USA > Massachusetts > Suffolk County > Winthrop > Town of Winthrop : Record of Deaths 1955 > Part 45
Note: The text from this book was generated using artificial intelligence so there may be some errors. The full pages can be found on Archive.org (link on the Part 1 page).
Part 1 | Part 2 | Part 3 | Part 4 | Part 5 | Part 6 | Part 7 | Part 8 | Part 9 | Part 10 | Part 11 | Part 12 | Part 13 | Part 14 | Part 15 | Part 16 | Part 17 | Part 18 | Part 19 | Part 20 | Part 21 | Part 22 | Part 23 | Part 24 | Part 25 | Part 26 | Part 27 | Part 28 | Part 29 | Part 30 | Part 31 | Part 32 | Part 33 | Part 34 | Part 35 | Part 36 | Part 37 | Part 38 | Part 39 | Part 40 | Part 41 | Part 42 | Part 43 | Part 44 | Part 45 | Part 46 | Part 47 | Part 48 | Part 49 | Part 50 | Part 51 | Part 52 | Part 53 | Part 54 | Part 55 | Part 56 | Part 57 | Part 58 | Part 59 | Part 60 | Part 61 | Part 62 | Part 63 | Part 64 | Part 65 | Part 66 | Part 67 | Part 68 | Part 69 | Part 70 | Part 71 | Part 72 | Part 73 | Part 74 | Part 75 | Part 76 | Part 77 | Part 78 | Part 79 | Part 80 | Part 81 | Part 82 | Part 83 | Part 84 | Part 85 | Part 86 | Part 87 | Part 88 | Part 89 | Part 90 | Part 91 | Part 92
Medical examiners shall make examination upon the view of the dead bodies of persons as are supposed to have died by violence, or by the action of chemical, thermal or electrical agents or following abortion, or from diseases resulting from injury or infection relating to occupation, or suddenly when not disabled by recognizable disease, or when any person is found dead. ... - General Laws, Chap. 38, Sec. 6., as amended by Chap. 632, Sec. 4, Acts of 1945.
No undertaker or other persons 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 derk of the town where the body is to be buried or the funeral is to he held, or from a person appointed to have the care of the cemetery or burial ground in which the interment is made.
. Chap. 114, Sec. 46. G. L., (Tercentenary Edition).
RULES OF PRACTICE
The fulfillment of the purpose of these laws calls for the observance of the follow- ing 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 unrelated to any form of injury, have died without recent medical attendance 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.
Statement of Cause of Death .- Physicians: see explanatory instructions on face side of standard certificate of death.
Statement of Occupation .- Precise statement of occupation is very import- ant, 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 occupa- tion had been given up or changed, or if the deceased had retired from business, report the kind of work done during most of working life even if retired. 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. 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 whatever write none.
SPACE FOR ADDITIONAL INFORMATION
DATE OF ENTERING MILITARY SERVICE DATE OF DISCHARGE RANK, RATING ORGANIZATION AND OUTFIT SERVICE NUMBER
1
X - PLACE OF DEATH
Suffolk (County)
Winthrop (City or Town)
The Commonwealth of Massachusetts EDWARD J. CRONIN SECRETARY OF THE COMMONWEALTH DIVISION OF VITAL STATISTICS STANDARD
CERTIFICATE OF DEATH
Registered No.
131
Winthrop Community Hospital
J(If death occurred in a hospital or institution,
St. [ give its NAME instead of street and number)
2 FULL NAME Joseph P. Stevens
(If deceased is a married, widowed or divorced woman, give also maiden name.)
(a) Residence. No. 183 Pauline Street .Winthrop St.
(Usual place of abode)
Length of stay: In place of death ... years. months 2. .days. In place of residence. 6 years.
.months.
.days.
MEDICAL CERTIFICATE OF DEATH
PERSONAL AND STATISTICAL PARTICULARS
3 DATE OF
DEATH
June
(Month)
19 (Day)
1955 (Year)
8 SEX
Male
9 COLOR OR RACE
White
MARRIED
WIDOWED
or DIVORCED
Widowed
4 I HEREBY CERTIFY,
70b
1954
to June 19,
1955
I last saw h ..... V ..... alive on.
June 19
195'S death is said to
have occurred on the date stated above, at. 5:00 P.m.
