English Deutsch Français Italiano Español Português 繁體中文 Bahasa Indonesia Tiếng Việt ภาษาไทย
All categories

2006-07-02 21:48:24 · 9 answers · asked by Tanya 2 in Arts & Humanities Genealogy

9 answers

I go to the Health Department and ask for a Genealogists Birth Data Sheet, these are free. Also, get my death records this way. Both the birth and death data sheets have the same information on them as the original records.
Also, on the usgenweb, volunteers are in the process of getting birth, death, and marriages on this site. If you can't find who you are looking for, check back once in awhile because these volunteers have alot of information to type in. I have found partial lists that at the end, they would put "to be continued".
Plus, rootsweb has the Social Security Death Index which is also helpful to me.

2006-07-03 02:35:13 · answer #1 · answered by Dottie 6 · 1 0

Birth certificates are not open to viewing until 72 years after the person's birth under federal law (they are NOT "public record" in the sense that they're open to the public for perusal). There are some states which publish birth indices, but that's the best you'll likely get.

If the record you're looking for is that old, you can view it at the office of the County Clerk where the person was born. Of course, if the record you want predates 1870, there may not even be one. Many states didn't keep civil birth records til then, and even if they had civil birth registers, there was nothing mandating birth registration until the 1930s. Many people who were born in the last century have no birth certificate and have to use Census records to establish their birth for legal purposes.

2006-07-03 11:12:12 · answer #2 · answered by yellow_jellybeans_rock 6 · 0 0

How and where to view birth certificates depends on both the year of birth and the place of birth. In some states, only birth certificates older than a certain year (which varies by state) can be viewed by anyone other than the person themselves, their parents if they are a minor, or an authorized representative.

*If* birth records are public in the state you are interested in, they may be at the town/city hall, county courthouse, or state Department of Public Health. Since you don't say what state, I can't say which is the case for the record you are interested in, but if you call the town or city hall, and ask for the town or city clerk, they should at least be able to tell you where the records are kept. If there is no city clerk, try the mayor's office; elected officials keep staffers on the payroll just to answer questions from voters.

2006-07-03 06:17:10 · answer #3 · answered by Riothamus Of Research ;<) 3 · 0 0

start certificate are likely no longer public archives, notwithstanding the tips is part of the necessary archives which the state will record. there's a waiting era earlier the tips would properly be printed to the wide-spread public. in case you want a replica of YOUR start certificate you've to pay. I doubt that you'll get a replica of somebody else's start certificate until eventually it became an ancestor. in case you stay close to the courtroom domicile or the state documents the position the man became born, you would possibly want to manage to pass there and be conscious the start archives.

2016-11-30 04:47:41 · answer #4 · answered by Anonymous · 0 0

You can go to the court house in the city where the birth was or if your not sure which city but you know the county, try the district county court house.
As far as criminal records, or cases charged against someone. You can go online to district court records, and you should be able to find information there if you know their legal name.

2006-07-02 22:12:43 · answer #5 · answered by Anonymous · 0 0

Thats you get from Nagar nigam office of that city where you belong from.If you are an Indian and other country i dont know.

2006-07-02 22:27:26 · answer #6 · answered by sharjish 2 · 0 0

those are free records at the court house if you know the person

2006-07-02 21:52:33 · answer #7 · answered by Paul G 5 · 0 0

There are a couple of websites which show you but they want money. The best one is searchsystems.net and the courthouse.

2006-07-02 21:53:16 · answer #8 · answered by Dimples 6 · 0 0

www.ancestry.com but it cost like $20.00 a year

2006-07-03 04:23:50 · answer #9 · answered by Anonymous · 0 0

fedest.com, questions and answers