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Last edited by David A Murray
February 2, 2013 | History

Computer indexed surname data base:Louisiana marriage records 1 edition

Computer indexed surname data base:Louisiana marriage records
David Alan Murray, Nicholas Ru ...

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About the Book

These guys are really good! I published 16 of these books which gave a look at each large genealogy data base we worked with. When data was added to one of the data bases the corresponding Surname Index became obsolete. A new edition was composed and the old one was discarded. It could be of some use to an avid genealogist but it only had application regarding HFB's data bases. It gave every variation (or mistake) and the total number of each of every surname in the data base in alphabetical order. I did not know that any even left the "cave of the bears". You're right, that is way too deep in the woods to warrant even a little smile, sorry. Its almost 2:00 am and I've written my final book description for the night. -David

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Louisiana Surname Index
Computer Indexed Louisiana Marriage Records by Nicholas Russell Murray
Computer Indexed Surname Data Dase: Louisiana Vol 1

Published 1984 by Hunting For Bears Genealogical Society and Library in 3878 W 3200 S, Salt Lake City, UT 84120-2154 ph.801-966-1611 huntingforbears@yahoo.com First published 1980 in Hammond, LA .
Written in English.

About the Book

The format for this series of books was designed specifically to address an extreme weakness in genealogical research methodology as it existed in the later half of the last century. The primary component of this solution was an extremely large data base of records which could be accessed via computer instantly to provide location of additional existent and more complete records needed by researchers. Marriage records were uniquely the form of research in need of this additional research methodology.

Several barriers to this project will be lost to the fog of history unless mentioned somewhere so here are a few; A few County Clerks were naturally obstinate. The worst two were Parish Clerks in Louisiana, one of Assumption Parish, who would not allow our elderly collection team any access to the records unless they stood at the counter and hand copied the data. The books containing the dates were in a separate book and to see it required an individual retrieval and put back for each marriage. A neighboring parish, Ascension, arrested and prosecuted my wife and I for conducting a legal bingo (the mayor himself had issued the permit) to raise funds to continue the data collection process when the inheritance my parents had left, ran out.

Another involves an deceitful lady named "Annie" and the Mississippi Genealogy Society who have no problem with taking the data that HFB paid teams of people to travel to each local court, collect the data, process it and publish it. Annie and MGS then publishes it on the internet and locally in print form thereby, negating any chance of recouping any of the expenditure put out in accruing the data. Nick and Dorothy had expended tremendous effort establishing directly or indirectly over half of the Genealogy Societies in Mississippi and had trained and hired these new enthusiasts as team members in their data gathering project. To have several of these "researchers" betray friends and mentors in this manner is inexplicable!

There is a corporate "wolf" who has done the same as MGS does does locally on a small scale on a national scale, no an international one. HFB had been approached by a small startup CD producer to make our data available on CDs. He assured us the data would be protected by an unbreakable decryption method. Maybe he was correct, the "wolf" bought controlling interest in his company, took our data and built the world's largest data repository and search service. All of this theft was was accomplished while I was becoming 100% disabled in the Gulf War, I just love it when people say "Thanks for your service". Eventually, after years of using the data to destroy us, "the wolf" did pay $35,000(far less than the cost of gathering data from one state in 1960), half of which was back royalties on the CDs sold years before to avoid the potential of lawsuits.

Table of Contents

v. 1. A-K
v. 2. L-Z.

Edition Notes

Series
Computer Indexes of the Hunting For Bears Statewide Marriage Record Data Bases
Other Titles
Louisiana Computer indexed marriage records: Surname
Copyright Date
2013

Classifications

Dewey Decimal Class
929/.3763
Library of Congress
F368 .M86 1984

The Physical Object

Format
Softcover
Pagination
2 v. (355 p., [1] leaf of plates)
Number of pages
355
Dimensions
11 x 8.5 x inches

Contributors

  • Research Director
    Dorothy L Murray

ID Numbers

Open Library
OL2645638M
LC Control Number
85224559

History Created March 12, 2010 · 8 revisions
Download catalog record: RDF / JSON

February 2, 2013 Edited by David A Murray Edited without comment.
February 2, 2013 Edited by David A Murray Edited without comment.
December 4, 2010 Edited by Open Library Bot Added subjects from MARC records.
August 16, 2010 Edited by David A Murray Edited without comment.
March 12, 2010 Created by WorkBot work found