
Once you locate one, you’ll want to use information in that record to explore other types of records. You’ll typically find a variety of records were created for your ancestor’s death.Information found on the records of siblings may include helpful details that aren’t found on your ancestor’s record. Seek out the death records for all family members.You’ll want to cover all bases though and check to make sure they didn’t move in with grown children, siblings, or other family members. Sometimes when they disappear from these records, it can narrow their death date. Follow your ancestors through census records and city directories.If you would like to view obituaries by country, state or city, please visit our Obituary pages. Use the information you find in one type of death record to seek out other death-related records. This collection includes indexes that can help you request the actual record, and in some cases, actual images of the death records. In addition to details about the death, they can contain birth information, family origins, cause of death, and more.ĭeath records are primary resources for details about the death, since they were typically created relatively near the time of the death. This category includes civil, church, cemetery, obituary, and other death-related collections. We also maintain a list of links to state vital records agencies in the Ancestry Library. The full record will typically include details not found in the index.

Death records how to#
If you find your ancestor in an index, be sure to click on the database title and look at the description to learn how to request the actual death record. In other cases, there are indexes that contain information that will help you request the record. In a few of the death records collections on Ancestry, you will find the indexes that link to images of actual birth records.
