Originally posted by MrBarnett
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In this case you are making an Argument From Silence. Absence of evidence is not evidence of absence.
[QUOTE=MrBarnett;n799043]‘Haven’t been transcribed yet?’ What on earth does that mean? Do you somehow imagine someone somewhere is working their way through transcribing 19thC marriage records and they haven’t reached Northamptonshire or the 1850s yet?[/quote}
I guess you're unfamiliar with geneologocal records. They were recorded on paper documents. These paper documents are then found by modern researchers. These paper documents are then scanned. These scans are then transcribed. These transcriptions are then posted online.
Every one of these steps takes time. And is done by multiple people of varying skill.
So yes, people have been transcribing 19th century marriage records. We don't know if these transcriptions are complete. We know these transcriptions aren't always accurate - look at the number of ways Lechmere is misspelled in online transcriptions. We don't know if all the original records were found.
Originally posted by MrBarnett
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But that's bad genetics and bad psychology on both of your parts.
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