INTERVAL BE- TWEEN ONSET AND DEATH 2 days
11 IF STILLBORN, enter that fact here.
12
AGE
55 Years.
8
Months
12 Days
If under 24 hours
Hours .....
.. Minutes
13 Usual
Occupation:
Steamship Clerk
14 Industry
or Business:
Steamship Co.
15 Social Security No
025-03-7989
16 BIRTHPLACE (City).
(State or country)
Boston
17 NAME OF
FATHER
Edward J. Stevens
PARENTS
18 BIRTHPLACE OF
FATHER (City)
(State or country)
Ireland
19 MAIDEN NAME
OF MOTHER
Mary C. Hyland
20 BIRTHPLACE OF
MOTHER (City)
(State or country)
Ireland
6
Mt. Benedict Cemetery, W. Roxbury Place of Burial or Cremation (City or Town)
DATE OF BURIAL
June 22nd
19 55
7 NAME OF FUNERAL DIRECTOR.Richard .... C ....... Kirby. ADDRESS917Bennington St. E .Boston
JUN 21 1953 19
(Registrar)
10a If married, widowed, or divorced
HUSBAND of.
Margaret.E ..... Lang
(Give maiden name of wife in full)
(or) WIFE of
(Husband's name in full)
DISEASE OR CONDITION
DIRECTLY LEADING
TO DEATH
DANNerebral Hemorrhage
ANTE
CEDENT (b)
CAUSES
Due To Hypertension
15 grs
Due
(c)
glomerulonephritis UREMIA
15yrs 10 yrs.
OTHER
SIGNIFICANT
CONDITIONS
None.
Major findings:
Of operations
None
Date of operation.
.Was autopsy performed?
Clinical.
What test confirmed diagnosis ?.
5 Was disease or injury in any way related to occupation of deceased? NO
If so, specify ....
Olades Lide ran
., M. D.
(Address).
(Signed).
Winthrop, MASS Date 6/201
.19 .. 3.37
Informant. 21 Mrs. Helen W. Ford-Step-dau. 183 Pauline St., Winthrop
I HEREBY CERTIFY that a satisfactory standard certificate of death was filed with me BEFORE the burial or transit permit was issued: Waller et 19 Met
(Signature of Agent of Board of Health or other)
1 dealle / Mechs 6/20/50
(Official Designation) (Date of Issue of Permit)
TRUCTIONS FOR L CERTIFICATE giving . OF DEATH not enter than one e for each (b) and (c)
does not mean of dying, such ailure, asthenia, eans the disease, lications which ath.
bid conditions. ving rise to the se (a) stating erlying cause
litions contrib- he death but not the disease or causing death.
100M-10-53-910621
m.c.
M R-301A 1
To be filed for burial permit with Board of Health or its Agent.
PHYSICIAN - IMPORTANT -
(Was deceased a U. S. War Veteran, if so specify WAR)
No
(If nonresident, give city or town and State)
10 SINGLE
(write the word)
That I attended deceased from
Received and filed.
(Kind of work done during most of working life)
EXTRACTS FROM THE LAWS OF THE COMMONWEALTH OF MASSACHUSETTS GOVERNING THE
RETURN OF CERTIFICATES OF DEATH
A physician or registered hospital medical officer shall forthwith, 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.
A physician or officer furnishing a certificate of death as required by the preceding section or by section forty-five of chapter one hundred and four- teen, shall, if the deceased, to the best of his knowledge and belief, served in the army, navy or marine corps of the United States in any war in which it has been engaged, insert in the certificate a recital to that effect, specifying the war, and shall also certify in such certificate both the primary and the secondary or imme- diate cause of death as nearly as he can state the same. For neglect to comply with any provision of this section, such physician or officer, shall forfeit ten dollars. For the purposes of this section and of sections forty-five, forty-six and forty-seven of said chapter one hundred and fourteen, the word "war" shall include the China relief expedition and the Philippine insurrection, which shall, for said purposes, be deemed to have taken place between February fourteenth, eighteen hundred and ninety-eight and July fourth, nineteen hundred and two, and the Mexican border service of nineteen hundred and sixteen and nineteen hundred and seventeen. G. L. Chap. 46, Sec. 10.
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 satisfactory written statement containing the facts required by law to be returned and recorded, which shall be accompanied, in case of an original inter- ment, 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 commonwealth 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 removal; 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 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 statement and certificate, shall forthwith countersign it and transmit it to the clerk of the town for registra- tion. 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., (Tercentenary Edition).
