Town of Winthrop : Record of Deaths 1935, Part 75

Author: Winthrop (Mass.)
Publication date: 1935
Publisher:
Number of Pages: 524


USA > Massachusetts > Suffolk County > Winthrop > Town of Winthrop : Record of Deaths 1935 > Part 75


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Medical examiners shall make examination upon the view of the dead bodies of only such persons as are supposed to have died by violence .... Gen. Laws, Chap. 38, Sec. 6.


.... He shall in all cases certify to the town clerk or registrar in the place where the deceased died his name and residence, if known; otherwise a description as full as may be, with the cause and manner of death .- Gen. Laws, Chap. 38, Sec. 7.


No undertaker or other person shall bury a human body or the ashes thereof which have been brought into the commonwealth until he has received a permit so to do from the board of health or its agent appointed to issue such permits, or if there is no such board, from the clerk of the town where the body is to be buried or the funeral is to be held, or from a person appointed to have the care of the ceme- tery or burial ground in which the interment is made .... Chap. 114. Sec. 46, G. L. as amended.


RULES OF PRACTICE


The fulfillment of the purpose of these laws calls for the observance of the following rules of practice:


(1) Attending physicians will certify to such deaths only as those of persons to whom they have given bedside care during a last illness from disease unrelated to any form of injury.


(2) Board of Health physicians will certify to such deaths only as those of persons who, though disabled by recognized disease un- related to any form of injury, have died without recent medical attend- ance or whose physician is absent from home when the certificate of death is needed.


(3) Medical Examiners will investigate and certify to all deaths supposably due to injury. These include not only deaths caused directly or indirectly by traumatism (including resulting septicemia), and by the action of chemical (drugs or poisons), thermal, or electrical agents, and deaths following abortion, but also deaths from disease resulting from injury or infection related to occupation, the sudden deaths of persons not disabled by recognized disease, and those of persons found dead.


RM R-301


Suffolk


PLACE OF DEATH


(County)


(City or Town)


Je Commonwealth of Massachusetts OFFICE OF THE SECRETARY DIVISION OF VITAL STATISTICS STANDARD CERTIFICATE OF DEATH


(City or town making return)


Registered No.


176


(If death occurred in a hospital or institution, give its NAME instead of street and number)


Grace(Blood) Shivelle


(If deceased is a married, widowed or divorced woman, give also maiden name.)


59. Shirley


(a) Residence. No.


(Usual place of abode)


Length of residence in city or town where death occurred


yrs.


mos.


days.


How long in U. S., if of foreign birth?


yrs.


mos.


days.


PERSONAL AND STATISTICAL PARTICULARS


MEDICAL CERTIFICATE OF DEATH


(Month)


(Day)


19 I HEREBY CERTIFY, What I attended deceased from pily 1 0


last saw h., An alive on


1


2 , 19 35, death is said


to have occurred on the date stated above, at ... 9.8 m. The principal cause of death and related causes of importance in order of Date of Onset onset were as follows: arten no- saludos


1


Name of operation


What test confirmed diagnosis?


Date of


Was there an autopsy ?...


20 Was disease or injury in any way related to occupation of deceased?


If so, specify


(Signed)


M. D.


(Address)


21 PLACE OF BURIAL,


So Tie. . o Ala.s .483


CREMATION OR REMOVAL


Sep t


(Cemetery)


26 I: 35


(City or town)


DATE OF BURIAL


19


22 NAME OF


UNDERTAKER


.


Lite


ADDRESS


interop Mass.


Received and filed


SEP 2 6 1935


19


A TRUE COPY, ATTEST: (Registrar)


information should be carefully supplied. AGE should be stated EXACTLY. PHYSICIANS should state N. B .- WRITE PLAINLOWWITH UNFADING BLACK INK-THIS IS A PERMANENT RECO. < D. Every item of PARENTS 100m-11-'30. No. 605-b


1


100000:


2 FULL NAME


3 SEX


4 COLOR OR RACE


Female


white


7 AUrox


AGE


00


10 Date deceased last worked at


this occupation (month and


OCCUPATION


year)


(State or country)


13 NAME OF


FATHER


(State or country)


16 BIRTHPLACE OF


MOTHER (City)


(State or country)


(Address)


is very important. See instructions and extracts from the laws on back of certificate.


CAUSE OF DEATH in plain terms, so that it may be properly classified. Exact statement of OCCUPATION


9 Industry or business in which


work was done, as silk mill,


saw mill, bank, etc.


