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BEST FREE ONLINE MARRIAGE RESOURCES |
GENERAL RESOURCES
Is it out there?
You might first want to check to see if marriage records were recorded (and
survived) for the place and time
Vital Rec.com has a state by state
inventory. This site has really become cluttered - scroll down to
the STATE MENU and go to your appropriate state. Each state page
will have their main vital statistics link that give information and if you
go down further you will see county links to tell what is held at the county
level. If a record can be gotten at the county level it is usually
less expensive.
for eastern states and the midwest the
LDS
Family History Catalog search is an excellent source because it will
also list added information. Most early American marriages were filmed
if they existed with the exception of some of the more western states and
may be borrowed by film through Salt Lake.
you might
also check your county GenWeb page [see below] which often give
bibliographies of what has survived.
If you are working in an area like early New York - a state that did not
record early marriages - you have to hunt for church records, newspaper
notices, Bible records and implied marriages (ie. John Brown sells land to
son-in-law James Craig and wife Elizabeth daughter of the said John Brown)
It SHOULD be out there - where can I look?
IGI
- from FamilySearch is a quick "first look" but remember you still need
verification somewhere else if you are basing your research on the marriage
in question as many marriages on the IGI are guesses, from memory etc.
WorldConnect - has many marriages but remember it is a gedcom database of other people's
research so like the IGI you need confirmation by an authoritative source.
If you are a member of Ancestry.com you might also try their gedcom
databases like
Ancestry's One
World Tree [FREE] or their
One World Tree
database [REQUIRES SUBSCRIPTION]
GENWED - Some states and
areas are much more complete than others but they also include information
about where to write for a record.
GENWEB PROJECT - go to the
state and county page and see if they have transcribed marriages
GENWEB ARCHIVES - go
to the state and county page to see if someone has transcribed pages
GOOGLE - particularly useful if
you know the bride and groom but not the date - on the search line put each
name in quotes:
"Richard Covington" "Jane Stephens"
and hit enter. If you don't know the spouse you might try
"Richard Covington" marriage Alabama
and
hit enter
or something similar and see what it pulls up.
Also google the county courthouse site for your county and make sure they
don't have them there. Some counties are scanning in early
certificates or providing a database of marriages.
I Dream Of Genealogy
also has many marriages [some states are much stronger than others]
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