
FOOTNOTING FOR HISTORIANS:
A Guide for the Perplexed
Introduction:
Purpose of Footnotes/Endnotes
Despite an impatience on the part
of many readers with source citations (what are generally called footnotes), they fulfill a critical function. One must always
remember that history is not just written for those with a casual or
even a passionate interest in the subject matter. History is also in
part an ongoing dialogue/debate between historians of the past, present, and
future. For that dialogue to go forward, it is important for the
participating scholars to know just where information comes from and to
communicate that fact to others. Without this knowledge, it would be
hard, if not impossible either to challenge or build on the work of
earlier historians without replicating their entire search process—the
academic equivalent of reinventing the wheel!
Over the course of time, scholars
have developed several methods for conveying information about sources
without actually inserting it in the text. For example, many works
in the early modern period placed such information in the margins.
Eventually, however, it became customary to place the notes at the
bottom of the page, hence our term "footnotes". It is these
footnotes that many readers find obtrusive.
On the other hand, the placement of
source citations can be done in
such a way that it will make them less obtrusive to the general reader.
Instead of placing them at the bottom of the page, where they not
infrequently constitute a distraction for people interested only in the text,
they can go at the end of the text, in which case, they become known as
“endnotes.”
There has long been something of a
debate between the supporters of footnotes and endnotes. Those who
advocate footnotes argue that they must be on the same page as the
statement in the text; that it is too difficult to keep flipping back
and forth between the text and a later page. On the other hand, I for one have always thought that making
it a wee bit harder for professionals to access the notes is a small
price to pay for increasing an essay’s readability and therefore
(hopefully) the size of the reading audience. Book authors who place
their notes at the end of chapters or even at the end of the book make
what is (in my opinion) a wise choice.
Unfortunately, an author does not always have that
choice. Where to place notes is frequently decided by the
publisher of the book or, if it is a journal article, the editorial
policy of the journal in which the article appears. On the other
hand, students in
this class will have both options.
The system I have outlined here is largely based on the Chicago
Manual of Style.
In recent decades, many students have learned the most frequently used alternative method of
citation
known as the Modern Language Association or MLA style, rather than the older, traditional
method
more often used by historians. MLA was designed primarily
for people
engaged in language studies, including English. Even if this is
the form of notation with which you are already familiar, you are NOT to use it in
the paper you are submitting in this class. In doing a historical paper,
you should be learning and using historical techniques. One such technique
is the production of footnotes/endnotes that utilize the accepted
historical format.
One final, but very important rule: Be Consistent. If
you choose to place titles in italics, always place them in italics; if
you choose to underline titles, always underline; etc., etc., etc.
Technical Advice: How to Create Historical
Footnotes/Endnotes in WORD
In the days before word processing on a lightscreen
(there was such a time!), one of the most tedious task was to redo
footnotes. As the writer inevitably cut and pasted the text, he or
she had to rearrange footnotes manually, renumbering each one into the
new order. Now, word processing handles this process quickly and
easily. To create footnote/endnotes in WORD, follow the following
steps. (Other word processing programs follow similar steps.)
1. Place the cursor at the point in the
text where you want the footnote/endnote to appear
2. Look at the menu on the top of the page
3. Click on "Insert"
4. On the drop down menu, click on "Reference"
5. On the side menu, click on "Footnote"
6. A menu will come up entitled "Footnotes and Endnotes"
7. Footnotes is the default setting. If you want endnotes,
click on it.
8. Click on the down arrow next to "Number Format"
9. On the drop down menu, select the Arabic numerals (i.e. 1, 2, 3).
Do not use Roman numerals (i.e. i, ii, iii) for footnotes/endnotes.
They may look cute, but their use is far more confusing for most
readers.
10. Click on "Insert" at the bottom of the "Footnotes and
Endnotes" menu. The footnote/endnote will appear.
To move back and forth between the footnote/endnote number in the text
and the actual footnote/endnote, double click on the number.
Alternatively, one can scroll down to the bottom of the page for
footnotes or to the end of the text for endnotes.
(While I have not worked in
other word processing programs, to the best of my understanding,
they have similar methods for footnoting/endnoting material.)
Three Types of Citation
When it comes to historical writing, it is critical to understand the
different ways
in which notation may be used. This section explains how footnotes/endnotes
take three forms.
