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2006-10-13 14:57:19 · 7 answers · asked by onemorelegtogo 2 in Arts & Humanities Genealogy

7 answers

Some US Gen Web county-level sites have some. How many depends on how many volunteers they get to transcribe the data. They start here:

http://www.usgenweb.net/

The Brits have
http://www.freebmd.org.uk/

Both sites use volunteers to transcribe. You can help.
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Added Later:

These are for deaths in the US only:

http://ssdi.genealogy.rootsweb.com/cgi-bin/ssdi.cgi
(Social Security)

California, Kentucky, Texas & Maine:

http://vitals.rootsweb.com/ca/death/search.cgi
http://vitals.rootsweb.com/ky/death/search.cgi
http://vitals.rootsweb.com/tx/death/search.cgi
http://vitals.rootsweb.com/me/death/search.cgi

2006-10-14 02:25:22 · answer #1 · answered by Anonymous · 1 0

There are websites that grant such documents, yet i think of they not unfastened, by way of fact those counsel are was once private and private. So paying for one will require a fee to preserved the the documents.

2016-10-16 04:22:27 · answer #2 · answered by ? 4 · 0 0

Courthouse websites....they are public records.

2006-10-13 15:04:20 · answer #3 · answered by B R 4 · 0 0

yes

2006-10-13 14:59:03 · answer #4 · answered by myk833 2 · 0 0

Yes there are, go to: www.ci. your city. your state.us./citysite

2006-10-13 15:10:33 · answer #5 · answered by lousylaus 3 · 0 0

www.findagrave.com but that's for famous people

2006-10-13 14:58:52 · answer #6 · answered by chrstnwrtr 7 · 0 0

obituaries.......something like that

2006-10-13 15:05:29 · answer #7 · answered by oneNirvanablue 2 · 0 0

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