Today FamilySearch sent the following email...
It was bemusing since I have an ancestor with that name, but not with those dates or burial location, but I still followed the link, signed in to FamilySearch, and saw the following list...
It is pleasant to read through and think about the named ancestors and look at their graves, but the last woman on the list is not an ancestor of mine.
This is all computer matching, so how accurate was it? I'll ignore the Map Location data and just look at the three other columns. In all, there are 30 links to my tree and information within the tree.
Ancestor Column
8.5/10
The entry for John Tanner still has the wrong dates but links to the correct ancestor, correcting the data in the email.
Not sure who Martha Morgan is, and it links to a woman named Matilda Nelson.
Ancestor's Headstone
8/10
John Tanner: wrong person
Martha Morgan: wrong person
View My Relationship
9/10
Martha Morgan: a relationship is listed that is not supported by the actual Family Tree. Martha Morgan disappears and Matilda Nelson is shown as the fifth great-grandmother of John Tanner, but that relationship is not in the tree.
Total
25.5/30 = 85% accuracy
In Conclusion...
Of course I have no idea how these statistics would represent what all the FamilySearch users saw, but my husband also got an email listing someone not an ancestor. Hence the title of the blog post.
In any case, Happy Memorial Day. We're happy to remember all these people, related or not, but most especially we remember our war dead.
Haha. I've found those emails to be semi-accurate, too. At least they are trying to garner renewed interest in our families.
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