Abstracting Documents: An Essential Skill for All Genealogists

Julie Miller, CG, CGL
Sep 20, 2022
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About this webinar

Every document that is used during genealogical research must be thoroughly and accurately analyzed. Abstracting is a fundamental part of this research and analyzing process. Yet many genealogists are not confident in their ability to perform this task effectively and efficiently. This causes researchers to avoid the abstracting process resulting in research errors. An abstract is a summary of all the important details in a document. This presentation will examine the abstracting process by using examples that show how to abstract a variety of documents, general guidelines for abstracting, what to include and what to eliminate when creating an abstract, and lastly will explore some problems that might be encountered while abstracting.

About the speaker

Julie Miller holds Certified Genealogist (CG) and Certified Genealogical Speaker (CGL) credentials and is a fellow of the National Genealogical Society. She is a full-time professional researcher, spe...
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Comments (114)

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  1. CG
    Campbell River Genealogy
    2 years ago

    fantastic. I am overjoyed to have a clear and concise idea of what to do. Thank you.

  2. VH
    Vincent Hill
    2 years ago

    I wish I had found this video a few months ago so I could have looked through the law dictionary on Rootsweb but as of May 1st 2023 nothing is accessible any longer as they have been merged into Ancestry, what a loss.

    1Reply
    • SP
      Suzanne Parker
      2 years ago

      The Rootsweb dictionary is available https://freepages.rootsweb.com/~randyj2222/genealogy/gendict.html

      2
  3. CK
    Cindy Knight-Palazzo
    3 years ago

    THANK YOU! Very clear and specific presentation.

  4. JD
    Joyce Disharoon
    3 years ago

    Excellent presenter and presentation. I have transcribed over 100 documents in the last several years, and have not yet distributed them. I used an early version of GenScribe and didn't like it, so I read and then transcribe each document "as is". It is a tedious process and hard on the eyes. I have not created an abstract to send with the actual document and transcription, but that is a good suggestion. I prepared a list of legal terms and had to use different sources since there was not a single source that had all the colonial definitions I needed. It's good to know I did a few things right. There are so many good tips in the presentation and it was succinct with excellent slides. I have seen a few presentations, but this is the best one yet. Thank you!

  5. AD
    Arlene Dukanauskas
    3 years ago

    Great job of explaining the steps to abstracting. And thanks so much for the information about the free transcript and Gen Scriber software.

  6. TC
    Teresa Carlow
    3 years ago

    Uniformly Excellent! Such a complicated subject dissected perfectly and professionally. Thank you very much. Teresa

  7. JS
    Jack Zbiegien Sr
    3 years ago

    I've just finished the AGS courses and sure would have enjoyed this session a month ago. Thank you!

  8. DW
    David Wick
    3 years ago

    Since there was no live video I felt the presenter did not hurry and had a pace that really worked.

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