Fayette County, Alabama Cemetery Records

Most of these cemetery listings are complete indices at the time of transcription, however, in some cases we list the listing when it is only a partial listing. Hosted at Fayette County, USGenWeb Archives Project Berea Church Of Christ Cemetery, Fayette, Alabama Bethel Baptist Church Cemetery, Fayette, Alabama Clover Hill Cemetery, Fayette, Alabama Edmonds Or Musgrove Family Cemetery, Fayette, Alabama Elbethel Baptist Church Cemetery, Fayette, Alabama Hollingsworth Family Cemetery, Fayette, Alabama * Hubbertville Church Of Christ Or Mccollum Cemetery, Fayette, Alabama Mt. Willing Cemetery, Fayette Co., Alabama New River Church Of Christ Cemetery, Fayette, Alabama Old Union Cemetery, Fayette, Alabama … Read more

Fayette County, Alabama Census Records

  1830 Fayette County, Alabama Census Free 1830 Census Form for your Research Hosted at Ancestry.com – Ancestry Free Trial  1830 Fayette County, Census (images and index) $ 1810-1890 Accelerated Indexing Systems $ Hosted at Fayette County, ALGenWeb Head-of-household index Hosted at Tracking Your Roots 1830 Fayette Co., AL Census Hosted at Clark’s Deep South Genealogy 1830 Census Images Hosted at Census Guide 1830 U.S. Census Guide 1840 Fayette County, Alabama Census Free 1840 Census Form for your Research Hosted at Ancestry.com – Ancestry Free Trial  1840 Fayette County, Census (images and index) $ 1810-1890 Accelerated Indexing Systems $ Hosted … Read more

North America Indian Names of Places in Mississippi, Alabama, Georgia, Florida, and Louisiana

The Indians all over this continent had names, traditions, religions, ceremonies, feasts, prayers, songs, dances all, more or less, with symbolism and allegory, adapted to circumstances, just as all other races of mankind. But the world has become so familiar with the continued and ridiculous publications in regard to everything touching upon that race of people that a universal doubt has long since been created and established as to the possibility of refinement of thought and nobleness of action ever having existed among the North American Indian race, ancient or modern; and so little of truth has also been learned … Read more

Alabama Mortality Census Records

1850 Madison County Alabama Mortality Schedule optimized

The 1850, 1860, 1870, 1880, and 1885 censuses included inquiries about persons who had died in the twelve months immediately preceding the enumeration. The 1850, 1960, 1870, and 1880 mortality census for Alabama all survived. Mortality schedules list deaths from 1 June through 31 May of 1849–50, 1859–60, 1869–70, 1879–80, and 1884–85. They provide nationwide, state-by-state death registers that predate the recording of vital statistics in most states. While deaths are under-reported, the mortality schedules remain an invaluable source of information.