The only restriction on death certificates is if they are for a child, and then the 50 year rule cuts in. This is of course because a recent child's death certificate will often give you enough information to order its birth certificate... Polly ----- Original Message ----- From: "Charani" <familyhunter@family-hunter.co.uk> To: <bristol_and_district@rootsweb.com> Sent: Sunday, February 07, 2010 5:58 PM Subject: Re: [B&D] Certificates Online. Roy Stockdill wrote: > When the dear old Family Records Centre was still open (and how I > miss it still) I applied for and was given an RU number which > enabled me to bypass some of the restrictions. > > However, I have found since then that if you order a certificate on > the phone to Southport that is under 50 years old, they don't > bother with the full details that you are asked when applying > online. The only thing is, they charge £1.50 more for it. I was under the impression the 50 year rule had been dropped since the FRC had closed because I ordered 3 death certs online, all from the 1980s without needing to give any more information than I would for death certs from the 1880s. I don't have an RU number either. I miss the FRC too. I think it was a real backward step withdrawing access to the actual volumes. It was also handy if there were any queries on FMP index entries because they'd send someone round to have a look at the actual index. FMP can't do that now the indices are in Basingstoke. -- Charani (UK) OPC for Walton, Greinton and Clutton, SOM Asst OPC for Ashcott and Shapwick, SOM http://wsom-opc.org.uk ------------------------------- To unsubscribe from the list, please send an email to BRISTOL_AND_DISTRICT-request@rootsweb.com with the word 'unsubscribe' without the quotes in the subject and the body of the message