Places
How to Turn a Marker Into a Source Trail
This field note is part of the FOBA learning stream. It is meant to orient readers and point toward better source work.
Key points
- A marker is a useful doorway because it names a place, date, sponsor, and public-memory claim.
- A marker is not the whole source trail. It should send the researcher toward nomination files, archive collections, agency pages, maps, newspapers, oral histories, and local records.
- Older markers may contain dated wording, omissions, or claims that need repair.
Next steps
- Record the marker title, location, sponsor, date, wording, and photo source.
- Find the source packet behind the sign before using it to support sensitive copy.
- Use Community Notes when a marker needs a source-backed update or correction.
Source trail
- FOBA Museum Markers guide – Internal public-history method entry.