http://lostcousins.com/pages/info/oct09 ... RY_SUPPORTANCESTRY SUPPORTERS HIT BACK!
It's good to know that despite the shortcomings reported by some Ancestry users, and summarised in my articles in the last two newsletters, there are others who think the site is wonderful. Several members have written in recently to point out how extensive a range of databases Ancestry has, and on this point I have to agree with them.
Nevertheless, anyone choosing between different sites can ascertain which records are included before they decide to subscribe - what isn't so obvious is when something doesn't work properly. In my first article I wrote about the problems which affect over 1 million records in the 1881 England & Wales census, and I'm prepared to bet that 9 out of 10 Ancestry users weren't aware of them before that article appeared.
I get emails every day from members who tell me they can't find their relatives in the 1881 England & Wales Census (it's the main census we use at LostCousins), and so I think it's important that readers of this newsletter are aware of the flaws that can prevent them finding people in that census - especially when it can be searched free at either FamilySearch or findmypast.com, neither of which has the same flaws.
My second article wasn't planned - it was prompted by the large number of members who wrote to tell me of other problems, many of them relating to the recently launched birth and marriage indexes for the period from 1916 onwards. If it sounded like a bit of a rant that's because as I researched the problems reported to me by members I discovered others, some of which were even more serious - and so I couldn't help wondering whether Ancestry had been rushing out new databases in an attempt to boost their profits before they head for the stockmarket.
I do think it is appalling that in my tests of the marriage indexes between 5% and 30% of entries from the 1920s and 30s were missing or wrongly transcribed. Of course one has to expect a small number of transcription errors when handwritten records are transcribed - but in this case the source data was almost all typed or printed!
I haven't had a chance to check the birth indexes, but since one member wrote to say that the births of all three of her sons were missing, I'm concerned that they may be equally flawed.