To read the answer to any of the questions below, simply click on the question and the answer should load underneath it. If you want to see all the answers at once click on the open all link.
GEDCOM stands for Genealogical Data Communications and is a file format specification that allows different genealogical software programs to share data with each other. It was developed by the Family and Church History Department of The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints to provide a flexible, uniform format for exchanging computerized genealogical data. This standard is supported by FamilySearchâ„¢ Internet, by the family history products that The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints produces, as well as by the vendors of most of the major genealogical software products.
To upload a Gedcom to Caperton.info please follow these steps
1) You must be logged in. First login using the login/profile link in the top menu.
2) Go to your profile bby cliking on Profile after clicking Login/Profile in the top menu.
3) Select the GedCom tab
4) Click "Click to upload"
5) In the dropdown menu select "upload file"
6) Click the Browse button to find the file on your computer you wish to upload.
7) Click Save to upload the file to Caperton.info
This explanation is from Bernard Caperton's The Caperton Family book:
"Each person in this genealogy has his own number which, if read from right to left, will give the number of his parents, grandparents, etc. By dropping the last digit on the right from each generation, any person can trace his direct line back to John and Polly Thompson Caperton.
The capital letter which precedes each number, refers only to the generation of each individual beginning with John Caperton as Generation A. The children of the second generation are all preceded by the letter "B", the third generation by the letter "C", etc. This merely makes it simpler to trace a person's line of descent.
I have not assigned a number to John Caperton, the original settler, but have assigned a number 1 through 8 to his eight children in the projected order of their birth: Hugh B-1, Adam B-2, Sarah B-3, Mary B-4, Nancy B-5, Elizabeth B-6, William B-7, and James B-8. The children of these eight children will be shown by adding a number, in order of birth, to the parent's number. For example, Hugh's children will be C-11, C-12, C-13, etc. Therefore, the children of Hugh's oldest child will be D-111, D-112, D-113, etc. If there are more than nine children, I use the letter 'A' for the tenth child, 'B' for the eleventh, etc. If there is a question of the exact line of descent, but we are certain that a person is of a particular branch, I will use a question mark where the uncertain gap occurs."
I have kept with the same numbers throughout this website that Bernard used in his book as a way of linking the two forms of data.
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