5 SINGLE


MARRIED


WIDOWED


or DIVORCED


(write the word)


5a If married, widowed, or divorced


HUSBAND of


arthur (Give maiden name of wife in full)


-Aulme Shivelle


(or) WIFE of


(Husband's name in full)


6 IF STILLBORN, enter that fact here.


Years


Months


Days


If less than 1 day


Hours


Minutes


8 Trade, profession, or particular kind of work done, as spinner, sawyer, bookkeeper, etc.


At Haue


11 Total time (years)


spent in this


occupation


12 BIRTHPLACE (City).


Chestershire


.1.28s.


Henry Blood


14 BIRTHPLACE OF


FATHER (City)


Canada


15 MAIDEN NAME


OF MOTHER


Ama E. Merry


Pittsfield


.488.


17 Pauline Roberts


Informant


"""mirley'st inthrow wass;


I HEREBY CERTIFY that a satisfactory standard certificate of death was filed with me BEFORE the burial or transit permit was issued: L


Signature of Agent of Board of Health or other) Health Spicer 9/24/35


/ (Official Designation) (Date of Issue of Permits


18 DATE OF


DEATH


Darriga


St.,.


Ward,


(If nonresident give city or town and state)


No. ...... inthrop Hospital. ....... St., .................. Ward


(If U. S.


War Veteran,


specify WAR)


22


1435


(Year)


193 4 To1 2/2/ 22


1935


Contributory causes of importance not related to principal cause:


9/2-19


Revised United :"es Standard Certificate of Death


Statement of occupation .- Precise statement of occupation is ervy important, so that the relative healthfulness of various pursuits can be known. Make some entry in this section for every person aged 10 years or over. If the occupation had been given up or changed on account of the disease causing death, report the occupation prior to illness. If the deceased had retired from business, report the occupation prior to retirement. Children not gainfully employed may be returned as at school or at home. For a woman whose only occupation was that of home housework, write housework in answer to Question 8 and own home in answer to Question 9. For a person engaged in domestic service for wages, however, designate the occupation by the appropriate terms, as housekeeper-private family, cook-hotel, etc. For a person who had no occupation what- ever write none.


To be complete, an occupation return must state:


8 .- The trade, profession, or particular kind of work done.


9 .- The industry or business in which the work was done.


10 .- The month and year the deceased last worked at the occupation.


11 .- The number of years the deceased followed the occupation.


In stating the occupation, avoid the use of such indefinite terms as "employee," "worker," "operative," etc. Find out the parti- cular kind of work done and return that, as spinner, weaver, etc.


In stating the industry or business, avoid the use of such general terms as "store." "factory." "mill." etc. State the particular kind of store, factory, mill, etc., as grocery store, soap factory, cotton mill, etc.


Distinguish carefully the different kinds of engineers by stating the full descriptive titles, as civil engineer, mechanical engineer, mining engineer, stationary engineer, etc. Avoid the term "laborer" when a more precise statement of the occupation can be secured. Do not use the word "mechanic, " but give the exact occupation, as carpenter, painter, machinist, etc. Distinguish carefully between retail merchants and wholesale merchants. A person who sells goods should be called a salesman and not a clerk.


Statement of cause of death .- Cause of death means the disease, or complication which causes death, not the mode of dying, e. g., heart failure, asphyxia, asthenia, etc. As principal cause name the disease causing death. As related causes, name earlier morbid conditions, if any, related to the principal cause and any important complication of the principal cause. Under contributory causes of importance not related to principal cause, name other important diseases.


Example


The principal cause of death and related causes of importance in order of onset were as follows:


Date of onset


Arteriosclerosis


1015


Chronic interstitial nephritis


1021


Cerebral hemorrhage


July 5, 1927


Contributory causes of importance not related to principal cause:


In a group of causes containing the principal cause and related causes, the causes should be given in the order of onset, so that in a group of three causes the principal cause may appear in either first, second, or third position. The principal cause in the above example happens to be the second cause given.


EXTRACTS (A)E


FROM THE LAWS OF THE COMMONWEALTH OF MASSACHUSETTS GOVERNING THE


RETURN OF CERTIFICATES OF DEATH


A physician or registered hospital medical officer shall forth- with, after the death of a person whom he has attended during his last illness, at the request of an undertaker or other authorized person or of any member of the family of the deceased, furnish for registration a standard certificate of death, stating to the best of his knowledge and belief the name of the deceased, his supposed age, the disease of which he died, defined as required by section one, where same was contracted, the duration of his last illness, when last seen alive by the physician or officer and the date of his death ... Gen. Laws, Chap. 46, Sec. 9.


