Offline Vital Records are Critical to Your Research, and Ordering Them is Easier Than You Think
Last Updated November 30, 2023
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by Marsha Peterson-Maass
If you’ve never taken the time to track down offline vital records about your ancestors you might be asking yourself two questions right now: “Vital Records? What are those?” and “Offline? Why would I need a quick guide to finding Vital Records offline when it’s so easy to surf for everything online?” But you’ll soon discover that adding these offline records to your research is an integral step in understanding your ancestors’ lives and building a quality family tree.
This article explains how to find out where offline vital records are stored and how to order them, often online. For even more help with offline genealogy research, read our guide.
Understanding Offline Vital Records and How to Gain Copies of Them
Vital Records are Birth, Marriage, Divorce and Death records that were created by governmental or other public or private means. They often contain the basic information you need to build an accurate family tree – such as birth, marriage and death dates and locations, addresses, relatives names, cause of death, occupations and more.
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And, of course, most Vital Records are still not online. But, happily, finding Vital Records OFFLINE usually starts with steps you take ONLINE.
Confused yet? No worries, I promise this quick guide’s methodology and process steps are easy to understand and use.
Just to be clear, for our purposes here, when I mention “OFFLINE” records, I’m talking about mostly paper records (and oral records) that have not yet been digitized and placed online for you to find. I hear many genealogists bandy around estimates of how many U.S. genealogical records are still OFFLINE, and today people are using the 85%-90% range. Many of these are vital records.
Just think about how much of your genealogical research evidence is still waiting for you to find in all of those offline records.
And I’m also hoping that by you acquiring Vital Records OFFLINE you’ll help to make a positive difference in the reliability of your genealogical evidence. How? By doing what the Board for Certification of Genealogists suggests in the first step of their 5-Step Genealogical Proof Standard . . . to conduct a “Reasonably exhaustive search.”
“We [genealogists who follow accredited methods] conduct a reasonably exhaustive search for all information that is or may be pertinent to the identity, relationship, event or situation in question.” Obviously, if you only research for documents online you won’t be able to achieve a reasonably exhaustive search. And don’t you want to confirm the validity of your evidence and know you’re assembling an accurate family history? Of course you do. That’s a no-brainer.
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So let’s concentrate on some of the most important source documents for you to find first when you’re trying to establish your ancestor’s identity . . . Vital Records. You might see the acronym “BMDD” when you’re looking for Vital Records, which stands for Birth-Marriage-Divorce-Death. You might also see the term “Department or Bureau of Vital Statistics” when looking for Governmental records. Or when seeking Vital Records indexes and webpages, you’ll probably see a category of “Vital Documents and Certificates” which is exactly what you’re looking for!
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