|   |
|
Victor,
Yes, you got it right. The state has always made a
second copy of the records. The originals (when the book closes) get sent to the
state capital and the second copy is supposed to stay in the municipio it came
from.
The registro civil in Zacatecas City should
have the copy of the tome in question (let's hope that it survived la Toma
de Zactecas). I had this problem with records from Durango. The
documents were found in the registro civil in the city of Durango.
Like someone said before ' thank God the Spanish
were compulsive record keepers". They taught the Mexicans
well!
Elvira
----- Original Message -----
Sent: Friday, November 04, 2005 8:36
PM
Subject: [ranchos] Re: Bautismos de Hijos
Legitimos
I'm not sure if it has always been the same but I
understand that civil registry records are always made in duplicate; one
for the local office and a copy for the State archives of the civil
registry. So even if the local copy was burnt there's a chance that
the State's copy survived. As I said, that is how it is done today
but I'm not sure if the same rule applied back in 1903.
The other
question is where were the microfilms made, at the local office or at the
state office?
Victor
--- In ranchos@yahoogroups.com, "Emilie
Garcia" <auntyemfaustus@h...> wrote: > > Victor, I was
just going over the civil registry records I have checked and I haven't
found any trace of my father, aunt or grandmother, nor of a marriage record
for my grandfather Francisco Olague and grandmother Gorgonia Garcia.
I checked the civil registry for Guadalupe, a town not far from Jerez,
where my aunt Soledad's (my father's only sibling) death certificate says
she was born. Also, the priest didn't say the records were burned in
1903, but later when the Revolucion war came to Jerez. It seems
whoever wanted to destroy records set fire to the church and the civil
registry office since the list of LDS films has gaps for 1903 in the
bautismos of hijos naturales and all other records in the civil
registry. Maybe someone there that wanted to hide something took
advantage and destroyed the "evidence". I know Hitler destroyed his
home town in Austria to prevent people finding proof he had Jewish blood,
and a lady at the FHC says that some politico in Montreal wanted to do the
same thing because he was illegitimate. Why else would only a portion
of records go missing in both places, the church and the civil
registrar? > > One thing I now know for sure, probably, is that
since my father was not listed in the book for hijos legitimos for 1903,
that he must have been listed as an hijo natural. Since I don't find
a marriage record for my grandparents, I think they were not married.
My grandfather was known to be a very large, tall and intimidating man---"a
very hard man" someone said. He mistreated the women in his family,
even his own mother, and my mother left Colorado when she couldn't stand
his bullying and interference, and she didn't return to my father
until after his father had died. My father just would not stand up to
his father. (My father was only five feet tall and maybe he knew
his father would kill him or something. She said that when she used
to spank his other grandchildren (my aunt's boys), my grandfather used
to come and pinch me and make me cry. He was mean and
dangerous. I heard from a cousin that someone was out to get him in
Mexico, so he came to the US during the Revolucion. > > I'll
keep hacking away and maybe the forces will feel sorry for me and give me a
clue. > > Emilie Garcia > Port Orchard, WA
--
|
|
|   |