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Powersupport

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About 13 years ago I made a website for my company. There was only five pages and one of them was a page which I posted pictures of my work, the URL was /gallery.php

A couple years later I built a new website without a gallery page so I did a 301 redirect of that gallery page to a different page.

I then built a new site years after that, and did a 301 redirect of that page to the newer page.

And then I had a new site built after that, and again redirected the old page to the new one.

Now today I had a new site built and I’m looking into things. In Search Console I see that Google attempted to index /gallery.php on September 14, only six days ago. It’s listed under the pages that are not indexed and the reason is because it is a page with a redirect. So fine, that works out.

My question is why is Google still trying to index this page that has been gone for over a decade? I used this one page as an example, but it’s like this for just about all of them.

I’d like to clean up this massive amount of 301 redirects that I already have when making them for the new website. But I guess I have to include even the really old ones if Google is still trying to index them…?
 
That feels like a very complicated set of redirects. Every time you build a new site you really need to keep the old structure. Google has already indexed and ranked the pages and links point to those pages so don't keep messing with things.

But to answer your question, it's probably because somewhere out there in webland is a website that links to your gallery.php. Google follows links and expects to see that page in place.
 

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