Citations (Evidence Style)

Citation style guides can help you capture all the information about a source that is necessary for others to evaluate the quality of the source, to find your source, and sometimes to find the source upon which your source was derived. In practice, style guides are not necessary when using the latest genealogy software because the software prompts you to enter source information into forms. You only need to fill in the appropriate boxes and the program formats citations appropriately. Style guides are only necessary when using software that doesn't have forms for the many different types of sources used by genealogists.

= The Basics =

One citation style used by genealogists in the United States is Mills style. Mills is an extension of the Chicago Manual of Style (CMS) bibliography/note system. CMS is adequate for most published sources, but doesn't include many sources and elements about sources that are important to genealogists. Mills style is named for Elizabeth Shown Mills and is explained in her books (Evidence and Evidence Explained ) and QuickSheets.

Contrary to the terminology used by PAF and other genealogy programs, a source is a person or artifact that supplies information. A citation is the entire textual reference to the source.

In the CMS/Mills style, there are four types of citations:


 * 1) Source list. CMS calls this a bibliography. Each citation—called a source list entry— is punctuated as if it were a paragraph and each citation element were a sentence. Published works are sorted by the last name of the author. To effectively organize the source list, Mills gives considerable latitude in the treatment of unpublished works. Examples here and in her books often illustrate ordering unpublished works geographically. However, elements of the source list entry can be reordered to effect other organizations when appropriate. One source list entry can apply to multiple reference notes and excludes the detailed citation elements present in the notes. For example, page numbers would be present in notes but not the source list entry.
 * 2) First reference note. CMS/Mills allows either footnotes or endnotes and uses the term reference notes, or simply notes to speak of both. Each note is punctuated as if it were a sentence containing a list of citation elements. As with any list, use commas to separate the elements. If commas within elements make the list ambiguous, then use semicolons to separate the elements.
 * 3) Subsequent note. When publishing a compiled genealogy, after the first reference to a source, it is not necessary to duplicate a complete citation in subsequent notes. In fact, abbreviating subsequent citations in a published work makes notes more understandable and signals source reuse. The abbreviated style of subsequent notes should be applied only at the time of publication since the order of notes can change along the way. Always enter complete citations into your genealogical records. If you never publish, you can safely ignore this type of citation.
 * 4) Source label. This is the citation that should appear on the front of all photocopies and prints of original records, transcriptions, and abstracts. Mills does not specify whether this citation type should be punctuated like a paragraph or like a sentence. Suffice it to say that the citation should be complete in case the page is shared independently of other documents.

= Examples =

Some examples are shown with each citation element labeled. Don't forget to include the punctuation at the end of each element. Some examples are shown as they normally appear, except for indenting. The numbers 1 and 11 are illustrative only and are used for the first reference note and subsequent reference note, respectively.

New FamilySearch (Common Pedigree)
insert example here

Record Search Collection
insert example here

= Underlying Principles =

It can be difficult to construct a citation when no matching example is given unless you know the underlying principles. Mills does not provide a summary of the principles used for Mills style. This list is an attempt to provide that summary. As such, citations are given to Mills's works in support of each principle.


 * Mills Style is grounded in the Chicago Manual of Style (CMS), Humanities style.
 * "Clarity always beats consistency."
 * Cite a newsletter like a journal when the extra parentheses are necessary to separate a volume number from an issue month.
 * Redundant information need not be repeated in a citation.
 * When publishing a genealogy article, once a reference note identifies the archive housing a collection, subsequent references to the collection do not have to repeat the archive information.
 * For records consulted on FHL microfilm, in some cases the repository information can be specified in the source list entry and excluded from reference notes.
 * When an archival set of records has both a number and a name, only the first need contain both.
 * When publishing a genealogy article, ibid. may be used when a citation refers to the same source as the previous citation.
 * When publishing a genealogy article, a citation may omit elements already identified in the text.
 * Do not respecify baptisms in the locator information of a citation when it is clear from the title.
 * Do not specify the record type when it is part of the title.
 * When a location is added to the beginning of a source list entry to force desired alphabetizing, it need not be repeated in its normal position in the citation. In essence, the citation element has been moved.
 * Do not specify the creator's role when it is clear from the title.
 * Do not redundantly add the periodical's publication place in parentheses when already specified in the title.
 * Do not specify creator if identified in the title.
 * Do not specify both website name and podcast name when the two are the same.
 * Default values in citations do not need to be specified.
 * "Author" is the default creator's role.
 * "Paper" is the default medium.
 * Cite websites like publications and web pages like subdivisions.
 * On large sites, it sometimes makes sense to cite the web edition of a book using the book's "home page" rather than the site's home page.
 * Information that is common knowledge can sometimes be excluded from a citation.
 * In some cases, world-famous, unambiguous cities may be specified without province or U.S. state name.
 * When citing a record the degrades over time, then one should specify when the record was seen. For example, grave markers degrade over time, so the citation should include the date the marker was read.

= Differences from Chicago Manual of Style =

Differences between Mills and CMS may be acceptable alternatives, improved practice, inadvertent, erroneous interpretation, or temporary deviations caused by different publication schedules.


 * Mills italicizes series titles if it "is considered a formal title for [the] set of materials." If "the name of the series is not self explanatory," the title is not italicized. CMS never italicizes a series title.
 * "Evidence Style identifies [periodical] issues by their dates rather than issue numbers, because unrecognized typing errors are more common with numbers than with words." CMS allows either, but recognizes that "although not all these elements may be required to locate an article, furnishing them all provides a hedge against possible error in one or another of them."
 * "Because abbreviations rarely save a significant amount of space, the thoughtful writer avoids all but the truly obvious ones." This includes state names when included in the place of publication. By contrast, CMS specifies, "If the city of publication may be unknown to readers or may be confused with another city of the same name, the abbreviation of the state, province, or (sometimes) country is added."
 * Mills allows an optional space after the colon separating volume and page numbers. CMS, on the other hand, specifies that no space be present. "But when parenthetical information intervenes," such as "12 (Winter): 345" then a space after the colon is required.

= Notes =