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− | + | When you tie the knot in the state of Nevada, even if it?s a drive-through wedding in Las Vegas, you do not instantly get a copy of your marriage certificate. If the time comes when you need a copy of this document, for whatever reason, you will have to file a request at the county registrar?s office in the county where the marriage license was issued. Unlike birth certificates and death reports, certified copies of Nevada marriage records and divorce decrees are not available at the state?s Department of Health and Human Services. Instead, marriage and divorce documents are held at the county level. | |
+ | The Nevada Office of Vital Statistics operates under the Bureau of Health Statistics, Planning, Epidemiology and Response (HSPER). This office serves as the official custodian of all original documents in the state, including birth and death certificates from the 1st of July 1911 and onwards. Obviously this would be a prime location for getting access to certified copies of birth and death records. The state?s vital statistics office charges $20 for each certified copy of birth and death reports. | ||
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− | + | For requesters of certified copies of marriage and divorce accounts, the county Recorder?s office, where the marriage license was issued or the divorce was granted, is probably where you should submit your application. If you want access to marriage certificates for research purposes, then determining which of the 17 counties the event occurred is most likely your first task. Although experienced genealogists would definitely make it a point to know where each of the events in their research has taken place, whether it?s the birth, death, marriage or divorce of an ancestor. | |
− | + | On the other hand, you can request searches and verifications at the Vital Statistics office, for accounts that were filed from 1968 onwards, and pay ten bucks for each name searched. But inquiries pertaining to certified copies of marriage and divorce reports are directly forwarded to the appropriate county offices. Nevertheless, to avoid delays and long waiting periods, it would be sensible on your part to simply submit the request at the originating county yourself. You can give the county registrar?s office a call and ask for the procedures and requirements in obtaining certified copies of marriage and divorce records, or you can just visit the county website and get the information from there. | |
− | + | For research and review purposes, private online record retrieval services are just as effective as any state or county office when it comes to vital records access. People can search any public document anytime and anywhere there is an Internet connection, using a variety of handheld devices that has online capabilities from smart mobile phones to iPads and other PC tablets. Convenience and practicality right at your fingertips. | |
− | + | For a reasonable one-time fee and a quick account registration, you can perform unlimited searches on public marriage records, divorce decrees, birth certificates, and death reports. Every vital document from each of the fifty states and some of the US territories can be accessed through one reputable data search website. How cool is that? A single hub for all of your public record needs. |
Version actuelle en date du 1 novembre 2016 à 12:04
When you tie the knot in the state of Nevada, even if it?s a drive-through wedding in Las Vegas, you do not instantly get a copy of your marriage certificate. If the time comes when you need a copy of this document, for whatever reason, you will have to file a request at the county registrar?s office in the county where the marriage license was issued. Unlike birth certificates and death reports, certified copies of Nevada marriage records and divorce decrees are not available at the state?s Department of Health and Human Services. Instead, marriage and divorce documents are held at the county level.
The Nevada Office of Vital Statistics operates under the Bureau of Health Statistics, Planning, Epidemiology and Response (HSPER). This office serves as the official custodian of all original documents in the state, including birth and death certificates from the 1st of July 1911 and onwards. Obviously this would be a prime location for getting access to certified copies of birth and death records. The state?s vital statistics office charges $20 for each certified copy of birth and death reports.
For requesters of certified copies of marriage and divorce accounts, the county Recorder?s office, where the marriage license was issued or the divorce was granted, is probably where you should submit your application. If you want access to marriage certificates for research purposes, then determining which of the 17 counties the event occurred is most likely your first task. Although experienced genealogists would definitely make it a point to know where each of the events in their research has taken place, whether it?s the birth, death, marriage or divorce of an ancestor.
On the other hand, you can request searches and verifications at the Vital Statistics office, for accounts that were filed from 1968 onwards, and pay ten bucks for each name searched. But inquiries pertaining to certified copies of marriage and divorce reports are directly forwarded to the appropriate county offices. Nevertheless, to avoid delays and long waiting periods, it would be sensible on your part to simply submit the request at the originating county yourself. You can give the county registrar?s office a call and ask for the procedures and requirements in obtaining certified copies of marriage and divorce records, or you can just visit the county website and get the information from there.
For research and review purposes, private online record retrieval services are just as effective as any state or county office when it comes to vital records access. People can search any public document anytime and anywhere there is an Internet connection, using a variety of handheld devices that has online capabilities from smart mobile phones to iPads and other PC tablets. Convenience and practicality right at your fingertips.
For a reasonable one-time fee and a quick account registration, you can perform unlimited searches on public marriage records, divorce decrees, birth certificates, and death reports. Every vital document from each of the fifty states and some of the US territories can be accessed through one reputable data search website. How cool is that? A single hub for all of your public record needs.