Donate SIGN UP

MacClesfield is now apparently a Scottish town

Avatar Image
dothawkes31 | 17:20 Fri 02nd Apr 2010 | Genealogy
4 Answers
According to ancestry.co.uk, i have emailed the help desk explaining that it does not matter how many times their transcribers write it as MacClesfield, they cannot geographically move it 250 miles north! The reply i have had is that i should send them the link to where this has happened, it has happened doezens of times grrr
Gravatar

Answers

1 to 4 of 4rss feed

Best Answer

No best answer has yet been selected by dothawkes31. Once a best answer has been selected, it will be shown here.

For more on marking an answer as the "Best Answer", please visit our FAQ.
Dot, my contacts with Ancestry are for a reasonably restricted set of data - my family, my wife's and one friend. In spite of this I have amassed a fair few "thank you" notes from Ancestry for my "improvements" to their database. I can understand to some extent the mistakes on names - they're isolated bits of data. If you're following a family it's obvious when they've got a bit of transcription wrong and easy to see why they might take a bit of handwriting at face value. What I find harder to understand is the mistakes in placenames - Rilmarnock in Scotland, for instance!
I used to live in Macclesfield and I know I have never lived in Scotland! It's a lovely market town in Cheshire. I have problems with Llangollen as some of Llangollen bmd's were registered in Oswestry, Shropshire, England. Found my Thomas Morris' christening via Rootschat, but still can't get the cert because of this anomaly.
Question Author
carole just order it using the gro refernence here: still only £7 as it goes up shortly to 9.25
http://www.gro.gov.uk...tificates/default.asp
In case it's not well-known, much of the contracted out PRO / TNA mass census transcription 1841-1891 (ex 1881) and 1891, was done on the Indian sub-continent, checked by youngsters who were inadequately supervised and the results lamentlably not overseen as a glance at some of the nonsense shows.
Youth and inexperience should not be let loose on such work.
It is clear that some transcribers were more than competent but that the PRO was party to this scramble is a scandal which it would take a lot of money to sort out.
(Was any attempt made to read faint entries under a UV lamp?).
Having spent 5 years organising a team to transcribe 1851 for my county FHS, transcribing thousands checking all half million - while making no guarantee of accuracy, I reckon to have a fair knowledge of what to look for. I offered to check the PRO 1851 but was sent packing
Being a bit slow to cancel my sub to ancestry.co.uk, I spend a lot of time seeking out errors and like dundurn have made many corrections and suggestions - ca 2000 so far and am fed up with the messages of thanks!
Presumably this sort of thing is being done on other providers sites so it is a complex muddle.

Currently working on Do and D which signified Ditto.

Any surname which looks nonsense, more often than not will be found to be just that.
A quick look at the surname FOSE in FreeBMD shows comparatively few - but look at ancestry's line-up and the images, where the final 'x' looks more often than not like 'se'.
That's quite enough from me, except to say if you can't find what you wnat it may well be lurking somewhere, but don't overlook missing booklets, (eg 1871 Stepney, is it? and one in Battersea).

1 to 4 of 4rss feed

Do you know the answer?

MacClesfield is now apparently a Scottish town

Answer Question >>

Related Questions

Sorry, we can't find any related questions. Try using the search bar at the top of the page to search for some keywords, or choose a topic and submit your own question.