You know all the necessary information to obtain what you want just call the municipal building in that city and get them to lead you to this information, their usually great with helping people locate this type of information. Good luck !
2007-06-21 05:38:37
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answer #1
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answered by chessmaster1018 6
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If you know the information you stated, you should be able to contact funeral homes in the city and learn when the person was buried, and where. You may be able to find obituaries in papers in that city; those often contain burial information.
Due to privacy laws, to get a death certificate, you'll probably need to contact the office of the county clerk in the county where the person died. In most states, you have to be a very close relative of the person to get a death certificate, or else the person has to have been dead for more than 70 years.
2007-06-21 05:41:36
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answer #2
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answered by Anonymous
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You can order a copy of the death certificate from the state or from the county if it is a direct ancestor and not outside of the range of dates that are still kept. Each state sets privacy restrictions, so some states are easier than others.
You can use US Genweb to look up the county of death and find out how to order vital records.
The death certificate will name the cemetery, the cemetery records will locate the specific grave.
2007-06-21 05:39:33
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answer #3
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answered by oohhbother 7
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I am sorry but I have not had the need to use that information yet. To get a death certificate you need to go to the following website
2007-06-21 06:02:59
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answer #4
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answered by 88sweet 1
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Is the person buried somewhere in the UK, if so if you would like to email me or post more information, name, date of death, which city they died in I will do a search to see what I can find for you. If its in the states you could use www.findagrave.com
2007-06-21 05:40:59
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answer #5
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answered by itsjustme 7
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First why not ask the family, next of kin. 2nd approach ask the funeral home. 3rd if you need to, order a genealogy copy from that county's death records, those are usually quicker and cost less.
2007-06-21 08:48:49
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answer #6
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answered by Anonymous
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In Texas it would be the Bureau of Vital Statistics. You might look at the state's genweb. Usually it will tell you where to get one. Not every state does the same.
2007-06-21 05:51:07
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answer #7
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answered by Shirley T 7
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For more than 16 million records of where people are buried, try:
http://www.findagrave.com
Hope that helps,
Dave
--
http://www.familypulse.org
2007-06-21 11:42:43
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answer #8
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answered by genealogist84 4
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