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Finding a grave.


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I would imagine a municipal owned cemetery will keep records of their sites. The older ones as paper records perhaps which may have been transferred to a computer based record. I imagine any modern records are now computerised. Look on your local council site for a link to their crematoria/cemeteries and ring them up and ask.

 

As for churches or similar with a graveyard I would have thought that the church parish records will record all this. Contact the vicar or sexton of the church or parish? There may be an obligation to inform the local authority as well of who is buried where?

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Im afraid a hell of a lot of public records have been sold to the private search engines so its a boots on the ground job we had loads of help from Derby historical society ,but some records we had to pay for .Went back to 1823 in my family and the 1700,s for her indoors ,learned some amazing things its worth a tenner for the journey through history

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My wife tells me that you need to contact each church in the village, They provide this information free.

This 👍

 

Had to do the same a few years ago to find my grandads grave- it was un marked.

Only the current vicar had access to the book of the buried within the grave yard, helped that we knew what church it was.

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Vince - if I knew that I wouldn't have asked how to locate a grave mate !

I have the full name, date of death and have e mailed the Church where the funeral took place. All I know is it's in Milford in Surrey. I don't know if there was a burial or cremation though so I'm starting at the very beginning. The death made the national news due to the date ( 22nd December ) the fact the deceased was killed and I guess the nature of the accident.

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Is there a local newspaper as they may well have printed details about it you could phone them up and ask.

How long ago did they die another thing is local undertakers people tend to use a local one and they would have records at least they could point you in the rite direction.

Edited by four-wheel-drive
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Vince - if I knew that I wouldn't have asked how to locate a grave mate !

I have the full name, date of death and have e mailed the Church where the funeral took place. All I know is it's in Milford in Surrey. I don't know if there was a burial or cremation though so I'm starting at the very beginning. The death made the national news due to the date ( 22nd December ) the fact the deceased was killed and I guess the nature of the accident.

That's what I meant, where was the village you mentioned in your OP? We have ended up driving to cemeteries on a Sunday to search. You tend to find somebody who can tell you something useful. Municipal cemeteries tend to bury people in sequencial rows so you can work out roughly where the grave is likely to within the cemetry be by the date.

 

Municipal cemeteries are run by the council parks dept usually

Edited by Vince Green
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