
Elizabeth Maw
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Name Elizabeth Maw Birth Abt 1825 Gender Female _UID 698DA88D9339477AA5946774EB3BB9802BC4 Death Aug 1891 Burial 2 Sep 1891 St James The Apostle, Meltham Mills, , Yorkshire, England
[1] - Name: Elizabeth Maw Birth Year: abt 1825 Parish: Meltham Mills, St James The Apostle Burial Date: 2 Sep 1891 Burial Age: 66

I39485 - West Yorkshire, England, Deaths and Burials, 1813-1985 Record for Elizabeth Maw Person ID I39485 The Maw Family Tree Last Modified 25 Oct 2017
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Sources - [S233] www.ancestry.co.uk, West Yorkshire, England, Deaths and Burials, 1813-1985, (
This database contains images of Church of England burial records in registers from parishes in the West Yorkshire area of England.
Parish Records
Before civil registration in England began in 1837, key events in a person’s life were typically recorded by the church rather than the state. Parish records are the best source of vital record information in England before the nineteenth century and remain an important source thereafter.
Burial Records
Historically, burials usually took place within a few days of the deceased’s death. The registers can provide
•name
•abode/residence
•date of burial
•age
•who performed the ceremony
In 1812, George Rose’s Act called for preprinted registers to be used for separate baptism, marriage, and burial registers as a way of standardizing records. These standardized registers are included in this collection. For earlier registers, please see the link provided in the Related Data Collections section.), Source Citation: West Yorkshire Archive Service, Wakefield, Yorkshire, England; Yorkshire Parish Records; Old Reference Number: D167/8; New Reference Number: WDP167/1/2/6. (Reliability: 3).
- [S233] www.ancestry.co.uk, West Yorkshire, England, Deaths and Burials, 1813-1985, (
This database contains images of Church of England burial records in registers from parishes in the West Yorkshire area of England.
Parish Records
Before civil registration in England began in 1837, key events in a person’s life were typically recorded by the church rather than the state. Parish records are the best source of vital record information in England before the nineteenth century and remain an important source thereafter.
Burial Records
Historically, burials usually took place within a few days of the deceased’s death. The registers can provide
•name
•abode/residence
•date of burial
•age
•who performed the ceremony
In 1812, George Rose’s Act called for preprinted registers to be used for separate baptism, marriage, and burial registers as a way of standardizing records. These standardized registers are included in this collection. For earlier registers, please see the link provided in the Related Data Collections section.), Source Citation: West Yorkshire Archive Service, Wakefield, Yorkshire, England; Yorkshire Parish Records; Old Reference Number: D167/8; New Reference Number: WDP167/1/2/6. (Reliability: 3).
