Excellent information.  Thank you Rosemarie

Sent from my iPhone

> On Jul 22, 2018, at 9:33 PM, Rosemarie Capodicci <[email protected]> wrote:
> 
> I was talking to a friend about the New Bedford info on vitals. I work at the 
> FHC here in Seaside I thought that some of these records were available  for 
> later dates,this is what he wrote: 
> 
> Familysearch, Ancestry, and other websites have Massachusetts Birth, 
> Marriage, and Death Records available until around 1915 with actual images of 
> the records.  Records going up to 1920 (an extra 5 years) are available 
> online in one Familysearch Collection "Massachusetts State Vital Records, 
> 1841-1920".  Many of the records from 1915-1920 are online but not indexed. 
> You can browse through the images by date city and date and find the records 
> that you are looking for that way. There are many indexes available for the 
> later years such as some Massachusetts Death Indexes on Ancestry that span 
> from 1901-1980 and 1970-2003, but these do not include the actual records.
> 
> While they have not been digitized as of yet, the LDS church has microfilms 
> of the Fall River AND New Bedford Birth & Marriage Certificates all the way 
> to 1968!  I have a cousin who works in the Salt Lake City library.  She 
> looked at the films for me and confirmed that these are indeed the actual 
> certificates, and are complete for the whole town. There are typescript 
> indexes on each film.  She also told me that because the material is so 
> recent and would contain living people, they will most likely not become 
> available online anytime in the near future. Apparently FamilySearch has also 
> them earmarked for "no circulation" and the post 1915 records are not 
> available at any Family History Center other than in Salt Lake City. Even 
> back when you could request microfilms be sent out to your local center these 
> were not available.
> 
> With the upcoming Salt Lake City trip, perhaps someone will want to check 
> those films.
> 
> You can get a list of the microfilm numbers and coverage here: 
> 
> Fall River Microfilms: 
> https://www.familysearch.org/search/catalog/234068?availability=Family%20History%20Library
> New Bedford Microfilms: 
> https://www.familysearch.org/search/catalog/819611?availability=Family%20History%20Library
> 
> I have many ancestors in Massachusetts on all sides of my family - most of 
> whom resided there since the early/mid 1600s.  I can tell you with great 
> certainty that this is relatively unique, and does not apply to the vast 
> majority of Massachusetts towns.
> 
> So, like many other records, you can see them in Salt Lake City but not 
> anywhere else! Even the Portuguese records of the Azores which the Family 
> History Library has digitized can only be accessed online if you have an LDS 
> person sign you in on the
> computer
> 
> Rosemarie
> [email protected]
> Researching Sao Jorge, Terceira, Graciosa, Faial and Pico, Azores,
> Isola delle Femmine, Sant' Elia, Sicily
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