Students should be aware that the distinctions made here and
the names given to the different categories are my own.
Nevertheless, they demonstrate how a careful approach to notation may
considerably enhance one's writing. It is strongly recommended that
students undertaking a writing assignment for Dr. V attempt to utilize all
three forms of citation!
1. Reference footnotes/endnotes
These consist of no more than simple
references to one or perhaps several sources of information that have been
consulted in composing the text. The majority of citations used by
writers tend to fall into this category.
2.
Bibliographical footnotes/endnotes
These are citations that
either summarize or comment upon the bibliography available to those working on the
subject. Such citations are particularly useful in article-length
compositions where there is not adequate space in the text to examine the
nature of the sources.
3. Information
footnotes/endnotes
These citations permit the writer to
add information that might be useful to the reader, but would break the
flow of the narrative if inserted directly into the text.
Actual footnotes/endnotes are often
some combination of the above categories. To illustrate my point, I have
slightly amended the opening paragraph of an article I published some
years ago. In this example, Footnote 1 is simply an information
footnote, supplying the reader with added information that I think would
have broken the narrative flow. Footnote 2 combines both extra information about the Black
Prince with a bibliographical component. Footnote 3
is purely bibliographical.
Example:
On April 3, 1367, as the sun rose over
northern Castile, largest of five kingdoms that shared the Iberian
peninsula
[1], two of the century’s greatest
armies faced each other across a field awaiting orders that
would propel them into one of the century’s greatest battles. From
across the Pyrenees, by way of the neighboring kingdom of Navarre,
came the invaders, an Anglo-Gascon force, battle-hardened in the
Hundred Years War and commanded by England’s most famous soldier,
Edward Plantagenet, known widely as the Black Prince (d. 1376).
[2]
Eldest son of Edward III (1327-1377) and heir to the English throne,
the prince had entered Spain to restore his country’s ally, Pedro I
“the Cruel” (1350-1366; 1367-1369)
[3],
to the Castilian throne from which he had been unceremoniously
ousted a year earlier.
[1] The Christian kingdoms of
Castile, Aragon, Portugal, and Navarre and the Moorish kingdom
of Granada.
[2] Most historians attribute this
sobriquet, not mentioned in historical sources until long after
Edward’s death, to a penchant for wearing black armor. See, for
example: Henry Dwight Sedgwick, The Life of Edward the Black
Prince, 1330-1376 (New York, 1993): 27. The best medieval
account of the prince’s life is to be found in a lengthy poem by
an anonymous author known only as the Chandos herald, the most
reliable surviving manuscript of which resides in Worcester
College, Oxford. A critical edition from the turn of the century
used in the preparation of this article contains not only the
original text in meter, but also a useful prose paraphrase.
While the introduction to that edition is overwhelmingly
linguistic rather than historical in nature, the inclusion of
voluminous endnotes, often cross-referencing to other
chronicles, more than makes up for this. See: Life of the
Black Prince by the Herald of Sir John Chandos [hereafter
Chandos herald], ed. Mildred K. Pope and Eleanor C. Lodge
(Oxford, 1910). In addition, a somewhat freer English
translation of the work can be found in Richard Barber, The
Life and Campaigns of the Black Prince (London, 1979), a new
version of which has recently come out with Boydell and Brewer.
[3]
The most widely-used edition
of the Pedro’s chronicle, the one cited in this article, is
Pedro Lopez de Ayala, Crónica del Rey Don Pedro Primero
[hereafter Ayala], in Crónicas de los Reyes de Castilla [CRC]
1, Biblioteca de Autores Espanoles [BAE] 66 (Madrid:
Ediciones Atlas, 1953), pp. 393-614. For a more recent edition,
see: Crónica
del rey don Pedro,
ed. by Constance L. Wilkins and Heanon M. Wilkins (Madison:
Hispanic Seminary of Medieval Studies, 1985.) In Pedro the
Cruel, 1350-1369 (Leiden, 1995), Clara Estow
has contributed a fine full-length biography of the king.
Another useful book for the study of the reign, one that
reprints a number of key documents is J. B. Sitges, Las
Mujeres del Rey Don Pedro I de Castilla (Madrid, 1910). For
my own assessment of Pedro and his highly impolitic policies,
see: L. J. Andrew Villalon, "Pedro the Cruel: Portrait of a
Royal Failure," in Medieval Iberia: Essays on the History and
Literature of Medieval Spain, ed. Donald J. Kagay and Joseph
T. Snow (New York, 1997), pp. 205-216.
Examples of
Historical Footnoting
Printed Works
Single Book:
Author, Title (Place of Publication:
Publisher, Date of Publication).
or
Author, Title (Place of Publication, Date of
Publication).
