
Person Info
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Title: NYC Municipal Archives "D' delayed birth certificate based on 3 records or the afidavit of persons who had primary knowledge of birth date and place; e.g. baptismal record, mother's statement, or older sister, school record. Page: June 15 1879 |
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Title: NYC Munical Archives 1957-1960 NYC Index LDS #1324927 Page: # 3129 Bx Mar 27, 1929 |
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Title: Calvary Cemetery (1848) 49-02 Laurel Hill Blvd, Woodside, NY 11377-7396 (718) 786-8000 St. Patrick's Cathedral trustees purchased land in Maspeth in 1846, and the first body was interred in Calvary Cemetery in 1848. "By 1852 there were 50 burials a day in Calvary, half of them Irish poor under 7 years of age," Gottlieb reported. By the 1990s there were nearly 3 million graves in Calvary Cemetery. Page: 3rd Section 30 Range 20 Plot A Grave 13 |
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Title: NYC Municipal Archives Heath Department marriage certificates and indexes for all Boroughs prior to 1938 are available on microfilm. Index to City Clerk marriage licenses for all Boroughs, 1908 - 1929, available on microfilm; Licenses 1908 - 1929 have not been microfilmed; license copies are available via special order only. Page: # 953 Bx Sep 27, 1903 Note: When birth certificate number has a 'D' suffix meaning DELAYED it must be obtained from the NYC Board of Health "City Clerk's Marriage Licenses, 1908-37: One of 20th-Century Genealogy's Best" http://www.nygbs.org/info/articles/NYC_marriages.html LeslieCorn@aol.com 1908 through 1937 - two choices of marriage records in New York City: 1) Dept. of Health marriage certificates NY Municpal Archives 2) City Clerk's marriage licenses. These are 2 different documents about the same event and give you two shots at finding information. Marriage license affidavits--one of the three parts of a City Clerk's marriage license-- were typically filled out by the bride and groom themselves if they were literate and have a much greater chance of being accurate than marriage certificates filled out by the person marrying the couple. Where the official performing the marriage, for instance, may have gotten the bride's mother's name wrong, it's a pretty good shot that the bride didn't! Plus, marriage licenses have more information than certificates, such as place of birth of the parents and bride's occupation. In addition, licenses sometimes show the place of the marriage, so you don't have to go through city directories and other sources looking for the affiliation of the person performing the ceremony With the date and locality of the marriage, the NYC Municipal Archives' staff will search for the license for you. Be specific in your letter that you want a search for a City Clerk's license, not a Dept. of Health marriage certificate, or they'll search for the latter. |
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Title: St Lukes, RC Church, 895 [623] East 138th St, Bronx 10454 Page: Marriage Sept 27 1903 |
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