No undertaker or other person shall bury or otherwise dispose of a human body in a town, or remove therefrom a human body which has not been buried, until he has received a permit from the board of health, or its agent appointed to issue such permits, or if there is no such board, from the clerk of the town where the person died; and no undertaker or other person shall exhume a human body and remove it from a town, from one cemetery to another, or from one grave or tomb other than the receiving tomb to another in the Same cemetery, until he has received a permit from the board of health or its agent aforesaid or from the clerk of the town where the body is buried. No such permit shall be issued until there shall have been delivered to such board, agent or clerk, as the case may be, a satis- factory written statement containing the facts required by law to be returned and recorded, which shall be accompanied, in case of an original interment, by a satisfactory certificate of the attending physician, if any, as required by law, or in lieu thereof a certificate as hereinafter provided. If there is no attending physician, or if, for sufficient reasons, his certificate cannot be obtained early enough for the purpose, or is insufficient, a physician who is a member of the board of health, or employed by it or by the selectmen for the purpose, shall upon application make the certificate required of the attending physician. If death is caused by violence, the medical examiner shall make such certificate. If the death certificate contains a recital, as required by section ten of chapter forty-six, that the deceased served in the army, navy or marine corps of the United States in any war in which it has been engaged, such recital shall appear upon the permit. The board of health, or its agent, upon receipt of such state- ment and certificate, shall forthwith countersign it and transmit it to the clerk of the town for registration. The person to whom the permit is so given and the physician certifying the cause of death shall thereafter furnish for registration any other necessary information which can be obtained as to the deceased, or as to the manner or cause of the death, which the clerk or registrar may require .- Chap. 114, Sec. 45, G. L., as amended.


Medical examiners shall make examination upon the view of the dead bodies of only such persons as are supposed to have died by violence .... Gen. Laws, Chap. 38, Sec. 6.


.... He shall in all cases certify to the town clerk or registrar in the place where the deceased died his name and residence, if known; otherwise a description as full as may be, with the cause and manner of death .- Gen. Laws, Chap. 38, Sec. 7.


No undertaker or other person shall bury a human body or the ashes thereof which have been brought into the commonwealth until he has received a permit so to do from the board of health or its agent appointed to issue such permits, or if there is no such board, from the clerk of the town where the body is to be buried or the funeral is to be held, or from a person appointed to have the care of the ceme- tery or burial ground in which the interment is made .... Chap. 114. Sec. 46, G. L. as amended.


RULES OF PRACTICE


The fulfillment of the purpose of these laws calls for the observance of the following rules of practice:


(1) Attending physicians will certify to such deaths only as those of persons to whom they have given bedside care during a last illness from disease unrelated to any form of injury.


(2) Board of Health physicians will certify to such deaths only as those of persons who, though disabled by recognized disease un- related to any form of injury, have died without recent medical attend- ance or whose physician is absent from home when the certificate of death is needed.


(3) Medical Examiners will investigate and certify to all deaths supposably due to injury. These include not only deaths caused directly or indirectly by traumatism (including resulting septicemia), and by the action of chemical (drugs or poisons), thermal, or electrical agents, and deaths following abortion, but also deaths from disease resulting from injury or infection related to occupation, the sudden deaths of persons not disabled by recognized disease, and those of persons found dead.


M R-301


N. B .- WRITE PLAINL/ WITH UNFADING BLACK INK-THIS IS A PERMANENT RICO.RD. Every item of is very important. See instructions and extracts from the laws on back of certificate. CAUSE OF DEATH in plain terms, so that it may be properly classified. Exact statement of OCCUPATION information should be carefully supplied. AGE should be stated EXACTLY. PHYSICIANS should state


PLACE OF DEATH


Suffolk .......


(County)


Winthrop


(City or Town)


No.


31 Sargent


St .;...


Ward


give its NAME instead of street and number)


2 FULL NAME


Andrew Millington


(If deceased is a married, widowed or divorced woman, give also maiden name.)


specify WAR)


(a) Residence. No


31 Sargent


.St., ..


............


.Ward,


(If nonresident, give city or town and state)


(Usual place of abode)


Length of residence in city or town where death occurred 24


yrs.


mos.


days.


How long in U. S., if of foreign birth?


yrs.


mos.


days.


