by Duncan Kuehn, professional genealogist
Along with the census, newspaper obituaries are a key resource for genealogists. If you’re researching more recent members of your family tree, then GenealogyBank’s online Recent Obituaries collection (from 1977 to the present) may provide important facts and clues to fill in the details of your family tree.
You will find different types of articles providing death information in the Recent Obituaries collection. This blog article will describe several of them.
Death Notices
A death notice is a short informational item run in the newspaper to announce the death and provide details about the funeral. These are sometimes posted immediately after the death and may reappear on the day of the funeral. A death notice may run in multiple newspapers.

Source: Worcester Telegram and Gazette, Oct. 1, 2011, accessed on GenealogyBank.com.
Obituaries
An obituary is a full-length article giving biographical information about a deceased individual. An obituary can be written by the newspaper staff or submitted to the newspaper by friends or family members of the decedent. Some newspapers use the term “obituary” for articles written by their staff and “death notice” for those submitted to the paper. For our purposes, I have chosen to define the two terms by length and content—an obituary is an article announcing the death and including biographical information, and a death notice is a very short death announcement.
Historically, newspapers did not charge for obituaries, and many of them were very lengthy and included photographs. In obituaries, you can find long biographies with excellent information for a genealogist.
Obituaries can run over several weeks in the newspaper. This may explain why multiple entries appear for the same person. Obituaries are usually written days or even weeks after the death occurred. And they may even appear in the paper after the funeral has taken place.
Obituaries, like death notices, may run in multiple papers. They may appear throughout the community where the person died. They may also appear in newspapers where the decedent grew up or spent their adult years. They may even appear in newspapers where close family members live, even if the decedent never lived there. Because of this, it is wise to search nationwide for obituaries.

Source: Worcester Telegram and Gazette, Sep. 29, 2011, accessed on GenealogyBank.com.
Here is another example of a recent obituary.

Source: Plain Dealer, Oct. 13, 2007, accessed on GenealogyBank.com.
Memorial Articles
Friends or family members will sometimes post a notice on the anniversary of the death of their loved one to memorialize their passing. These articles vary in length but are generally short and tender.

Source: Plain Dealer, Oct. 10, 2015, accessed on GenealogyBank.com.
Human Interest Stories
These are longer articles written by the newspaper staff about the death of individuals significant to the community. They may have caught the editor’s eye because the death was unusually tragic, the person was well known in the community, or the person’s life story is of interest to a wide readership.

Source: Plain Dealer, May 10, 2008, accessed on GenealogyBank.com.
Of course, obituaries are not a recent phenomenon. Obituaries prior to 1977 can be found in GenealogyBank’s online Historical Obituaries collection.
Obituaries hold significant, valuable information for genealogists. Be sure to incorporate obituaries in all your family history information—both for the facts they contain as well as the family history clues they provide for further genealogy research.
You may also like:
I Have the Name of the Ship and the Year He Immigrated—Now What?
GenealogyBank Announces Huge New Collection of Online Newspapers
GenealogyBank’s Detailed Revolutionary War Burial Lists