> Lisa wrote: > > > Someone looked up my ancestor and gave me the location in the 1910 > > census. I went to the ancestry site, and found him. Another > > ancestor was not found in the index, however, this same census > > district had his street, so I decided to read through all of it. I > > found some of the pages from this district were missing. Scrolling > > through the ED, I noticed that this district included pages for > > other districts, and some pages for my district were missing. > > > > <snip> > > It's not you. Evidently when the pages were scanned they were > mixed. The same thing happened to me. I was looking in the > Marshall County Alabam census of 1920 and all of a sudden pages from > Cullman County Alabama came up. > > I reported it to ancestry.com, but they didn't seem to care. > > Ruth "Rh Domino" <rhdomino@hotmail.com> Likewise, regarding ancestry.com's lack of response to detailed feedback about the census indexing errors. Some time ago, we found that a whole section of a Georgia county in a federal census was listed as being in another decade. We figured it out, gave ancestry.com detailed information on several occasions (both on the phone and in e-mails) about what was awry, and nothing was ever changed. Aarrggh! There were many surnames affected, or I would've posted a message on a surname board in an attempt to try to notify others. (Maybe I should post it on one of the county's boards.) Mike Harris <mik_harr@swbell.net>