A person can get their hospital records when mother and baby go home by requesting them from the head nurse. A person may also have the records sent to their home.
Yes, he would have had a mother.
They would be classified as extinct. Volcanoes with recorded eruptions - but nothing 'recent' would be classed as dormant.
No. If it is a mother, that infers that the organism is female. The feature that determines gender is the 23rd set of chromosomes. A female can only result if the pair is XX (XY results in a male). Therefore, a mother cannot pass on a Y chromosome to her child. If you are wondering whether by cause of a genetic mutation the mother happens to have a Y chromosome, then she would not be a mother, as she would be infertile.
Mum or mom would be "mama". Mother would be "matka" in most cases.
I don't believe there are records there, but I would guess between about 160 - 190"
If the deed was recorded you must execute a new deed that conveys your interest in the property back to your mother. Then that deed must be recorded in the land records. If the deed was never recorded in the land records you could destroy it. If it was never recorded in the land records then the record title would still be in your mother's name.
I think you would need papers reflecting that you have custody or guardianship--or permission from the mother to see the records.
Um.....you should know who your mother is not necessarily meet her but....your birth certificate should tell you and your records would have it unless blocked. There are organizations which help people locate family.
According to your question, your mother and your daughter owned property together. That deed should be recorded in the land records. If they owned as joint tenants with the right of survivorship, when your mother dies her interest in the property would pass automatically to your daughter and bypass probate. If your mother signed a quitclaim deed that conveyed her interest to you, that deed must be recorded in the land records. By executing that deed, she broke the joint tenancy she had with your daughter and now you and your daughter own the property as tenants in common. Your mother no longer owns the property and it would not be included in her probate estate.
I'm guessing you might mean your medical records? Your insurance records would be wherever you put them. Your medical records, or records of insurance payments would be with the medical provider.
You must check the records of the probate court in the jurisdiction where your mother resided to see if the will was filed for probate. If it was filed it's a public record and you can request a copy. If there was no will filed then you must ask family members whether your mother had a will and who has possession of it.If your mother had an attorney she used for any legal services you could try calling to see if they have any copy of a will in their records.You must check the records of the probate court in the jurisdiction where your mother resided to see if the will was filed for probate. If it was filed it's a public record and you can request a copy. If there was no will filed then you must ask family members whether your mother had a will and who has possession of it.If your mother had an attorney she used for any legal services you could try calling to see if they have any copy of a will in their records.You must check the records of the probate court in the jurisdiction where your mother resided to see if the will was filed for probate. If it was filed it's a public record and you can request a copy. If there was no will filed then you must ask family members whether your mother had a will and who has possession of it.If your mother had an attorney she used for any legal services you could try calling to see if they have any copy of a will in their records.You must check the records of the probate court in the jurisdiction where your mother resided to see if the will was filed for probate. If it was filed it's a public record and you can request a copy. If there was no will filed then you must ask family members whether your mother had a will and who has possession of it.If your mother had an attorney she used for any legal services you could try calling to see if they have any copy of a will in their records.
3-7 percent would be vital records.
It would be the Guinness World Records. Link Provided.
I think it would be she and her mother. It sounds better
Unless his mother Jackie Peterson comes forward with the information, it would be almost impossible to verify. Other than that, his medical records, which are protected by law, would have to be breeched. That is privileged information between a patient and a doctor.
If your father is not available to tell you what his family history is, for whatever reason, then you have to go to other relatives who might know something or to the records. Records would include vital records (birth, death, marriage), legal records (land ownership, court records, civil cases, wills, etc.), military records, newspapers, cemetery records, etc. And, unfortunately, if you can't find something to start from, you may have to simply give up, at least for a time, and work on something else, perhaps your mother's family history.
The best way to go about looking up a relative's mother and father would be to visit a genealogy website. The most popular genealogy website today is Ancestory, which boasts over 11 billion records.