Examples:
Barbara W. Tuchman, A Distant Mirror: The Calamitous Fourteenth
Century (New York, 1978).
John Keegan, The Face of Battle (New York: The Viking
Press, 1976).
Note: The author's name should be given as it
appears on the title page of the book, including initials. The
title must be underlined or in italics. You may either include or
omit the publisher. In the collections I have co-edited, we do not
require the publisher. On the other hand, many outlets, in
particular historical journals, do require it.
Single Book with page number(s):
Author, Title (Place of Publication, Date of
Publication), page(s).
Examples:
Barbara W. Tuchman, A Distant Mirror: The
Calamitous Fourteenth Century (New York, 1978), 3-33.
John Keegan, The Face of Battle (New York: The Viking Press,
1976), pp. 3-33.
Note: The abbreviation for page/pages (p./pp.)
can be, but does not have to be included.
Single Book with
multiple authors:
Authors, Title (Place of Publication, Date of
Publication).
Examples:
Raymond T. McNally and Radu Florescu, In Search of
Dracula: A True History of Dracula and Vampire Legends (New
York, 1972).
Carlton J. H. Hayes, et. al., History of Europe
(New York: The McMillan Company, 1956).
Note: When there are two authors, both of their
names should be given in full. When there are three or more authors,
give the first name mentioned, followed by "et. al.", a Latin abbreviation
that means "and others."
Journal Article :
Author, “Title of article,” Title of journal, volume,
number (Date), pages.
L. J. Andrew Villalon, "Putting Don Carlos Together Again: the
Treatment of a Head Injury in Mid-Sixteenth Century Spain," Sixteenth
Century Journal, Vol. XXVI, No. 2 (Summer, 1995), 347-65.
L. J. Andrew Villalon, "San Diego de Alcala and the Politics of
Saint-making in Counter-Reformation Europe," Catholic Historical Review,
Vol. LXXXIII, No. 4 (October, 1997), 691-715.
Note: The title of the article should be placed within quotation
marks. The title of the journal should be in italics or underlined.
The date might be the season or the month of publication. Rarely
will it be only the year, but if that is the case, then give just the
year.
Article (also called a “chapter”) in a collection:
Author, “Title of article,” in Title of collection, Name of editor(s), Title of
collection (Place of publication, Date), pages in collection.
Author, “Title of article,” in Name of editor(s), ed(s)., Title of
collection (Place of publication: Publisher, Date), pages in collection.
Examples:
L. J. Andrew Villalon, "Pedro the Cruel: Portrait of a Royal Failure,"
in Medieval Iberia: Essays on the History and Literature
of Medieval Spain, ed. by Donald J. Kagay and Joseph T. Snow,
Iberica Series, vol. 25 (New York, 1997), 201-16.
L. J. Andrew Villalon, "Seeking Castles in Spain: Sir Hugh Calveley
and the Free Companies' Intervention in Iberian Warfare (1366-1369)," in
Crusaders,
Condottierri, and Cannon: Medieval Warfare in Societies around the
Mediterranean, L. J. Andrew Villalon and Donald J. Kagay, eds. (Leiden, The Netherlands: Brill, 2003),
pp. 305-328.
Note: The title of the article should be placed within quotations
marks. The title of the collection must appear either underlined or
in italics. Since there are two co-editors, both of their names
should be listed. The volume is either "edited by" or their names
are followed by "eds." meaning editors.
Article (also called “chapter”) in a multi-volume collection:
L. J. Andrew Villalon, "The Battle of Najera and the Hundred Years
War in Spain," in The Hundred Years War: A Wider Focus, edited
by L. J. Andrew Villalon and Donald J. Kagay, 2 Vols. (Leiden, The
Netherlands: Brill, 2005), 1: 3-74.
Note: The title of the article is placed in quotation
marks, the title of the collection must appear either in italics or
underlined. If there are two editors, both names are given; if there
are three or more, the first one named is given, followed by "et. al."
