Showing posts with label Hard-Drive. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Hard-Drive. Show all posts

Saturday, February 26, 2011

Sorting Saturday - What do I do with THIS?

What do I do with this stuff?

Earlier this week I sat down on the floor in my office with my last paper genealogy files piles up next to me. One was 'misc,' another was photocopies of most of my Mamaw's notes and then there was one each for my four main family lines: Epperson, Hood, Nordstrom and Eldridge.

I with the 'misc' folder and it was mostly information on libraries I hadn't been to in over a decade or articles that I could find on the internet.  The old library information went into recycle pile and the articles went into 'find on the internet' pile. That was the easy part.

The family folders were a bit more complicated. There were bits and bobs that weren't need anymore and so joined the library pamphlets in the recycle bin. There was a small collection of handwritten notes, that were put in yet another pile, 'to be typed.'  But what about all the other stuff? There are copies of emails, correspondence, funeral cards, newspaper clippings, my grandmother's hand-written family tree, church bulletins, photocopies from books, copies of death certificates from the Ohio Historical Society, and Christmas cards. Oh, and of course, my copies of Mamaw's notes need to be kept too.

It makes sense to scan the pages I've photocopies from books and then add them to the 'digital documents' folder on my hard-drive. But what about the ephemera and correspondence? I mean I can't simply throw away the funeral card for my papaw or the church bulletin announcing the birth of my sister's first child.  If I scan the copies of ancient emails, do I need to keep the paper copies too? I mean the 'e' stands for electronic, it wasn't originally paper in the first place. Do I need to keep photocopies of newspaper articles?  I suppose, I'll have to take it on a case-by-case basis. Scan and keep or scan and toss.

As for Mamaw's papers and the funeral cards and such, I think it makes sense to scan it all. A digital copy will make it easier to find and share the information. Digital copies can also be put in my OneNote family notebook.

It sounds so easy, doesn't it. And scanning is easy; just not very exciting. Then after everything is scanned I can store all of the originals in an archival box.

But what do I do with the funeral card for one of my favorite professors from college or the one for the mother of a friend from college who recently died? They aren't my family and don't fit readily into one of my family files. But they are part of my history. Do they get scanned? Stored in a separate file or in the Epperson file? Should I attach a note?

It's all such a muddle. Organizing isn't nearly as much fun as searching through the census on a microfilm reader. And in the meantime my 'to type' file has been sitting on the desk, taunting me.

Saturday, January 8, 2011

Lisa Louise Cooke, Hard-Drives and Me

As noted in my last post, I listened to Lisa Louise Cooke’s hard-drive organization podcast for the second time. At the top of the first one, she mentioned that she encouraged her listeners to spend one-hour a week on genealogy. I am so glad I heard that again as it made this whole project seem much more manageable. No matter how busy I am, I can probably come up with an hour a week. 
I listened to the rest of the podcasts while trying to stay balanced on the elliptical. I could feel myself becoming overwhelmed again, particularly because Cooke groups everything by family and I have realized I prefer to group things by type. Another difficulty is that I was resistant to filing documents and notes for my family history research separately from those collected for my other research projects. Since I am an immigration historian, I collect many of the same documents that family historians do. Additionally, my job requires constant note-taking and writing. I really did not like the idea that the research I did on my family was different and ought to filed separately from everything else.
The podcasts finished about the same time I was done with my workout, so I put the problem out of my mind and ran some errands before going home.  Then, with a big mug of tea, I sat down at my laptop to sort out the whole hard drive organizational conundrum.  And I cracked it!  I wonder if it was the exercising or the tea that helped solve the problem?
Here is an annotated version of what I came up with:

  1. Windows Documents Directory
    1. Notes
      1. Books
        1. A-G (by author, not title)
        2. H-M
        3. N-S
        4. T-Z
      1. Genealogy Misc (I added this while actually doing the organizing, it wasn't part of the original plan. I ended up with a whole bunch of ancient files that I wasn't sure what to do with, so I put them here)
      2. Manuscript (this will include notes and transcriptions from actual documents and will be subdivided by repository)
        1. National Archives of Scotland 
        2. Presbyterian Historical Society
        3. National Library of Scotland
        4. Western Reserve Historical Society
    2. Digital Documents  (this will include digital images of the actual documents)
      1. Books
      2. Census
      3. Military
      4. Passenger Lists
      5. Wills & Estates
    3. Research Aids and Forms
      1. Family Group Sheets
      2. Family Trees
      1. Other
      1. Pedigree Charts
    4. Papers Projects and & Presentations (drafts of things I’ve written, researched or presented)
      1. Book
      2. MA Thesis
      3. Historian's Family Blog
      4. OGS Conference
        1. Presentation
        2. Proposal
      5. PhD Dissertation
      6. Project Ideas

These folders will be interspersed with all the other ones in my Windows Document folders, but that doesn’t bother me. What I like about this system is that it integrates my family history and other research.  If you do want to have a separate genealogy folder, you could simply place folders similar to mine in a folder called "Genealogy."

The best part is that I actually did it. The project only took about two and half hours, and that includes time I spend reorganizing files that had nothing to do with historical research. The files might not all have the best names, but they are all in the right place. 

I think I ought to have piece of chocolate with my next cup of tea, don't you?