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Begin your journey into your family's past by exploring the Social Security Death Index (SSDI). This is a crucial tool for people interested in their family history. It helps confirm important dates like birth and death, where your ancestors lived, and where they got their Social Security card.
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Name index to deaths recorded by the Social Security Administration beginning in 1962.
Ancestry.com – Search the Social Security Death Index (SSDI) to find names, birth and death dates, and locations for your ancestors.
16 lut 2014 · About 98 percent of the people in the SSDI died after 1962, although a few deaths do date back as far as 1937. Where Can I Look at the SSDI? Almost any LDS Family History Center offers free on-site use of the FamilySearch set of cd-roms, which include the Social Security Death Index.
12 sie 2024 · The "Social Security Death Index" is a database created from the Social Security Administration's Death Master File. This is an index of deceased individuals whose deaths were reported to the Social Security Administration. It has been kept since 1962, when operations were computerized.
The Social Security Death Index (also known as the SSDI or the SS Death Index) lists basic information, such as the date of death and the residence where the last claim was sent by the Social Security Administration. It mostly includes people who died after 1962.
The Social Security Administration compiled all of these records into what is now known as the Social Security Death Index, or SSDI for short. This database records all deaths reported since 1962. The omission of an individual in this index does not mean the person is still living.