New York Marriage Index Online
Adoptees searching for relatives in the New York boroughs have a new (free!) resource to verify and supplement the (fee-based!) Ancestry.com, New York City Marriage Indexes. The marriage index images for all five New York City boroughs from 1930-1972 are now online, an addition to the 1908-1929 collection that was…
Adoption Search In California
SFGenealogy.com asked me to pen a short guide, How To Do Your Own Adoption Search In California, which highlights some of the recommendations I offer on AdoptionSearcher.com. I didn’t mention petitioning the court to open closed adoption files because this is generally not successful. However, courts in closed states have released…
Birth Family Search With the U.S. Census
Birth family are the people you’re biologically related to — mom, dad, siblings and children. The link for adoptees and birth mothers and fathers is usually severed soon after birth. How can the U.S. Census help these relatives find each other? Even though the census is available through 1940, only,…
Find Your Adoption Record
An adoptee can begin her search for an adoption record even if she doesn’t know her birth parent’s name. A few states will open adoption records and give you the original birth certificate. Almost all allow release of some information from the closed record. This is called the non identifying…
Finding Names: Old Newspapers
Adoptee or biological parent names may be published in newspapers’ birth announcements. But even if a newspaper has been digitized that doesn’t mean that it is searchable. If you’re looking for births, deaths, marriages or divorces which may have been published on a specific date, go to the vital records…
How to Search for A Birth Parent
Adoptees are confronted with the investigative challenge of how to search for a birth parent when you don’t know their name. Well, let’s say you are looking for a birth mother who was born 50+ years ago and you only know her birth name. Even when the adoptee’s original birth…