United States Cemeteries

Portal:United States of America

Types of care for Human Copses: earth burial, cremation, Sea burial, entombment, donation to science, and cryogentic

Several types of cemetery records are available. Sextons or caretakers of cemeteries generally keep records of the names and dates of those buried and maps of the burial plots. Tombstones or gravestones may also exist, or the information on them may have been transcribed.

Cemetery records often include birth, marriage, and death information. They sometimes provide clues about military service, religion, or membership in an organization, such as a lodge. These records are especially helpful for identifying children who died young or women who were not recorded in family or government documents. Check the sexton's records, or visit the cemetery in person to see if other relatives are in the same or adjoining plots.

To find tombstone or sexton records, you need to know where an individual was buried. The person may have been buried in a community, church, private, military, or family cemetery, usually near the place where he lived or died or where other family members were buried. You can find clues to burial places in funeral notices, obituaries, church records, funeral home records, and death certificates.

Many cemetery records are available online. Consider the following websites:


 * www.findagrave.com
 * www.interment.net
 * www.usgenweb.org

You can find the addresses of many cemeteries in:


 * Cemeteries of the U.S.: A Guide to Contact Information for U.S. Cemeteries and Their Records. First Edition. Detroit, Michigan: Gale Research, 1994. Lists over 22,000 operating and inactive cemeteries. Alphabetical by state, county, and cemetery name. Entries may list physical location or mailing address, phone and fax numbers, contact information for cemetery record keepers, years of operation, religious and other affiliations.
 * Kot, Elizabeth Gorrell. United States Cemetery Address Book, 1994-1995. Vallejo, California: Indices Publishing, 1994. (Family History Library book 973 V34k.) Lists over 25,000 cemetery addresses and locations. Alphabetical by state, town, and cemetery name.

Other sources of cemetery records include:


 * The present sexton, funeral home, or minister who may have the burial registers and the records of the burial plots.
 * A local library, historical society, or local historian, who may have the records or can help you locate obscure family plots or relocated cemeteries. Cemetery associations sometimes publish inventories or transcripts for their areas.
 * Sextons' records and transcripts of tombstone information that have been published, often in local genealogical periodicals. (See the periodical indexes listed in the “Periodicals” section of this outline.)
 * Lists of soldiers' graves, described in the U.S. Military Records Research Outline (34118).

Types of Cemeteries
Church

Government: town, county, state, and national

Miltary:

Organization: fraternal

Corporate:

Family or private:

How to Locate Cemeteries
Maps

GPS

County highway maps

Early county maps and atlases

County and town histories

Land records: deeds

Government officials

Church officials

Mortuary

Local historians

Residents

Information gained from obituaries, death certificates, mortuary funeral cards

NOTE: some cemeteries have been relocated or destroyed.

ON LINE:

Funeral directors in the area where your ancestors lived may have records similar to death and cemetery records. Most of their addresses are in the:

American Blue Book of Funeral Directors. New York, New York: National Funeral Directors Association, biennial. Funeral Home Records

The library has a few funeral home records listed in the Locality Search of the Family History Library Catalog under the following:

[STATE], [COUNTY] - BUSINESS RECORDS AND COMMERCE

[STATE], [COUNTY] - FUNERAL HOMES

[STATE], [COUNTY], [TOWN] - BUSINESS RECORDS AND COMMERCE

[STATE], [COUNTY], [TOWN] - FUNERAL HOMES

Terms
"Centaph: engraved on a tombstone indicates an empty grave, with the stone erected in memory or in honor of a person buried elsewhere.  It often indicates a stone erected in honor of a person lost at sea." --FromStalkin' Kin In Old West Texas, Vol XVI, No. 2.(San Angelo Genealogical and Historical Society, Inc. Aug 1988):