![]() |
New Jersey Naturalization Petition card for James Joseph Maguire, 1929. |
Growing family trees from leaves and branches. Finding lost relatives. Solving family mysteries. Concentrating in New Jersey and New York.
Pages
- Home
- Surnames and Locations of My GGG Grandparents
- DURYEA New Jersey Births
- DURYEA New Jersey Marriages
- DURYEA New Jersey Deaths
- DURYEA New York State Marriage Index
- DURYEA New York State Death Index 1881-1950
- Pictures by Clifford Lutter 1930s-1960s New Jersey
- ODonnell- New Jersey Records
- Hit or Miss Records
- Adoption Laws New Jersey
- Genealogy Humor
- Bayonne Neighbors
Thursday, March 15, 2012
Another Indexing Project
The Italian Genealogical Group is sponsering another indexing project. Volunteers are creating a name index for naturalization petitions filed in the United States District Court in Newark, New Jersey. The district includes not just Essex County, but also Bergen, Hudson, Morris, Passaic, Union, Sussex, and parts of Middlesex. The years of the petitions range from the 1920s through the 1980s. I am indexing about 1000 cards of last names that start with M.
Sunday, March 11, 2012
Birth Certificate of Twins
I am slowly processing the birth certificates I copied last week in Trenton. I have one birth certificate for twins born in 1878 in Newark. They did not get individual birth certificates. They are also not named on the certificate, which was not unusual. Based on the 1880 census, their names were Catharine and William.
![]() |
New Jersey birth certificate for Bossard twins, born 29 June 1878. Volume 1, Place 36 (Newark, Essex County). Note that the months are in German. |
![]() |
1880 United States Federal Census, 123 Howard Street, Newark, Essex County, New Jersey. The unnamed twins ended up being called William and Catharine. |
Saturday, March 10, 2012
New Jersey Birth Index Online
I copied some birth certificates at the New Jersey State Archives in Trenton last week. Indexes for births, marriages, and deaths are available through FamilySearch and Ancestry. I compared actual birth certificates to their corresponding entries in these indexes to confirm that the year may be off by one, just as in the indexes for marriages and deaths.
Here is a page from the index for births in New Jersey from July 1, 1890 through December 31, 1900 available through the Archives. The baby's name, or "male" or "female" if unnamed, is listed first, and the father's initial is listed next. The dates have been accurate for all certificates that I have viewed. Using the birth of Robert Bosset, for example, we can see in the index that his father's first name begins with R, the date of birth was January 10, 1898, and that the certificate was filed in Newark, which is place number 36.
The birth certificate for Robert Bosset matches the information in the index and also provides the full names of both parents. You also get to see the address of the birth (likely the family's home), as well as his birth order and how many children are still living. This is very helpful information and why you should always seek out the original record.
FamilySearch and Ancestry have a record of this birth in their indexes. Their indexes provide additional information not contained in the older indexes from the Archives, such as full names of parents and their ages. BUT: the year can be off by one. The year of Robert's birth is incorrectly listed as 1897, not 1898. This is because the volume held births from July of 1897 through June of 1898. It is unfortunate that while creating these indexes, greater care was not taken to record the year of birth. The indexer needed to have viewed the actual certificate to generate the parents' names and ages for the index and, in hindsight, should have also entered the year of the event.
Remember that the names on the birth certificate are handwritten and had to be deciphered by the indexer. The example birth certificate here is actually a very good copy and the handwriting is not too bad. The mother's name is fully written on the birth certificate, but only the middle initial is used for the index. Her last name begins with an M in other records, but you can see how the indexer read W. This is another reason why you need to view the actual record yourself to compare the information to other records.
Here is a page from the index for births in New Jersey from July 1, 1890 through December 31, 1900 available through the Archives. The baby's name, or "male" or "female" if unnamed, is listed first, and the father's initial is listed next. The dates have been accurate for all certificates that I have viewed. Using the birth of Robert Bosset, for example, we can see in the index that his father's first name begins with R, the date of birth was January 10, 1898, and that the certificate was filed in Newark, which is place number 36.
The birth certificate for Robert Bosset matches the information in the index and also provides the full names of both parents. You also get to see the address of the birth (likely the family's home), as well as his birth order and how many children are still living. This is very helpful information and why you should always seek out the original record.
FamilySearch and Ancestry have a record of this birth in their indexes. Their indexes provide additional information not contained in the older indexes from the Archives, such as full names of parents and their ages. BUT: the year can be off by one. The year of Robert's birth is incorrectly listed as 1897, not 1898. This is because the volume held births from July of 1897 through June of 1898. It is unfortunate that while creating these indexes, greater care was not taken to record the year of birth. The indexer needed to have viewed the actual certificate to generate the parents' names and ages for the index and, in hindsight, should have also entered the year of the event.
![]() |
FamilySearch.org |
![]() |
Ancestry.com |
Subscribe to:
Posts (Atom)