Overview
A place packet gathers the materials needed before a hub, article, classroom note, or Community Note makes a public place claim. It keeps maps, records, source links, institutions, timeline events, and open questions in one source-aware structure.
What this helps you learn
- A place packet can connect rivers, roads, rail lines, churches, schools, cemeteries, lodges, businesses, maps, newspapers, and county records.
- The packet helps visitors browse without relying only on the map.
- The packet gives editors a clear way to decide what is supported and what still needs review.
Careful claims
- Do not use a place packet as proof of origin, ancestry, legal status, tribe, DNA conclusions, descent, or membership.
- Do not collapse Indigenous, African, Muur, Moor, local, and family-history context into one undifferentiated claim.
- Do not publish current home addresses, parcel details, or living-family information without review.
Research path
- Start with quick facts, a map note, timeline events, source links, what is supported, what is open, related Wiki entries, and related Tales.
- Add separate institution, land, court, newspaper, and cemetery rows when they support different claims.
- Use the packet to decide which claims belong on the hub, in a Fact Check, or in owner review.
Source trail
- FOBA Place Hubs – Managed place-hub index.
- FOBA Place-Based History – Why place-based research matters.
- FOBA Community Notes – Public source-backed additions.
Evidence note: This starter entry is educational. Add sources, dates, maps, Community Notes, and Fact Checks as research develops.