October is Family History Month what are you going to do to discover more about your ancestors?
Contact me for a free consultation to get started, work on a problem, organize your documents, or start a medical family history.
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October is Family History Month what are you going to do to discover more about your ancestors?
Contact me for a free consultation to get started, work on a problem, organize your documents, or start a medical family history.
Some counties in Illinois began keeping death records in 1877. An index to some of these records are available online in the Illinois Statewide Death Index, Pre-1916, a listing of the counties included and the date ranges can be found here. These records are housed within the county where the death occurred; a copy of of the record can be obtained from the county in which the death occurred. Many counties offer a genealogical copy, which is less expensive than a certified copy.
There are two different indexes of death records for time periods after 1916. Family Search hosts the Illinois Deaths and Stillbirths, 1916-1947. The Illinois state archives hosts the index, Illinois Death Certificates, 1916-1950.
The state of Illinois offers a genealogical version of death records that are less expensive than certified copies of the record. Currently, a genealogical version is $10, while a certified copy is $19. Counties can also be contacted for the certificate and may be less expensive than contacting the state, for example, Dupage county only charges $5.
It seems to come up far too often when I am doing family history research, two individuals are confused within genealogical records as the same person, doppelgangers in a sense. A few years ago, I was working on the family of John Marsh and Catharine Leavell of Ohio and Indiana. They had several children, one son was named Henry C Marsh, who was born about 1844 in Indiana.
On Ancestry.com I found a family tree with Henry C Marsh, son of John Marsh and Catharine Leavell. Henry was from Indiana and listed as being in a Private in the Civil War. I looked at the Civil War Draft Registration Records, 1863-1865, and there is a Henry C Marsh, born about 1862 in Indiana. Henry served in the 12th Indiana Infantry. He was from Clark County, Indiana, which is on the southeastern part of the state. He is also listed as a wagonmaker.
The Marsh family I was looking at were farmers and lived in Cass County, Indiana. Henry’s two brothers served the 20th & 99th Indiana Infantries in the Civil War, which had soldiers from Cass and surrounding counties.
So something is not quite right that Henry, who is fairly young, takes up an occupation different from his father and brothers and joins a regiment in a county almost 200 miles away.
A quick check of the U.S. Census records shows two Henry Marshes in Indiana in 1860. One in Cass County (farmer) and the other in Clark County (carpenter). Two men with the name name, born about the same time in the same state.
It can really tangle up your family tree if only take a quick glance at a record and assume it is referring to a person you are researching. The distance between the two counties and the occupations listed should have raised a red flag even though the names matched and there were similar dates of birth.
Note: I do not use other’s posted family trees as evidence in family history research. I use this example as a point of reference that people can be too quick to judge that a document refers to an individual. The owner of the tree did want that military connection to his family, but it just wasn’t there.