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This new index has been compiled from the death and burial records
of twenty-four churches in Hamilton County, Ohio. It contains
nearly 11,000 deaths recorded in the death and burial registers of
individual priests and ministers before 1850. Although index
entries vary considerably in detail from church to church and year
to year, a particular entry may contain any of the following
valuable information: full name and maiden name (where applicable)
of the deceased, names of parents, surviving spouse, date of death,
age at time of death and date of burial. Entries are alphabetized
by surname and are coded with a letter or letters corresponding to
a key of churches, allowing researchers to consult the original
records for clarification; an "*" preceding the church code denotes
an original record containing birth information for the deceased.
An alphabetical listing of maiden names and corresponding married
names follows the index. Hamilton County, Ohio, Church Death
Records, 1811-1849 is intended to supplement the cemetery
extractions published in the Hamilton County Burial Records series
(also published by Heritage Books, Inc.). Although these church
registers do not provide a complete record of Hamilton County
deaths and burials for this time period, they can be used to fill
in gaps in the official record and suggest new avenues for
genealogical research. This volume is particularly valuable for
family researchers whose ancestors may have passed through Hamilton
County during the western migration but were not residents. The
deaths of transient pioneer families are often unaccounted for in
county court and cemetery records and were seldom noted in the
obituaries of Cincinnati's newspapers; in some cases church
registers are the only record of the deaths of these individuals.
The scope of this index covers death, marriage, and other
miscellaneous notices that were published during this time period
in the early Cincinnati newspaper named Liberty Hall and Cincinnati
Gazette. This index contains over 15,750 deaths, over 4200
marriages, and over 3000 miscellaneous notices which were reported
and published in this early Cincinnati newspaper. It should be
noted that the names in this index are not only from the Cincinnati
and Hamilton County area, but for much of the former Northwest
Territory during the early years, and as far north as Dayton, as
far east as Columbus and Chillicothe, south to Lexington and
Shelbyville, Kentucky, and west as far as Indianapolis and
Richmond, Indiana during the later years.
The Cincinnatier Zeitung was published in German from July 1887
until September 1901 for German speaking immigrants of Cincinnati.
What makes this newspaper valuable to family history researchers is
the list of German death records which were reported to the
Cincinnati Health Department on a daily basis. Many of these deaths
were reported due to the fact that these individuals died in a city
institution. These were typically people who lived in mental
institutions, orphanages, the "poor house" and homes for widows and
the aged. These people normally could not afford to pay for a death
notice to be published in a newspaper. While the death records do
not contain much information about the deceased, they contain the
name of the person, their age, their street address and sometimes
the disease from which they died. Since not all of this vital
information can be contained in this index, the date(s) of the
death notice is supplied after the person's name so that the reader
may look for this additional information in the original notice if
desired. Surviving issues of the Cincinnatier Zeitung can be found
in Cincinnati at the Public Library of Cincinnati and Hamilton
County. This index contains the names of more than 20,000 people
who died between 1887 and 1901 and includes such information as:
the full name of the deceased, sorted alphabetically by last name;
the dates that the death notice appeared in the newspaper; and the
actual date of death, if published. Also listed is the age of the
person in (YY-MM-DD) format, the page on which the notice was
printed, the maiden name of the woman (if listed), and if the city
of birth was mentioned in the notice, an asterisk appears before
the page number. A separate alphabetical list of maiden names
provides the corresponding married names under which the death
notices are listed.
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