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Charles R. Hale Collection < PAGE TITLE

Charles R. Hale directed a project about 1932-5 to record cemetery inscriptions in 2,269 Connecticut cemeteries. Newspaper death and marriage notices were abstracted for the years 1755 to 1865-6 (except for the Danbury Times ending in 1900). The state typed and bound the inscriptions and abstracts, then created separate marriage and death name indexes on slips of paper.

The collection is valuable because it contains cemetery inscriptions for stones no longer extant or no longer legible. It includes cemeteries under highways and covered by reservoirs.

In 1949-50 the Genealogical Society of Utah (FamilySearch’s predecessor) microfilmed the Hale Collection at the Connecticut State Library. Decades ago the society indexed parts of the collection and added it to the International Genealogical Index. Recently FamilySearch produced a digital index for parts of it. Still other parts remain unindexed. Indexed parts are now scattered among three FamilySearch collections:


 * Connecticut, Deaths, 1640-1955
 * Connecticut Deaths and Burials, 1772-1934
 * Connecticut, Charles R. Hale Collection, Vital Records, 1640-1955

One result of this ragged indexing history is that some colonial era events are found by specifying “Connecticut, United States” and some by specifying “Connecticut Colony, British Colonial America.”

Collection Organization
The organization and different parts of the collection are reflected in the film notes in the FamilySearch catalog entry for the.

Surname index, Death and Inscriptions. Slip index of newspaper death notices and cemetery inscriptions.

Index to Deaths, (newspaper name). Slip index of newspaper death notices, arranged by newspaper, then by name.

Index to Marriages, (newspaper name). – Slip index of newspaper marriage notices, arranged by newspaper, then by name.

Surname index of marriages. Slip index of newspaper marriage notices, includes separate slips for bride and groom.

Cemetery inscriptions of (town). Bound volumes. Microfilm rolls can be divided in the middle of a town. Towns are presented alphabetically, not numerically.


 * Each town has its own section, with page number beginning at 1.
 * Inscriptions are grouped by cemetery and ordered by cemetery number.
 * Index of Inscriptions
 * List of Cemeteries, showing cemetery numbers.
 * Location of Cemeteries (map)

Newspapers with death and marriage notices (newspaper name). Newspapers may not all be indexed in the slip index.


 * Paper title page gives newspaper name, S.L.N. (state library number?), marriage notices date and page number range, death notices date and page number range.
 * Marriages are listed, sorted by newspaper issue date

Cemetery Inscription Example
FamilySearch has indexed many of the Hale Collection cemetery inscriptions, but not all of them. This example demonstrates how to locate an inscription manually.

Consult the catalog to locate the “Surname index, Death and Inscriptions” image group number (or microfilm) inclusive of the surname of interest. For example, Maria Eudocia Foote falls between FOL and FOX, so the image group of interest is 7592623. The image group contains slips indexing the bound volumes of cemetery inscriptions.

Maria’s index slip looks like this:



The slip indicates the town (New Haven in the example), followed by the location code (215) assigned to that town. The leading digit indicates the county:


 * 100 Hartford
 * 200 New Haven
 * 300 New London
 * 400 Fairfield
 * 500 Windham
 * 600 Litchfield
 * 700 Middlesex
 * 800 Tolland

Cemetery numbers start with 1 in each town. The bound abstracts list the cemeteries for each town (215-1). The page number refers to the town’s section in the bound abstracts. (The website “Hale Collection of Connecticut Cemetery Records” by New Horizons Genealogy also lists cemetery numbers.)