Encyclopedia Article:
L. J. Andrew Villalon, "Machiavelli," in
Encyclopedia of the Reformation, ed. by Hans Hillerbrand, et. al.,
4 Vols., (New York: Oxford University Press, 1996), 2: 481.
Note: The use of "et. al." indicates
multiple editors. The encyclopedia contains four volume; the entry
in question appears in volume 2.
Document in a documentary collection:
“The Speech of Urban: The Version of Guibert of
Nogent,” in The Chronicle of Fulcher of Chartres and Other Source
Materials, ed. by Edward Peters, Second Edition (Philadephia, 1998),
33-37.
"The Speech of Urban: The Version of Guibert of
Nogent,” in The Chronicle of Fulcher of Chartres and Other Source
Materials, Edward Peters, ed., Second Edition (Philadephia:
University of Pennsylvania Press, 1998), pp. 33-37.
Repeat Citations:
In the course of writing a paper, it is often
necessary to cite a work or a document more than once. For example,
each direct quotation from a source must be cited individually.
What is more, if different pieces of information are taken from a single
source, each piece of information should also be separately cited.
On the other hand, it is not necessary or even
desirable to supply a complete citation each time the source is used.
There are acceptable ways in which to abbreviate repeat citation.
Example 1:
1. Barbara W. Tuchman, A Distant Mirror: The
Calamitous Fourteenth Century (New York, 1978), 33.
2. ibid.
Note: In Example 1, the first reference to the source should be a
complete reference. The second reference is to the same page in the
same source; hence, all one needs to put in the footnote is "ibid."
Example 2:
1. Barbara W. Tuchman, A Distant Mirror: The
Calamitous Fourteenth Century (New York, 1978), 33.
2. ibid., 35.
Note: In Example 2, the second reference is to
the same source, but a different page.
Example 3:
1. Barbara W. Tuchman, A Distant Mirror: The
Calamitous Fourteenth Century (New York, 1978), 33.
2.
John Keegan, The Face of Battle (New York, 1976), 80.
3. Tuchman, 35.
Note: In Example 3, there is an intervening
source between the first and second references to Tuchman's book.
One can not use "ibid" for the second Tuchman reference, because in this
case "ibid" would refer to the preceding source, i.e. the book written by
John Keegan. Consequently, it is necessary to refer back to Tuchman
by using her name and the page number.
Example 4:
1. Barbara W. Tuchman, A Distant Mirror: The
Calamitous Fourteenth Century (New York, 1978), 33.
2. Barbara W. Tuchman, The Proud Tower:
A Portrait of the World before the War, 1890-1914 (New York, 1962), 55.
3.
John Keegan, The Face of Battle (New York, 1976), 80.
4. Tuchman, A Distant Mirror, 35.
Note: In Example 4, several works by Tuchman
have been used. Consequently, in subsequent footnotes/endnotes, the
author must distinguish between them by including a short title.
Example 5:
1. Barbara W. Tuchman, A Distant Mirror: The
Calamitous Fourteenth Century (New York, 1978), 33.
2. Barbara W. Tuchman, The Proud Tower:
A Portrait of the World before the War, 1890-1914 (New York, 1962), 55.
3.
John Keegan, The Face of Battle (New York, 1976), 80.
4. Tuchman, A Distant Mirror, 35.
5. ibid.
6. ibid., 36.
Note: In Example 5, note 1 gives the complete
reference; note 4 i refers back to that reference and includes both the
author's name and a short title; note 5 refers to the same work and the
same page as note 4; and note 6 refers to the same work, but a different
page.
Citing Sources from the Web
Although the rules for citing print sources were
worked out long before the arrival of the World Wide Web, scholars are currently wrestling with the question of
how best to cite web sources. The main problem lies in the fact that
print sources have a solidity that web sources lack. A web source
can literally be here today and gone tomorrow. Even if the web
source remains in place, it may not be the same. Any electronic
source can be altered over time--witness the material in my website.
To help compensate for this problem, scholars are increasingly adding to
their citations to the web, the date and perhaps even the time when they accessed the
material. The following are some suggestions of how one might
cite websources
Examples 1:
Review of Niccolo Machiavelli, The Art of War, translated, edited, and
with a Commentary by Christopher Lynch (Chicago: University of Chicago
Press, 2003) written by L. J. Andrew Villalon for the De re militari website
URL:
http://www.deremilitari.org/REVIEWS/Machiavelli_Art_Lynch.html,
(accessed 4/15/08.)
