| Sources |
- [S2012] Census Population Schedules.
- [S3260] Crandall, Myron Nathan (I9702): 1850 US Census, (www.ancestry.com (2009): National Archives and Records Administration micropublication M432, roll 919, page 125A, line 37, dwelling 91, family 91; image accessed 13 Aug 2012.), 1850.Utah Territory.Utah.11.
- [S2132] Utah Cemetery Inventory Online, (Utah State Historical Society, comp. Utah Cemetery Inventory. [database online] Provo, UT: Ancestry.com, 2000. Original data: Utah State Historical Society. Utah Cemetery Inventory. Salt Lake City, UT: 2000.
Utah was settled in 1847 by Mormon pioneers. It became the 46th state in 1896. This database is an inventory of many of the cemeteries in Utah. There are currently 250 cemeteries included in the work, encompassing more than 350,000 burial records. Periodically, updates to this data will be added online. Researchers may find information about birth and death dates for their ancestors who were buried in Utah.
Two unique datasets compose this database. A list of cemeteries will lead you to the actual burial data. For more information about this database or the cemetery project, contact the Utah State Historical Society.
Used by permission; copyright Utah State Historical Society, all rights reserved.
http://history.utah.org/Services/lcburials.html), "Franklin A. Crandall".
- [S2176] Family Data Collection - Births, (Edmund West, comp. Family Data Collection - Births [database online] Provo, UT: Ancestry.com, 2001.
The Family Data Collection records were created while gathering genealogical data for use in the study of human genetics and disease. Compiling data for genetic research does not require the same type of documentation as traditional genealogical research. The genes themselves verify relationships and qualify or disqualify a person from a particular study. Citing the source of every genealogical fact in the electronic gene pool was deemed unnecessary and cost prohibitive by medical researchers. Millions of individual records were created from birth, marriage and death records; obituaries; probate records; books of remembrance; family histories; genealogies; family group sheets; pedigree charts; and other sources. The records collected that did not fit a specific study became the project's by-products and were schedule to be discarded. After viewing the quality of the source material used to create the gene pool and despite the absence of cited documentation, the electronic rights to the data were purchased, rather than see it destroyed.
After initially posting the Family Data Collection database in July of 2000, it was decided to divide the database into three separate collections of Births, Marriages and Deaths. By so doing it was possible to standardize place names and delete duplicates. This process also allowed us to add some additional records that were not included in the first launch of the database. This data covers the entire U.S. for a wide expanse of years. At a minimum, each record contains an individual's name, date and place of event, and the name of related parties. Use this database as a finding tool, just as you would any other secondary source. When you find the name of an ancestor listed, confirm the facts in original sources, such as birth, marriage, and death records, church records, census enumerations, and probate records for the place where the even took place.), "Franklin Austin Crandall".
- [S3261] Crandall, Myron Nathan (I9702): 1860 US Census, (www.ancestry.com (2009): National Archives and Records Administration micropublication M653, roll 1314, sheet 294, page 1009, line 9, dwelling 2609, family 2047; image accessed 13 Aug 2012.), 1860.Utah Territory.Utah.Springville.26.
- [S2309] Viola Drake Bisbee, compiler, Geneology of The Bisbee Family (I) - Viola Drake Bisbee, (June 2000, Bisbee Family Connection, Decatur, MI), p. 84.
- [S1084] The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints, comp., International Genealogical Index (R), (Version 5.0 (Online: Intellectual Reserve, Inc., 1999-2005), : FamilySearch (TM) Internet Genealogy Service, 50 East North Temple Street, Salt Lake City, Utah 84150).
|