PERSONAL AND STATISTICAL PARTICULARS


MEDICAL CERTIFICATE OF DEATH


3 SEX


Male


4 COLOR OR RACE


White


5 SINGLE


MARRIED


WIDOWED


or DIVORCED


(write the word)


Married


(Month)


25 Day)


1935 (Vear)


5a If married, Hatrigrd Giller


HUSBAND of


(Give maiden name of wife in full)


(or) WIFE of


(Husband's name in full)


6 IF STILLBORN, enter that fact here.


7


AGE


69


Years


6


Months


Days


Hours Minutes


8 Trade, profession, or particular


kind of work done, as spinner,


Mechanic


OCCUPATION


sawyer, bookkeeper, etc ...


9 Industry or business in which work was done, as silk mill, Metal mill saw mill, bank, etc.


10 Date deceased last worked at


11 Total time (years)


this occupation (month and


year)


Jan. 1935 spent in this


54


occupation.


12 BIRTHPLACE (City)


Liverpool


(State or country)


England


13 NAME OF


FATHER


George Millington


PARENTS


14 BIRTHPLACE OF


FATHER (City)


(State or country)


England


15 MAIDEN NAME


OF MOTHER Marguerite Ann Brogan


16 BIRTHPLACE OF


MOTHER (City)


(State or country)


England


17 Harriet G . Millington wife


Informant (Address) 31 Sargent st.


winthrop


I HEREBY CERTIFY that a satisfactory standard certificate of death was filed with me BEFORE the burial or transit permit was issued:


(Signature of Agent of Board of Health or other) Ide althe Hacer 9/26/30


(Official Designation)


(Date of Issue of Permit)


19


I HEREBY CERTIFY, Thay I attended deceased from


Manl


1933, to


Soft 25, 19


I tast saw h. Long alive on


Laht 25, 193], death is said


6P m.


to have occurred on the date stated above, at. The principal cause of death and related causes of importance in order of onset were as follows: Lamonta taxi Date of Onset


Contributory causes of importance not related to principal cause:


Name of operation.


What test confirmed diagnosis?


Date of.


Was there an autopsy?


20 Was disease or injury in any way related to occupation of deceased?


If se, specify


(Signed)


M. D


(Address) megh


2r


Date 1/26 1935


21 PLACE OF BURIAL,


CREMATION OR REMOVAL


Winthrop


winthrop


DATE OF


September 28


(City or town)z 135


22 NAME OF


Charles P. Bennison


UNDERTAKER


ADDRESS


Winthrop Mass


Received and filed.


OCT 8


1935


19


A TRUE COPY, ATTEST:


(Registrar)


100m-12-'34. No. 2938-e


1


Registered No .....


(If death occurred in a hospital or institution,


(If U. S.


18 DATE OF


DEATH


If less than 1 day


8


The Commonwealth of Massachusetts OFFICE OF THE SECRETARY DIVISION OF VITAL STATISTICS STANDARD CERTIFICATE OF DEATH


(City or town making return)


Relation, if any


Revised United Setes Standard Certificate of Death


Statement of occupation .- Precise statement of occupation is very important, so that the relative healthfulness of various pursuits can be known. Make some entry in this section for every person aged 10 years or over. If the occupation had been given up or changed on account of the disease causing death, report the occupation prior to illness. If the deceased had retired from business, report the occupation prior to retirement. Children not gainfully employed may be returned &8 at school or at home. For a woman whose only occupation was that of home housework, write housework in answer to Question 8 and own home in answer to Question 9. For a person engaged in domestic service for wages, however, designate the occupation by the appropriate terms, as housekeeper-privats family, cook-hotel, etc. For a person who had no occupation what- ever write none.


To be complete, an occupation return must state:


8 .- The trade, profession, or particular kind of work done.


9 .- The industry or business in which the work was done.


10 .- The month and year the deceased last worked at the occupation.


11 .- The number of years the deceased followed the occupation.


In stating the occupation, avoid the use of such indefinite terms as "employee," "worker," "operative," etc. Find out the parti- cular kind of work done and return that, as spinner, weaver, etc.


In stating the industry or business, avoid the use of such general terms as "store, " "factory," "mill." etc. State the particular kind of store, factory, mill, etc., as grocery store, soap factory, colton mill, etc.


Distinguish carefully the different kinds of engineers by stating the full descriptive titles, as civil engineer, mechanical engineer, mining engineer, stationary engineer, etc. Avoid the term "laborer" when a more precise statement of the occupation can be secured. Do not use the word "mechanic, " but give the exact occupation, as carpenter, painter, machinist, etc. Distinguish carefully between retail merchants and wholesale merchants. A person who sells goods should be called a salesman and not a clerk.


