Hey, Folks—I’m not telling anyone here what they should or should not consult, whether on-line or off-line. If you all like using Wiki-Tiki, more power to you. This whole thread started because I refuse to accept as definitive evidence that Wikipedia states the birds on the Great Seal of Burlington County are seagulls.
Because I have one foot in the old world and one in the new relative to my research approach, I tend to lean towards finding a older book or manuscript material to answer my research questions rather than something like Wiki-Tiki.
For example, Mark mentioned researching coppersmithing. If I needed information on that subject—and I didn’t own some books on the subject (which I do)—I would tend to turn to something like Google Books before doing a general web search on the subject. A quick search on Google Books using “Coppersmithing” as a keyword finds 822 texts. Some have either snippet views on no preview at all, but you can compile a great bibliography on any given subject using Google Books. In the case of coppersmithing, there are several historical technical treatises on the subject that have full view on Google Books.
Another website—actually two websites—I like to use is “Making of America.” Cornell hosts a portion of the MOA web presence and the University of Michigan hosts the other part. These two sites allow you to search many historical books and journals and then will display a scan of the original magazine page complete with all figures and graphics. If you are researching machinery or some scientific question, it will show you how our forefathers approached the same subjects.
Every researcher has his or her unique “bag of tricks” for cracking tough research nuts. Over the years, I have accumulated many browser “favorites” that aid me in my research on the web, but Wiki-Tiki is not one of them. But in the final analysis, it comes down to whatever you feel comfortable using. I am just as happy pulling a book off the shelf in my library as I am performing a web search to answer a question.
I’m done with this thread.
Best regards,
Jerseyman