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Obituary Databases Atchison and Leavenworth, Kansas Obituaries, 1998 Audrain County, Missouri Obituaries, 1885-1903 Audrain County, Missouri Obituaries, 1904-16 Audrain County, Missouri Obituaries, 1917-29 Audrain County, Missouri Obituaries, 1930-42 Boone County, Missouri Obituaries, 1871-91 Boone County, Missouri Obituaries, 1892-1901 Boone County, Missouri Obituaries, 1902-13 Callaway County, Missouri Obituaries, 1830-1910 Callaway County, Missouri Obituaries, 1910-30 Callaway County, Missouri Obituaries, 1920-55 Chicago Sun-Times Obituaries, 1988-95 Cole County, Missouri Obituaries, 1871-99 Columbia, South Carolina Obituaries, 1859-77 Daughters of Utah Pioneers Obituary Scrapbook Elmhurst Press (Elmhurst, Illinois) Obituaries, 1988-98 Iosco County, Michigan Obituaries, 1978-90 Iosco County, Michigan, 1892-1949: Tawas Herald Obituaries Irish Independent Newspaper Obituaries: March - December 2001 Jasper County, Missouri Newspaper Obituaries, 1999 Kansas City Kansan Obituaries, 1998 Lafayette County, Missouri Obituaries, 1891-1920 Leavenworth County, Kansas Obituaries, 1947 Leavenworth County, Kansas Obituaries, 1948 Leavenworth County, Kansas Obituaries, 1999 Leavenworth County, Kansas: Leavenworth Times Obituary Index, 1983 - 1993 Leavenworth Times (Kansas) Obituaries, 1949, 1951-53 Leavenworth Times (Kansas) Obituaries, 1950 Leavenworth Times (Kansas) Obituaries, 1954, 1958, 1967-78 Leavenworth Times (Kansas) Obituaries, 1955-56 Leavenworth Times (Kansas) Obituaries, 1957-64 Leavenworth Times (Kansas) Obituaries, 1965-66, 1979-82 Leavenworth Times (Kansas) Obituaries, 1987-98 Leavenworth Times (KS), Obit., 1994-1998 Lombard, Illinois Newspaper Obituaries, 1929-53 London Free Press (Ontario) Obituaries, 1998-99 Montgomery County, Missouri Obituaries, 1889-1935 New York Times, Obituaries & Marriage Notices, 1889 Ontario, Canada Obituaries, 1999-2001: Kitchener Record and Windsor Star Richmond, Virginia Newspaper Obituaries, 1804-38 Riley County, Kansas Area Newspapers Obituaries, 1998-99 Riley County, Kansas Obituary Index, 1994-95 Sacramento California, Sacramento Beenewspaper 1859, Obituaries, Marriages, Births San Diego Union-Tribune (California) Obituaries, 1993-94 Southern Christian Advocate Obituaries, 1867-78 St. Clair County, Missouri Obituaries, 1888-1928 Toronto Star Obituaries, Toronto, Ontario, Canada, 1999 - April 2000, February 2001 Woodford county, Illinois, Illinois Prairie District library, obituaries, 1887-2000 Obituaries
Most genealogists are well aware of the importance of finding a death
certificate for each ancestor. However, many overlook obituaries as an equally
valuable source of information. These items often provide evidence of the
individual's marriage, place and date of birth, parents, siblings, and children.
Many also give insight into the person's character and the events which shaped
his or her life. An obituary may provide a death date and place and the cause of
death, where a person was buried (especially helpful if the burial did not occur
at the most recent residence), where the individual had previously lived, from
what foreign place he or she had emigrated, and when the person arrived in
America or at the final residence. While more recent obituaries tend to include
more personal information, those of earlier times are sometimes equally
extensive and even more important because they may provide such information for
periods before vital records were kept. Because of the value of establishing family connections, obituaries should be
sought not only for direct ancestors but also for siblings and children. One
obituary may give information which your own ancestor's and other immediate
relatives' obituaries do not have. In the case of hard-to-prove lineages,
seeking obituaries for other people in the same area with the same surname
should not be overlooked as a possible line of research. Information found in
obituaries varies widely. Each newspaper had its own policy concerning how much
and what kind of information was to be included. In small towns where most
people knew each other, a death was often considered highly newsworthy and a
lengthy article may have been written, especially if the person was somehow
involved in the town's political or social arena. At the same time, the length
of the obituary often had more to do with the amount of other news which needed
to be included in the small number of pages in the newspaper during the
particular week or day. The placement of the article could be at any point in
the newspaper where a space remained to be filled, and the obituary might appear
days, weeks, or even a month after the date of death. Larger newspapers
generally printed lengthy obituaries only about the area's more prominent
people, in part because their families generally paid a fee to extol the
deceased person's life. Information found in obituaries often leads to research in other places. In
those cases where a person died through an accident, suicide, or murder, the
obituary or article may describe the death as "sudden" and may even mention that
an inquest was held, in which case you might find further information in
coroners' records (See "Dead Men Do Tell Tales," Ancestry, Vol. 12, No.
2). Notice of death at a place of former residence or at the residence of a
child may show where to search for death and burial records in a new location,
perhaps where an aged person happened to be visiting or even along a travel
route. Mention of the deceased person's relatives may enable you to contact them
or their present-day descendants so that you can compare and share information
on the family. If you have established the death place of an individual, an obituary should
be sought in the immediate area since this is the most likely place for it to
have been published. The area may have had many newspapers, some of which have
long since ceased publishing. If your ancestor was an immigrant, the obituary
might have been printed in an ethnic newspaper. If the individual was active in
a religion, you may find the obituary in a church-sponsored newspaper. These
smaller newspapers may in fact provide much more information than the larger
city newspapers. Each must be searched before concluding that no obituary exits
in that area, and you may wish to look in every newspaper anyway, as one version
may provide more information than another. Incases where no obituary can be
found in the last place of residence, looking in areas where the person's
children lived may be successful. The names and present locations of a town's local newspapers are sometimes a
challenge to find. County histories and county research outlines can be very
helpful. Those newspapers which are still being published are listed in Gale
Directory of Publications and Broadcast Media, which describes the printing
locations and correct titles of newspapers. The predecessor of this directory,
the American Newspaper Directory, began publishing in 1869, so many old
newspapers can be identified in older issues. Union lists of newspaper files can
also help in locating newspapers which have ceased publication. See especially
Clarence Brigham's History and Bibliography of American Newspapers,
1690-1820, Winifred Gregory's American Newspapers, 1821-1936, Anita
Milner's Newspaper Indexes: A Location and Subject guide for Researchers,
and the Library of Congress' Newspapers on Microfilm. Also see Betty
Jarboe's Obituaries: A Guide to Sources. In recent years, some cities and counties have indexed the obituaries in the
local newspapers, making a search quite easy. These indexes may be available at
your local family history center (a branch of The Church of Jesus Christ of
Latter-day Saints Family History Library), a local library, or through
correspondence with the county's historical or genealogical society. You may
also wish to contact the local genealogical or historical society, as it may
know of indexes which have been recently compiled, some of which may still be in
private hands but available on request. A few major examples of newspapers with
obituary indexes include The New York Times, which has a master index
that includes the years 1851 to the present and a separate Obituary Index; early
Boston newspapers are indexed back to 1704; over 100 Connecticut newspapers are
indexed (Hale Collection) up to 1865. |
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