Statement of cause of death .- Cause of death means the disease, or complication which causes death, not the mode of dying, e. g., heart failure, asphyxia, asthenia, etc. As principal cause name the disease causing death. As related causes, name earlier morbid conditions, if any, related to the principal cause and any important complication of the principal cause. Under contributory causes of importance not related to principal cause, name other important diseases.


Example


The principal cause of death and related causes! of importance in order of onset were as follows:


Date of onset


Arteriosclerosis ...


1015


Chronic interstitial nephritis ...


1021


Cerebral hemorrhage


July 5, 1027


....


....


Contributory causes of importance not related to principal cause:


In a group of causes containing the principal cause and related causes, the causes should be given in the order of onset, so that in a group of three causes the principal cause may appear in either first, second, or third position. The principal cause in the above example happens to be the second cause given.


EA |RAVIS FROM THE LAWS OF |HE COMMONWEALTH OF MA ACHUSETTS GOVERNING THE'


RETURN OF CERTIFICATES OF DEATH


A physician or registered hospital medical officer shall forth- with, after the death of a person whom he has attended during his last illness, at the request of an undertaker or other authorized person or of any member of the family of the deceased. furnish for registration a standard certificate of death, stating to the best of his knowledge and belief the name of the deceased, his supposed age, the disease of which he died, defined as required by section one, where same was contracted, the duration of his last illness, when last seen alive by the physician or officer and the date of his death .... Gen. Laws, Chap. 46, Sec. 9.


No undertaker or other person shall bury or otherwise dispose of a human body in a town, or remove therefrom a human body which has not been buried, until he has received a permit from the board of health, or its agent appointed to issue such permits, or if there is no such board, from the clerk of the town where the person died; and no undertaker or other person shall exhume a human body and remove it from a town, from one cemetery to another, or from one grave or tomb other than the receiving tomb to another in the Same cemetery, until he has received a permit from the board of health or its agent aforesaid or from the clerk of the town where the body is buried. No such permit shall be issued until there shall have been delivered to such board, agent or clerk, as the case may be, a satis- factory written statement containing the facts required by law to be returned and recorded, which shall be accompanied, in case of an original interment, by a satisfactory certificate of the attending physician, if any, as required by law, or in lieu thereof a certificate as hereinafter provided. If there is no attending physician, or if, for sufficient reasons, his certificate cannot be obtained early enough for the purpose, or is insufficient, a physician who is a member of the board of health, or employed by it or by the selectmen for the purpose, shall upon application make the certificate required of the attending physician. If death is caused by violence, the medical examiner shall make such certificate. If such a permit for the removal of a human body. not previously interred, from one town to another within the common- wealth cannot be obtained early enough for the purpose, the certificate of death made as above provided and in the possession of the undertaker desiring to make such removal shall constitute a permit for such re- moval; provided, that such body shall be returned to the town from which it was removed within thirty-six hours after such removal, unless a permit in the usual form for the removal of such body has been sooner obtained hereunder. If the death certificate contains a recital, as re- quired by section ten of chapter forty-six, that the deceased served in the army, navy or marine corps of the United States in any war in which it has been engaged, such recital shall appear upon the permit. The board of health, or its agent, upon receipt of such statement and certificate, shall forthwith countersign it and transmit it to the clerk of the town for registration. The person to whom the permit is so given and the physician certifying the cause of death shall thereafter furnish for registration any other necessary information which can be obtained as to the deceased, or as to the manner or cause of the death, which the clerk or registrar may require. - Chop. 114, Sec. 45, G. L., (Tercentenary Edition.)


Medical examiners shall make examination upon the view of the dead bodies of only such persons as are supposed to have died by violence .... Gen. Laws, Chap. 38, Sec. 6.


.... He shall in all cases certify to the town clerk or registrar in the place where the deceased died his name and residence, if known; otherwise a description as full as may be, with the cause and manner of death .- Gen. Laws, Chap. 38, Sec. 7.


No undertaker or other person shall bury a human body or the ashes thereof which have been brought into the commonwealth until he has received a permit so to do from the board of health or its agent appointed to issue such permits, or if there is no such board, from the clerk of the town where the body is to be buried or the funeral is to be held, or from a person appointed to have the care of the ceme- tery or burial ground in which the interment is made .. .. Chop. 114, Sec. 46, G. L., (Tercentenary Edition.)


RULES OF PRACTICE


The fulfillment of the purpose of these laws calls for the observance of the following rules of practice:


(1) Attending physicians will certify to such deaths only as those of persons to whom they have given bedside care during a last illness from disease unrelated to any form of injury.




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