GuidedResearch:Why Can't I Find the Record - Wales Nonconformist Deaths

 This page will give you additional guidance and resources to find death information for your ancestor. Use this page after first completing the Wales Nonconformist page. After 1837, search for Civil Registration.

Additional Databases and Online Resources

 * 1640s-1920s:  England & Wales Non-Conformist Burials  at FindMyPast ($)
 * 1500s-1900s:  Search our Parish Registers  at FreeReg
 * 1500s-1900s:  The Official Non-Conformist and Non-Parochial BMDs Service  at BMDRegisters ($)
 * 1500s-1900s:  Non-Conformist Records  at TheGenealogist ($)

Substitute records may contain information about more than one event and are used when records for an event are not available. Records that are used to substitute for death events may not have been created at the time of the death. The accuracy of the record is contingent upon when the information was recorded. Search for information in multiple substitute records to confirm the accuracy of these records.

Tips for finding deaths
Successfully finding death records in online databases depends on a few key points. Try the following search suggestions:
 * Add information. For common names, add more information to narrow the search such as approximate birth date or parent's names if known.
 * Spelling variations. Your ancestor's name may be misspelled. Search with spelling variations for the first and last name of your ancestor.
 * Search given name. Search by given name (leave out the last name) with the approximate date of birth or death.
 * Know county. Because of the abundance of common given and last names, knowing the county and parish is important to narrow down the search. See Finding the Wales County or Parish of Origin to learn how.
 * Date range. Expand the date range of the search by 5 years.

Records Start Nonconformist records date to 1567, although a majority of records began in the 18th and early 19th centuries. Before the 1850s, the majority of burials were recorded in the Church of England and, therefore, do not appear in nonconformist records. Records Destroyed Only 10% of nonconformist records have been digitized.