Now that the database had a correct and decluttered list of parties, I could begin digging into all those odd ones that said multiple party names in one menu listing. Some were simply people that switched parties between office terms, which was a fairly easy fix. But, after looking at many election results in historical newspapers, it turned out that the United States actually had a period of dabbling in coalition politics in the latter half of the 19th century. So, a lot of those entries that said “[major party]/[third party]” weren’t mistakes at all, though they did require a bit of extra double-checking for accuracy.
Before they were in a database, every catalog card that makes up the Legislative Biographical File was a row in one of a group of spreadsheets. Each of these spreadsheets had a tab for cards with correct information and a tab for “problem” cards. One of my primary tasks working with the database was to go through each of these tabs and attempt to fix the issues within. These turned out to need a wide variety of different solutions, from decoding old county acronyms and fixing undiscovered typos to archiving duplicate entries and disambiguating people with the same name whose entries had been conflated. Many of the issues were with birth or death dates and locations. The majority of these people were ordinary folks from 150 to 200 years ago, so finding the answers to these questions meant a lot of searching around on genealogy and obituary websites for primary sources, if I could find them.
Before they were in a database, every catalog card that makes up the Legislative Biographical File was a row in one of a group of spreadsheets. Each of these spreadsheets had a tab for cards with correct information and a tab for “problem” cards. One of my primary tasks working with the database was to go through each of these tabs and attempt to fix the issues within. These turned out to need a wide variety of different solutions, from decoding old county acronyms and fixing undiscovered typos to archiving duplicate entries and disambiguating people with the same name whose entries had been conflated. Many of the issues were with birth or death dates and locations. The majority of these people were ordinary folks from 150 to 200 years ago, so finding the answers to these questions meant a lot of searching around on genealogy and obituary websites for primary sources, if I could find them.
The longer I worked on the database, the more I noticed patterns of issues in certain spots, especially with place names. So, when I was done sorting out the major problems, I went around to fix them. First up was Maine, which was part of Massachusetts until 1820 and, as such, was represented in the Massachusetts legislature before then. This meant that there were a number of town and county names, some of which overlapped with Mass ones, that were not properly noted in their entries as now being in another state. Next on the list were towns that had changed their names, split, or merged with neighbors. For each of these, I found both the old and new names and the year of the switch, so I could verify that any relevant entries were not listed anachronistically to their time.
A major issue I noticed was that the Democratic-Republican party, one of the two first political parties in United States history, appeared to be absent from the database entirely and most of its members were listed as Democrats and/or Republicans. Fixing this required more effort than my previous party corrections work because I had to do all the research myself, more or less from scratch. I then had to comb through the entries in the database from the party’s time frame and reassign anyone I could verify to their proper listing.
Last up, once everything else was out of the way, a variety of small data errors revealed themselves, so my next task was to fix those so someone else wouldn’t have to do it later. Additionally, I attempted to wrap my head around the full evolution of political parties in Massachusetts, so I could write up short descriptions for each one listed in the party menu as a reference guide. The bulk of this work involved extensive Wikipedia rabbit holes on various movements and figures central to parties in question. In the end, I had to even make my own flowchart-style diagram in an effort to map out and keep track of all of the major parties’ relations to each other.
Bonus fun: Most of the entries that needed correcting (and thus, most of the ones I was working with) were for people from the 18th or 19th century, simply because it’s harder to find information about them. Going back that far in New England tends to surface a number of odd sounding names, so I started writing down the ones that particularly tickled me and I’ve shared a few of my favorites below.
Last up, once everything else was out of the way, a variety of small data errors revealed themselves, so my next task was to fix those so someone else wouldn’t have to do it later. Additionally, I attempted to wrap my head around the full evolution of political parties in Massachusetts, so I could write up short descriptions for each one listed in the party menu as a reference guide. The bulk of this work involved extensive Wikipedia rabbit holes on various movements and figures central to parties in question. In the end, I had to even make my own flowchart-style diagram in an effort to map out and keep track of all of the major parties’ relations to each other.
Bonus fun: Most of the entries that needed correcting (and thus, most of the ones I was working with) were for people from the 18th or 19th century, simply because it’s harder to find information about them. Going back that far in New England tends to surface a number of odd sounding names, so I started writing down the ones that particularly tickled me and I’ve shared a few of my favorites below.
- Captain Staples Chamberlain
- Polycarpus Loring
- Consider Dickinson
- Frederick A. Mann
- Pliny Arms, Esq.
- Pardon Seabury
- Parley J. Prindle
- Thaddeus Clapp
- Knight Day
- Preserved Fish
- George Costanza (No, seriously)
- Elvira Edgell (I’m not kidding)
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