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Death certificates are invaluable resources for genealogists. They offer a wealth of information about an individual's life and family history, including details such as birthplaces, parents' names and birthplaces (including the mother's maiden name), occupation, marital status, and cause of death. The death certificates in this collection have been processed using artificial intelligence to extract the most relevant information for genealogical research.

For each death certificate, a brief summary has been prepared, followed by a table containing each field of the death certificate.

Remember, today's AI tools can make mistakes, so check the info in our death certificate collection and let us know of any mistakes.



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Babb, Becky Lou (1988)

Babb, Sidney Ernest (1946)

Bailey, John Earl (1986)

Barnes, Raymond Etheldred (1987)

Barritt, Zina (1918)

Beale, Emily Edith Devilla (1933)

Beale, Josie Powell (1981)

Beale, Lloyd McLane (1986)

Beaton, Mary Hatfield (1968)

Benton, Martha Eliza (1931)

Bradshaw, Charles Edward (1938)

Bradshaw, Edwin (1916)

Bradshaw, Leslie Lee (1963)

Branch, Mamie Rebecca (1951)

Branson, Hallie Eliza (1949)

Britt, James E (1915)

Britt, Julian Jesse (1986)

Britt, Mills (1925)

Brown Sr, James Walter (1953)

Butler, Richard Sherman, Jr (1965)

Carr, Elizabeth Frances (1932)

Carr, Julian (1963)

Carr, Lemuel (1914)

Carr, Maggie Eva (1965)

Carr, Solomon (1917)

Carr, Willie (1987)

Carr, Willie Iverson (1957)

Coates, Jessie Varnell Mayes (1996)

Cobb, Audrey Christine (1938)

Corbett, George Willard (1970)

Corbett, James Samuel (1963)

Crooks, Mary Jane (1905)

Davidson, Delsie (1987)

Davidson, John Roland (1961)

Davidson, John Roland Jr (1990)

Davidson, Wilton Dalton Sr (1972)

Duck, Garland Andrews (1984)

Duck, Mary Elizabeth Turner (1958)

Duck, Morris Randolph (1995)

Duke, Claude W, Sr (1936)

Dunning, Lyna L (1920)

Glover, William Grafton (1992)

Hargrove, Margaret Virginia (1942)

Harrison, Fenton Wallace Sr (1977)

Harrison, Fenton Wallace, Sr (1977)

Hayes, Louisa Gordon (1923)

Heffington, James Edward Sr (1959)

Johnson, Beulah Lillian (1972)

Johnson, Herman L (1943)

Johnson, Olia Blythe (1969)

Jones, Frances (1966)

Joyner, Benjamin Edward (1914)

Joyner, Leland H (1917)

Kittrell, Ola Samuel (1962)

Lankford, Selester Truitt (1983)

Lewis, Martha Rhodes (1949)

Lewis, Ryland Gladstone (1981)

Mumford, Richard (1928)

Orney, Mattie J (1930)

Pantelides, Anthony (1970)

Pope, Eldridge Thomas Sr (1992)

Pope, Johnny Henry (1960)

Raiford, Eula Beaton (1954)

Sears, Sarah E (1917)

Smith, William Robert (1931)

Spivey, Jennie Wilson (1956)

Spivey, Leona Redd (1975)

Stevens, Matthew (1931)

Turner, Eddie Seward, Sr (1990)

Vasser, Benjamin Dewey (1946)

Vaughan, Ethel Bland (1978)

Whitley, Frank (1947)

Whitley, Jane Bradshaw (1949)

Woodruff, Fannie Lewis (1992)

Wyatt, Evalina Holland (1967)


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Death Certificates: a rich source of genealogy data

Using Death Certificates in Genealogical Research [8]

Death certificates should be essential part of any investigation by a geneaolist. They contain valuable details that can assist you in constructing and confirming your family tree. Use them to gather names, dates, relationships, and locations for your research.

    Each state uses its own form for a death certificate; however, key Information Found on most Death Certificates include [9] [12]
  1. Full name of the deceased, including maiden names for women
  2. Date and place of death
  3. Date and place of birth (sometimes)
  4. Names and birthplaces of parents (often including the mother’s maiden name)
  5. Name of spouse and marital status
  6. Occupation
  7. Last known address or residence
  8. Cause of death (useful for understanding family health history)
  9. The name of the attending doctor and when the doctor last saw that person alive
  10. Informant’s name (the person who provided the information, often a family member)
  11. Whether the remains were buried, cremated, or disposed of in some other way)
  12. Burial information, including cemetery and funeral home details [3] [5] [7]
How can you use Death Certificates in your Research
Verify Vital Data

Use the birth and death dates, and places, to confirm or correct information in your family tree. [3] [7]

Discover Family Relationships

Parent and spouse names can help you trace lineage and connect generations. The informant’s name may reveal a close relative or friend [3] [5] [7]

Find New Leads

Details such as address or occupation can lead you to other records (like census data, city directories, or employment records) that mention the same person at the same location or job[1][5]. [1] [5]

Understand Family Health

Causes of death may indicate hereditary health issues, which can be valuable for both medical and genealogical research[2][5]. [2] [5]

Locate Burial Sites

Cemetery information can guide you to gravestones or burial records, which may provide additional family details[3][5]. [3] [5]

Access Additional Records

In some regions, you may need a death certificate to obtain other vital records, such as birth or marriage certificates, especially if proof of death is required for privacy reasons[4]. [4]

Build Timelines

Use addresses and dates to create a timeline of your ancestor’s life, which can help you track their movements and locate them in other records[1]. [1]

Cross-Reference Information

Treat details on the death certificate as clues. Verify these clues with other primary sources, such as obituaries, probate files, funeral home records, and coroner’s reports, to ensure accuracy[5][7]. [5] [7]

Tips for Effective Use of our Death Certificate collection

The information in our curated collection of death certificates is collected from official government records. The information here should be considered reliable, but... [7]

Be aware that some information, especially about birth or parents, may be incorrect or incomplete, depending on the informant’s knowledge or memory[7]. [7]

Use of death certificates are starting points for further research, not as sole proof, especially for details not directly related to the death event[5][7]. [5] [7]

Death certificates are often the most recent record for an individual and can be the key to unlocking further records and confirming family connections[4][6]. [4] [6]

AI tools like Perplexity and Chat GPt were used to assist in processing this collection. Today's AI tools can make mistakes, so check the info in our collection of death certificates and let us know of any mistakes. [4][6]. [20] [21]

By carefully analyzing and cross-referencing the information in death certificates, you can make significant progress in your genealogical research.

Using Death Certificates in genealogy provides a important snapshot into our ancestors' lives and helps fill in gaps in family history. By combining death certificate information with other genealogical records, researchers can construct a more accurate and detailed family history.

If you have documents describing life in Southampton County that you would like to share, please tell us about it using the link below.


Submit suggestion/comment/critique/error(s) to the Southampton Transcription Project by clicking the link here.


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