Tuesday's Tips provide brief how-to's to help you learn to use the Legacy Family Tree software with new tricks and techniques.
Better Results with Estimated Dates
Don't leave date fields blank! You will get better searching and sorting results if you have estimated dates for the date fields where the exact date is not known.
For example, there is a married couple that has 5 known children but you don't know when the parents were married or when they were born. Taking into consideration the time period and the local customs, you can put in either an Est. date or an Abt. date for their birth dates and their marriage date based on the date of birth of their oldest child (I prefer Est).
This isn't an exact science, of course, but a more complete timeline will also help you when you are ruling people in and out when trying to determine if a certain person is YOUR person. You can do the same thing with death dates.
Here's another simple example. There is a man that appears on the 1850 census. In 1860 his wife appears but he doesn't. Of course a divorce is possible but it is more likely he had died between the two census dates. You could put a death date of "between 1850 and 1860."
This will also help you if you use the Research Guidance. For estimated dates I don't add a source but I might add a note explaining how I came up with the estimated date.
Legacy Family Tree software has all kinds of nifty date prefixes you can use and you can even customize them a bit. This is in Option 5.7. Hint – Est or Estimated is a valid prefix even though it isn't on the official list of prefixes. If you use Est or Estimated it will not trigger a date error.
To find the estimated dates option go the Options tab > Customize > 5. Dates. Then scroll down to 5.7 to see the list which includes about, after, before, between, calculated, circa and BC.
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Michele Simmons Lewis is part of the technical support team at Millennia, the makers of the Legacy Family Tree software program. With over 20 years of research experience, Michele’s passion is helping new genealogists get started on the right foot through her writings, classes and lectures. She is the former staff genealogist and weekly columnist for the McDuffie Mirror and now authors Ancestoring, a blog geared toward the beginner/intermediate researcher.


I have used estimated dates for years, with very good results. I very often find that I have estimated the correct date to within 0 to 5 years, by using the following somewhat empirical guidelines for marriages up to about 1925:
1. Men usually married first at about 24 years of age.
2. Women usually married first at about 20 years of age.
3. The first child was usually born the first year after the parents’ marriage date.
4. Children were usually born about 2 years apart.
5. For marriages after about 1925, the man & woman are likely to be closer to the same age, perhaps the man will be one or two years older than the woman.
Of course, after better methods of birth control came along, it is anybody’s guess when the children were born.
These guidelines work well when calculated going forward or backward through the family.
I use est. for dates that I estimated, and abt. dates are dates that come to me from other researchers.
Therefore, if I have the birth date for at least one child, I can calculate very close birth and marriage dates for the parents. These estimated dates are a great help in almost any avenue of research that one pursues.