Just so you don't think me rather tedious, I'd like to mention four important considerations in doing family historical research. -- There really is method to my madness even though a friend once noted with tongue in cheek, that there might be more madness to my method.
First, it's important to know a family member's name as complete as possible -- including nicknames. The picture above, courtesy of Dave Sanderson, Shreveport, LA, is of his grandparents -- Silas Chester and Charlotte Campbell Sanderson. Silas was my wife Bessie's oldest brother, and he married my sister Charlotte. Consequently, that makes Grandson Dave Sanderson and his siblings what I call "double cousins" with grandkids of mine and Bessie's.
Anyway. . . , the family called Silas "Bud", and many friends and acquaintances might only have known him by that nickname. However, one would not find any documents listed under the name "Bud Sanderson" at the local courthouse in Paulding, Paulding Co, OH -- the county where he was born.
Second, it's also important to know the dates, as complete as possible, for events in Bud's life to be successful in locating documents that provide more information about him.
Third, it's crucial to be accurate when noting places -- again, as complete as possible. That way, one would be more apt to find the document he's searching for. Different levels of government hold Information on Bud's life in different states and counties. It just depends on where he lived at the time. And, even though county lines have been established for some time, they haven't always been static. Some of our ancestors may not have moved, but the county line may have. Consequently, records would be filed in the county as they were generated. This can get pretty confusing at times, I know.
Fourth, it's always important to record relationships in a family as accurately as possible, otherwise one might waste lots of time, energy, and money looking for a record that doesn't exist. Bud was a natural son of Francis Marion and Louisa M. Sackett Sanderson, but if he had been adopted, or a stepson, his birth certificate might very well have been filed somewhere entirely different than Paulding Co, OH.