skygazer
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Tue Feb-24-09 07:21 PM
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| Probably stupid question about death certificates |
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I need to order a copy of my mom's death certificate but I'm unsure who to contact. We lived in Vermont at the time but she officially died in a hospital across the border in New Hampshire. So does a death cert reside in the county of death or the county of residence?
Thanks. :hi:
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Montauk6
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Wed Feb-25-09 04:25 PM
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| 1. Normally the county of death |
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Easiest example, John F. Kennedy resided in Washington DC but he died in Dallas County, TX; and the latter is where the event is documented (File No. 75708, for those taking notes).
Not sure that this applies in all cases/jurisdictions but I would definitely start with the death location.
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dgibby
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Wed Feb-25-09 09:15 PM
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| 2. Bureau of Vital Statistics in NH. |
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Probably the same place you'd go to get a copy of a birth certificate. Try to Google Bureau of Vital Statistics and see what you get. If that doesn't work, try NH public records, or NH death certificate. Sorry about your mom.:hug:
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Gormy Cuss
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Wed Feb-25-09 09:20 PM
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| 3. Check at the NH state level, then at the town level. |
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The death certificate should reside in the town of death in New England --remember that counties aren't much in terms of government there unlike the rest of the country.
Years ago deaths were cross-recorded in place of residence but I don't know if that's done anymore.
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DU
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Sun Oct 26th 2025, 03:04 PM
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