To obtain your mother's birth certificate, you typically need to contact the vital records office in the state or country where she was born. You may need to provide information such as her full name, date of birth, and possibly identification or proof of relationship. For your own birth certificate, the process is similar; you can request it from the vital records office in the state where you were born, usually requiring an application form and identification. Always check the specific requirements and fees associated with the request in your jurisdiction.
Yes, "mother unknown" can appear on a birth certificate in cases where the mother is not identified at the time of registration. This may occur in situations such as abandoned infants or when the mother is unwilling or unable to provide her information. In such instances, the birth certificate may reflect "mother unknown" to ensure that the birth is still officially recorded.
Either birth mother or legal adoptive mother. In the case of adoption the adoptive mother becomes the birth mother in the eyes of the state
Fathers with parental rights are not always listed on the birth certificate.
Well your mother should have your birth certificate but you can find it in the hospital where you were born.
yes she can
No - they simply list the names of the biological father and mother. A birth certificate does not prove the parents were married at the time the birth was registered.
It depends on what state you are in. In some states you can get a pre-birth order, allowing the intended parent's names to be placed on the birth certificate. I other states, the surrogate mother and her husband's names on placed on the birth certificate, and later changed by a lawyer through the courts to the intended parents names.
The mother should put the actual fathers name on the birth certificate.
The hospital you were born in has your records, or you can look on your birth certificate.
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The father's name goes on the birth certificate only if he signs an acknowledgment of paternity.
The same if he is listed on the birth certificate. NONE