Ancestry/Genealogy
Related: About this forumWant to learn my mother's birth, marriage and death dates; she died when I was 7 or 8,
Dad remarried several years later and brother Billy and I were adopted; NYS 'obliterated' name/existence of birth-mother on my/our 'new' birth certificates (after adoption.)
Will 'ancestry' places include facts about my birth mother, in spite of NYState's practice? and which of several 'ancestry' places better (and less expensive) than others?
Thanks
Buckeye_Democrat
(15,042 posts)(Copied and pasted from your other thread.)
That should include her birth date and possibly the names of her parents too.
And they probably have a record of her marriage certificate too.
Some of my ancestors lived in New York back in the 1600's when it was a colony, so I've never looked up those kinds of records there myself. But they surely have all of those types of records going back to at least the early 1900's like many other states.
elleng
(135,988 posts)Will look into NYS records.
Buckeye_Democrat
(15,042 posts)And here's a website that provides a summary of other NY genealogy records:
https://www.familysearch.org/wiki/en/New_York_Online_Genealogy_Records
fierywoman
(8,103 posts)libraries, which they allow non-Mormons to use.
csziggy
(34,189 posts)Sometimes they duplicate Ancestry.com, sometimes they have things that Ancestry does not have and vice versa. FamilySearch.org is a good way to start without spending anything but time.
fierywoman
(8,103 posts)mother, he left just as my friend was born.) He realized that his mother was from Hispañola, NM and traced his origins back to the Spanish conquest of Mexico!
csziggy
(34,189 posts)fierywoman
(8,103 posts)bluestateboomer
(510 posts)If you know a name and a date range you can find obituaries and other articles.
elleng
(135,988 posts)Irish_Dem helped, and found it ALL!