  • Áine Ní Donnghaile
    Áine Ní Donnghaile ✭✭✭✭✭
    October 30, 2024

    It would be better if you share the batch number so that we can see exactly what you see.

    0
  • Julia Szent-Györgyi
    Julia Szent-Györgyi ✭✭✭✭✭
    October 30, 2024 edited October 30, 2024

    Given the username, I can be pretty sure which project he's working on, and he should mark the child's surname blank. The field help says in part: "Do not assume a surname from the surnames of others mentioned in the document."

    As Barbara wrote, you can mark a field blank using Ctrl-B on your keyboard or using the fourth button on the top toolbar.

    image.png

    If you hover your pointer over the button, the tooltip says "Mark the field blank (Ctrl + B )". [Minus the space after the B, but the Community software ever-so-helpfully changes capital B followed by a closing parenthesis into a smiley with sunglasses. Gee, thanks ever so much for saving me the trouble of inserting an actual smiley when I want an actual smiley.]

    If you are unsure of only part of the surname, you can use the question mark to represent a single unknown character or the asterisk (*) to represent multiple unknown characters. This is found in the General Indexing Guidelines under "Unreadable Information". However, I find that if I "sit on it" for a bit, the correct reading often suddenly "jumps in". How long that takes is variable, of course, but you do have some time, in indexing.

    1
  • Máté70
    Máté70 ✭
    October 31, 2024
    https://community.familysearch.org/en/discussion/comment/573865#Comment_573865

    thanks! also if i see a date that is obviously miswritten (birth noted down in june 29 but birth date marked as july 26 that same year than i should write the right one in right?)

    0
  • Julia Szent-Györgyi
    Julia Szent-Györgyi ✭✭✭✭✭
    November 1, 2024

    None of the date field helps mention errors, but all of the name fields say not to correct misspellings, and the overarching principle in indexing is to type what you see, so I would index the date exactly as written. It's not our job as indexers to determine where the error lies, and the "What to Remember" section for the Hungarian civil registrations says explicitly that "The completed index and digital images will be freely accessible online to the general public when the collection is published", so it's safe to leave that decision to the researcher using the index.

    1
This discussion has been closed.
Clear
No Groups Found

Categories

  • All Categories
  • 43K Ask a Question
  • 3.4K General Questions
  • 571 FamilySearch Center
  • 6.8K Get Involved/Indexing
  • 644 FamilySearch Account
  • 6.5K Family Tree
  • 5.2K Search
  • 1K Memories
  • 2 Suggest an Idea
  • 476 Other Languages
  • 62 Community News
  • Groups