Examples 1 (alternate):
Review of Niccolo Machiavelli, The Art of War, translated, edited, and
with a Commentary by Christopher Lynch (Chicago: University of Chicago
Press, 2003) written by L. J. Andrew Villalon for the De re militari website
URL:
http://www.deremilitari.org/REVIEWS/Machiavelli_Art_Lynch.html,
(accessed 9 p.m. 4/15/08.)
In the alternate version, the writer has also recorded
the time of day when the source was accessed. While this may seem to
be "overkill," in the end, it is the author's choice.
Citing Major
Genealogical Sources
A. Personal
Interviews, Conversations, Letters, Emails
The following are variations on what
is really a common theme—communication between yourself and another
individual. Together, they should cover citation to what will
probably be one of the student’s most widely-used sources, i.e. his or her
relatives.
Interview with George Washington
conducted by L. J. Andrew Villalon in Philadelphia, Pennsylvania on
July 4, 1776.
Conversation between George
Washington and L. J. Andrew Villalon in Philadelphia, Pennsylvania on
July 4, 1776.
Phone conversation between John
Adams and L. J. Andrew Villalon on July 4, 1826.
Letter of Benjamin Franklin to L.
J. Andrew Villalon sent in Summer, 1789 (?).
Email of Thomas Jefferson to L. J.
Andrew Villalon sent from Monticello, Virginia on July 4, 1826.
If, as in the fourth example, a
letter does not identify the place from which it was sent or the precise
date when it was sent, do the best you can. If you are not certain about
any part of that information, but have a good guess, then enter your guess
followed by a question mark.
B.
Social Security Death Index
Full Citation: To be used when first referring to the source in respect to
each
particular person.
U.S. Social Security Administration,
"Social Security Death Index," database, RootsWeb.com (http://ssdi.genealogy.rootsweb.com.)
(Accessed 9 p.m. 4/1/09), entry for Jose Villalon, ssn 159-03-3852.
The abbreviation ssn refers to Social
Security Number.
Short Citation:
To be used for all subsequent references to the same person:
"Social Security Death Index,"
RootsWeb.com database entry for Jose Villalon, ssn 159-03-3852.
The shortened form as given above is
the official form that appears in several genealogical handbooks. On the other hand, I think it is
actually longer than necessary. In arriving at an abbreviated form,
two factors must be weighed against one another: (1) being as brief
as possible while (2) supplying enough information to identify the source.
Here, I would argue that the "shortened form" can be shortened even
further without loss of specificity. My alternative would be:
SSDI, Jose Villalon, ssn
159-03-3852.
After all, SSDI is a commonly-recognized abbreviation making it unnecessary to spell out "Social Security Death
Index" on subsequent occasions. If the writer wishes to clarify this
still further, then the first full reference
can indicate that thereafter an abbreviation. will be used:
U.S.Social Security Administration,
"Social Security Death Index (hereafter abbreviated SSDI), "database,
RootsWeb.com (http://ssdi.genealogy.rootsweb.com.) (Accessed 9 p.m.
4/1/09), entry for Jose Villalon, ssn 159-03-3852.
Secondly, unless the writer is
using several databases to access the SSDI, there is probably no
need to specify the database each time.
The exception would
come when a writer did use several databases to access the census; for example, both Rootsweb and FamilySearch provides
a search function. If one is using both of these databases, a distinction would have to
be made in the shortened footnote/endnote:
SSDI, RootsWeb.com
database, Jose Villalon, ssn 159-03-3852.
SSDI, FamilySearch
database, Jose Villalon, ssn 159-03-3852.
When referring to another
person found in the SSDI, the full footnote should be repeated in
the first reference:
U.S. Social Security
Administration, "Social Security Death Index," database,
RootsWeb.com (http://ssdi.genealogy.rootsweb.com.) (Accessed
10 p.m. 4/1/09), entry for Luis J. Villalon, ssn 159-03-3852.
If, in an earlier note
concerning a different person, you have already indicated that
"Social Security Death Index" is to be abbreviated thereafter as
SSDI, then you can give this initial note for another person as follows:
U.S. Social Security
Administration, SSDI, database, RootsWeb.com (http://ssdi.genealogy.rootsweb.com.)
