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Obituaries on Steroids

Photo: Common Burying Ground and Island Cemetery in Newport, Rhode Island. Credit: Matt H. Wade.; Wikimedia Commons.

I was very surprised and pleased to see that some of the old newspapers in GenealogyBank’s Historical Newspaper Archives routinely published the necrology reports of Harvard alumni.

These detailed necrology obituary reports are usually much longer than a death notice or obituary. Why? Harvard University had a “Committee on Necrology” to research and document the lives of its alumni and then write these very genealogically-detailed obituaries.

In 1873 the practice of compiling these necrology reports almost stopped when the donations from the alumni fell short of the cost of preparing and publishing these obituaries.

Massachusetts Spy (Worcester, Massachusetts), 27 June 1873, page 3

Genealogists can be grateful that Harvard continued to publish these detailed obituaries.

These compact biographical essays are usually dense with family history and biographical details – typically giving the names, dates/places of birth, marriage and death of the children of the deceased, along with many other details.

The 1861 necrology report was published in the Boston Daily Advertiser on 16 July 1862.

Boston Daily Advertiser (Boston, Massachusetts), 16 July 1862, page 2

Looking at the report I found my cousin: Daniel Gilman Hatch (1798-1862). It was a long, detailed obituary. This is just the first part of the entire article:

Boston Daily Advertiser (Boston, Massachusetts), 16 July 1862, page 2

What do we learn about Daniel Gilman Hatch and his family?

Wow – an enormous amount of detail – and there is still more biographical information in this obituary. Read the rest of the obituary to learn all of the details they published about his life.

Genealogy Tip: Notice that Daniel was born and died in Exeter, New Hampshire, and he lived most of his life in Virginia and Kentucky. But, because he attended Harvard, his obituary was written and published in the Boston Daily Advertiser – a reminder to be flexible in searching for your ancestors and cousins.

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