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U.S. 1850-1880, 
      Mortality Index 
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U.S. 1850-1880, Mortality Index
Search more than 382,000 mortality records created by the Bureau of the Census. Confirm your family information and find new leads as you discover an ancestor's first and last name, state of birth, month of death, age at time of death, plus more.

U.S. 1850-1880, Mortality Index CD-ROM
$19.99
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Grow your family tree with this data:
The date and location of an important family event, can help you to immediately fill in holes in your family tree. The dates and locations provided in these records can also help you pinpoint a family's location at a particular time. When you know where a family lived, you know where to look for church, census, and other important family records, which may provide you with more details about the family.

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What does this product give you?
What are the data sources for this product?
What are the system requirements?
How does the money back policy work?

What does this product give you?
This data set indexes more than 382,000 mortality records created by the Bureau of the Census during census years. Copies of the original mortality schedules may be available through the National Archives and the National Archives regional centers and at many libraries, including the Family History Library of the Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints.

Original death records can often provide you with information, such as the names of the individual's parents and the name of the surviving spouse, if any. With the death date and county from this title, you may also be able to find a newspaper announcement, which may provide more details about the individual's life and family.



What are the data sources for this product?
Mortality schedules document the deaths of individuals who died during the twelve months preceding the enumeration of the U.S. census. They exist for the four census enumerations that took place between 1850 and 1880 (see a list of the states covered by the Mortality Index including the number of individuals indexed in each year). Mortality schedules provide information such as occupation, gender, age at time of death, cause of death, date of death, and place of death by county. These records are especially useful because they were collected prior to the creation of statewide vital statistics. Original death records can often provide you with information, such as the names of the individual's parents and the name of the surviving spouse, if any. With the death date and county from this data set, you may also be able to find a newspaper announcement, which may provide more details about the individual's life and family.


What are the system requirements?
A CD-ROM drive, and one of the following programs: Family Tree Maker for Windows® version 3.02 or higher, the FREE Family Archive Viewer version 3.02 or higher, or Family Tree Maker for Power Macintosh.


How does the money back policy work?
If you are not completely satisfied with any online subscription or other intangible product, you may request a refund within seven days of the date of purchase.

If you are not completely satisfied with any Membership, data CD, or other tangible product, you may request a refund within thirty days of the date of purchase.

If a product is labeled "all sales final" at the time of purchase, you are not entitled to a refund of any kind. If you purchased products as a bundle, the individual products in that bundle may not be returned separately. Click here for detailed information on our guarantee and refund instructions.

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