No you need a passport as well.
no you can not!
No, a baby cannot travel to Canada with only a birth certificate. They would need a valid passport to enter the country.
You used to be able to Canada with just a birth certificate until around 2011 when the laws changed. However you need a passport to travel pretty much anywhere outside the US now and you can use your birth certificate and license or state i.d. to get a passport. You need a visa to travel to a few places and you need 4 duplicates of your visa if you travel to Africa.
You need a certified birth certificate, not a baptismal certificate. It is only important if you have no birth certificate and a letter from the state saying that there is no record after a detailed search of your birth certificate.
You can contact the hospital for a certificate of birth but to get a legal document you need to contact the state office. the original is on file there and you can not have that but only a legal certificate.
Yes. You only need a birth certificate and or ID.
If you are a United States citizen, you do not need a visa to travel to Hawaii. You only need a visa if you are visiting from another country.
The State Department of Health and Senior Services can replace your birth certificate. Replacement birth certificates in Missouri are not public record and can only be obtained by the individual, guardian or other legal party. You can obtain a copy of your birth certificate in person and online.
If you travel by air, yes they do. Otherwise, they only need a birth certificate or another proof of citizenship.
If you are going on a cruise from a US port and the child is a US citizen, you will only need a state-issued copy of the child's birth certificate. If you are flying, the child will need a passport.
You should be OK.
In Florida, a "certificate of live birth" is the original certificate completed at the time of the child's birth. It is prepared by the hospital and includes the signatures of at least one of the parents and usually the physician or another witness to the birth. Once the "certificate of live birth" has been completed, it is sent to the Florida Office of Vital Statistics, who files the document and issues certified copies when requested. When ordering a Florida birth certificate, you can ask for a "photocopy certificate" - which is an exact photocopy of the original "certificate of live birth". They can only be ordered from the state office in Jacksonville, since that is where the actual certificate is stored. A "Certification of Birth" also known as a "computer copy" is a document issued by the Florida Office of Vital Statistics that only includes some of the information from the original "certificate of live birth". It usually states only the name, sex, date of birth, place of birth, parents' names, and the state file number. These types of birth certificates are cheaper and can be purchased from any Vital Statistics office in the state of Florida (and each county has one). Now for adopted persons, the policy is different. When the child is born, their birth certificate is completed like normal. However, once the child is adopted, the state of Florida creates a NEW "certificate of live birth" that shows the child's adoptive name and the names of the adoptive parents. The original "certificate of live birth" containing the names of the original parents is "sealed", meaning that it is locked up and can never be opened again without a court order. So, when an adopted person orders a birth certificate - whether it's a "photocopy" ("certificate of live birth") or "computer copy" ("certification of birth"), it will only show the adoptive name of the child and the names of the adoptive parents.