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eLearning Series: Geneology
My Family Tree is Important to Me
( 50 articles in this series )
Family
Records: Vital Statistics
Birth,
marriage and death are possibly the
three most important events in a person’s life. These events
are recorded in government vital statistics records, and these
records are of great importance to a genealogy researcher.
In fact, without these records, doing genealogical research
would be next to impossible.
Here’s an example of how
vital statistics can be used. In
tracing your own family tree lets say you can go back as far
as your great grandparents on each side of the family, but
know nothing about their parents and can go no further with
family records. By going to the court house and checking government
vital statistics you can find the birth records of your grandparents,
their marriage records, and their death records. With this
information you can find information on their brothers and
sisters, leading to other branches of the family. You can also
find the names of their parents, your great, great grandparents.
You can then find out where your great, great grandparents
were born, showing the geographic trail as your ancestors moved.
By checking their death records and lists of survivors you’ll
find brothers and sisters, and children listed, showing other
family branches again.
As an example, one man researching his family found that his
grandfather had two brothers. His grandfather moved to Illinois,
his brothers went first to Canada, and then to California.
The brothers married and raised families in Canada, and some
of the children married and stayed behind. Some went to California.
It is now obvious that there are three branches of this family:
Illinois, California and Canada. Vital statistics records provided
the trail to follow. This record also showed that one member
of the family was a military veteran of World War I. He was
buried without a tombstone, so the family used vital statistics
to prove his service and requested a tombstone from the Veterans
Administration which was granted.
In California this researcher discovered birth records for
long lost cousins he didn’t know he had, and by using these
records he got in touch with other family members who were
interested in genealogy, and was able to tie his research in
with their research and go on from there. This led him to a
branch of the family in New Zealand, a branch in Indiana, and
a branch in Illinois that moved back and lived just a few blocks
away from the researcher.
From a practical standpoint vital
statistics are often the easiest records to find and the most reliable since they are
kept by government agencies and recognized as being official
documents. Many people say that they have no relatives, or
have no living relatives. This is a misconception. Everyone
has relatives. If you are alive then you are related to someone.
Many people just don’t know who their relatives are. It becomes
a question of identity, and how close or how distant relatives
happen to be.
Using vital statistics can also allow a person to check
on marriages. In past years many people would have more than one
marriage, since mortality was so common. If a person’s spouse
died, they usually remarried. Sometimes there would be children
from the other marriage as well, leading to a larger family,
with more records of birth, more records of death, and more
records of marriages, again leading to more children and more
records of birth. These records will in turn lead to more birth
records, more marriage records and more death records, adding
more and more names to the family tree list, and making a more
complete picture.
Finding
these vital statistics isn’t a secret. These are government
records kept on file in court houses in counties across a state,
and across the nation. In some areas the records are gradually
being converted to digital form and may eventually be available
online. Most however, still use the old method of microfilm
storage which requires a person to go physically to a location
and look up the information in person.
The record of death, the record of birth, and the record of
marriages in government vital statistics are an important tool
for the genealogical researcher, a tool that many have learned
to use to great benefit. The next time you need to find out
information about an ancestor, perhaps checking the vital statistics
would be a good place to start.
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by SolveYourProblem.com
: 2006
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