(Accessed 10 p.m. 4/1/09), entry for Luis J. Villalon, ssn
159-03-3852.
C.
Federal Census Records
Full Citation: To be
used only when first referring to the source in respect to each
particular person.
1880 US Federal Census,
Population Schedule, Athens Boro, Bradford County, Pennsylvania,
Enumeration District 4, p. 20, dwelling 196, family 222. Ely
E. Hyatt. Database: Ancestry.com, Census Records.
(Accessed April 1, 2009). Derived from the original in the
National Archives, microfilm roll T-9_1104.
This has been simplified
somewhat from the "approved" model given in several works on
genealogical citation.
Most of the information for
drafting the citation comes from the original image. On the
other hand, information on where in the National Archives the
originals can be located appears on the compiled database page, not
on the original image.
Short Citation: To
be used for subsequent references
1880 US Federal Census, Ely E.
Hyatt.
Always spell the person's name
as it is given on the census you are citing.
If the spelling differs from
census as it does in the case of Eli Hyatt (Ely E. Hyatt, Eli E.
Hyatt, E.E. Hyatt), then that fact should be noted in the first
census citation dealing with the individual.
D.
Draft Registration Cards
Full Citation: To be
used only when first referring to the source in respect to each
particular person.
U.S. Social Security Administration,
"Social Security Death Index," database, RootsWeb.com (http://ssdi.genealogy.rootsweb.com.)
(Accessed 9 p.m. 4/1/09), entry for Jose Villalon, ssn 159-03-3852.
Draft Registration Card,
database, Ancestry.com (http://www.ancestry.com)
(Accessed 4/1/09), entry for Jose Andrés Villalon, Gary, Lake County,
Indiana, June, 1917.
Draft Registration Card,
database, Ancestry.com, (
http://www.ancestry.com) (Accessed 9 p.m.), entry for Lewis Carleton
Matthews, Norfolk, Virginia, September, 1918 (?).
The information supplied
in these sample citations should be sufficient to inform readers how they
can locate the draft registration cards. It identifies the database that
was used in finding the card, the individual as his name appears on the
card, and where that individual was living when the card was
issued.
If (as on the Matthews
card) no county is given, then the citation will contain only the city
name.
Also on the Matthews card,
the date is given as September, 1918 (?). The question mark results from
the difficulties involved in reading the on-line version of the
card.
Short Citation:
To be used for subsequent references
Draft Registration Card,
Jose Andrés Villalon.
Draft Registration
Card, Lewis Carleton Matthews.
E.
Passenger Lists
Full Citation:
“Philadelphia
Passenger Lists, 1800-1945,” database, Immigration and Emigration
Records,” database, Ancestry.com. (http://www.ancestry.com/search/rectype/default.aspx?rt=40)
(accessed March 22, 2009), entry for Jose A. Villalon, 18 years/6
months old, arrived September 13, 1907 on the Brighton.
Short Citation:
“Philadelphia
Passenger Lists,” Jose A. Villalon, arrived September 13, 1907 on
the Brighton.
The full citation must be used
at the first mention of the source. In subsequent
citations, if it is the
same database being used (for example, Immigration and Emigration
Records,” Ancestry.com), then these do not need to be repeated in
the short citation. Subsequent citations can also omit the date
accessed and the age of the individual upon arrival.
E.
National Park Service Civil War Site:
Full Citation:
The American Civil War: Forging a more Perfect
Union, National Park Serivce, U.S. Department of the Interior, Civil War
Soldiers and Sailors System (Accessed April 1, 2009), entry for Jacob G. Frick, Colonel, 27th
Regiment, Pennsylvania Infantry Militia (Emergency, 1863).
If, as in the case of Frick, the soldier served in
several different units, the citation may be designed to show that fact:
The American Civil War: Forging a more
Perfect Union, National Park Serivce, U.S. Department of the Interior,
Civil War Soldiers and Sailors System (Accessed April 1, 2009), entry
for Jacob G. Frick, Lieutenant
Colonel, 96th Regiment, Pennsylvania Infantry; Colonel, 129th
Regiment, Pennsylvania Infantry; Colonel, 27th Regiment, Pennsylvania
Infantry Militia (Emergency, 1863).
If service in multiple military units is indicated by the
citation, then the units should (if possible) be listed in the order in
which the soldier served in them.
Short Citation:
NPS, American Civil War, Jacob G. Frick.
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