Thanks to all of you who looked up my great-grandfather, Alfred Long, in the 1930 census for me. I appreciate your time and effort! It gave me some information about my uncle that I didn't know. We only knew him as Bonsall, but his real name was Alfred Bonsall Jr. He went by his middle name. I have another question. I vaguely remember a discussion about death certificates being received with the cause of death blacked out. I am about to order several death certificates. Is there a way that I can order them with the cause of death still listed on them? Jodi
Jodi, If you know the town where the person was pronounced dead, you can order death certificates from that locality. Each municipality maintains a vital record office. When I have ordered them through the local authority, the cause of death has never been blackened out. Note I said above "where the person was pronounced dead". That is the key. If a person died at home and the doctor or whomever pronounced the death there, then that town would have the certificate. However, say in the instance where the person was transported to a nearby hospital, then the certificate would be found in that town. Lynn --- [email protected] wrote: > I am about > to order several death certificates. Is there a way > that I can order them > with the cause of death still listed on them? __________________________________________________ Do You Yahoo!? Yahoo! Tax Center - online filing with TurboTax http://taxes.yahoo.com/