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Published byPriscilla Housley Modified over 10 years ago
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Cemeteries and Obituaries A source of Vital Information
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Cemetery Records Can be a place to find… Family members Relatives in other plots Children who died young Women not found in other records
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Cemetery Records Often include information about: Birth Marriage Death And sometimes: Military service Religion Membership in an Organization
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Cemetery Records Vary in completeness and accuracy. Records may be difficult to locate.
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Cemetery Records Determining a burial place can be a difficult problem. Use Obituaries and Death Certificates to solve this problem.
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Burial place listed here.
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There are 5 TYPES of Cemeteries in America.
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1. Churchyard Members buried here. Custom from the Old World. Common in colonial states.
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2. Church-owned Cemetery Not adjacent to Church building but is owned and operated by the church. Example in SLC is Mount Calvary Catholic Cemetery.
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3. Government-owned Cemetery Includes military Can be at town, county, state or national levels Maintained by taxes Salt Lake City Cemetery is an example. DeRuyter Town Cemetery, New York
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4. Privately-owned, non-church cemetery Operated as a business enterprise; is a corporation. More common in recent years. Larkin Sunset Lawn is an example in Salt Lake City. Poukeepsie Cemetery
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5. The Family Cemetery Often just a small corner of the family farm or estate. Set aside for family members and relatives. Found throughout Utah on hillsides and farms.
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Cemetery Records 2 Types of Cemetery Records 1.Sexton’s Records 2.Tombstone or Gravestones
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1.Sexton’s Records ~ started around the time of the Civil War
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Sexton’s Records Provide ~ Names and dates of those buried. They are not obliged to share these records.
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Sexton may also provide Maps of burial plots Salt Lake City Cemetery
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How to Contact Sextons FHL Resources include: “Cemeteries of the United States” –Organized by County “United States Cemetery Addressbook” –Organized by State and Town
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“Cemeteries of the United States”
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United States Cemetery Address book
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Tombstones or Gravestones The Other Cemetery Record Have been around a very long time. May be only record that a person lived and died.
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The two types of Cemetery Records: Sexton’s Records Tombstones or Gravestones These may be transcribed and found in publications.
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How to Find Transcriptions of Cemetery Records in the Family History Library and elsewhere…
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One FHL Tool: “The Cemetery Record Compendium” 1979 by Jack Stemmons, FHL [has a Key to Format] Lists some of the Library Cemetery Record Holdings Uses our film numbers
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Other Tools for finding Transcriptions of Cemetery Records Library Catalog Topics: –Cemeteries –Vital records –Also found under Newspapers and Obituaries PERSI
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The FHLC can provide Cemetery helps like “Index to United States Cemeteries”
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Let’s do a search for a Mrs. Roxana Dame in the Niagara, New York area. We’ll use the FHL catalog.
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4 search paths
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L.D.J. December 6, 1884, p 2 c 5 In Royalton, Nov 28, 1884 – Dame- Mrs. Roxana Dame, relict of Samuel Dame age 88 yr., resided here 50 yr. Born Vermont. Early to Canada. 1 st husb. Capt. Cutter with whom came N.Y. 4 children. He died consumption. She mar. Samuel Dame. Members M. E. Church Grandchildren. Miss Sara and Orlanda Dame. Lived with James C. Swift Family, Mrs. Swift being a step- daughter.
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Lockport Daily Advertiser is a close match.
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How can we locate a newspaper entry?
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This shows the location where a copy of the actual newspaper article can be found.
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PERSI Let’s do another search. This time we’ll use PERSI because the catalog doesn’t have what I’m looking for in Dryden, Tompkins, New York.
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Periodical is New York Genealogical and Biographical Record BYGBR’s Found in FHL
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This gives tombstone readings
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The Sexton’s Records for Willow Glen Cemetery look like this…
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Newspaper Transcripts Another source for Cemetery or Obituary Records is Newspaper Transcripts
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A valuable source of older record information Easier to find than original copies.
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Abstracts can look like this… They can provide good information.
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cannot The FHL cannot house microfilms of all newspapers. It has some. The FHL can be a good source for INDEXES to newspapers.
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New York Times Index Good example of a newspaper Index is the “New York Times Index”
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Use the index to locate actual articles.
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Locating an actual obituary can be very valuable in gathering family histories.
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