Medical examiners shall make examination upon the view of the dead bodies of persons as are supposed to have died by violence, or by the action of chemical, thermal or electrical agents or following abortion, or from diseases resulting from injury or infection relating to occupation, or suddenly when not disabled by recognizable disease, or when any person is found dead. ...- General Laws, Chap. 38, Sec. 6., as amended by Chap. 632, Sec. 4, Acts of 1945.
No undertaker or other persons 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 cemetery or burial ground in which the interment is made.
. . . Chap. 114, Sec. 46, G. L., (Tercentenary Edition).
RECEIVED
RULES OF PRACTICE
The fulfillment of the purpose of these laws calls for the observance of the follow- ing 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 unrelated to any form of injury, have died without recent medical attendance 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.
Statement of Cause of Death .- Physicians: see explanatory instructions on face side of standard certificate of death.
Statement of Occupation .- Precise statement of occupation is very import- ant, 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 occupa- tion had been given up or changed, or if the deceased had retired from business, report the kind of work done during most of working life even if retired. 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. 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 whatever write none.
SPACE FOR ADDITIONAL INFORMATION
DATE OF ENTERING MILITARY SERVICE
DATE OF DISCHARGE RANK, RATING
ORGANIZATION AND OUTFIT
SERVICE NUMBER
M R-301A 1
(County) Winthrop
(Gity or Town) Winthe No.
The Commonwealth of Massachusetts EDWARD J. CRONIN SECRETARY OF THE COMMONWEALTH DIVISION OF VITAL STATISTICS STANDARD CERTIFICATE OF DEATH
To be filed for burial -permit with Board of Health or its Agent.
132
Registered No.
[(If death occurred in a hospital or institution. give its NAME instead of street and number)
Nancy Bego bretter) (quagina)
(If deceased is a married, widowed or divorced woman, give also maiden name.) 62 Nowe, Grad"
St:
(If nonresident, give city or town and State)
Length of stay: In place of death years. months. days. In place of residence 15 years. months days.
MEDICAL CERTIFICATE OF DEATH
PERSONAL AND STATISTICAL PARTICULARS
3 DATE OF
DEATH
June
26
1950-
(Month)
(Day)
(Year)
AI HEREBY CERTIFY,
That I attended deceased from
June
19
5.5
to
June 26
1955-
I last saw her
alive on
June 26, 1955, death is said to
10a If married, widowed, or divorced
HUSBAND of.
(Give maiden name of wife in full) .
(or) WIFE of.«.₺
(Husband's name in full)
11 IF STILLBORN. enter that fact here.
12
AGE ....
Years
Months
8 Days
If under 24 hours
Hours ... ... Minutes
13 Usual
Occupation :
(Kind of work done during most of working life)
14 Industry or Business:
at home
15 Social Security No. none
16 BIRTHPLACE (City). (State or country)
Waterbury ul
17 NAME OF FATHER W. Plumer Gretter
18 BIRTHPLACE OF FATHER (City) (State or country) Vergina
19 MAIDEN NAME
OF MOTHER
Bessie G, Gordura
20 BIRTHPLACE OF MOTHER (City) (State or country)
Waterbury
Withins Cemetery Winthrop Place of Burial or Cremation (City or Town)
19:
Victoria G. Reynolds
ADDRESS
Received and filed. 19
(Registrar)
INTERVAL BE- TWEEN ONSET AND DEATH
DISEASE OR CONDITION
DIRECTLY LEADING
TO DEATH (a) massive atelectésis
Right lung
ANTE
Due To
Pulmonary
CEDENT (b)
CAUSES
Embolus
Due To
(c)
Fibrosis f lung
Irreversible
OTHER
SIGNIFICANT
CONDITIONS
Medical Shock
ihr
Major findings:
Of operations
Date of operation.
Was autopsy performed?
What test confirmed diagnosis ?.
5 Was disease or injury in any way related to occupation of deceased? If so, specify/
(Signed). (Address) 194 Lastin armas Date 6-18 1955
M. D.
6
DATE OF BURIA June 29
21 Informant. Francis W. Auggues (Address) 62 Lowell RQ-00
I HEREBY CERTIFY that a satisfactory standard certificate of death was filed with me BEFORE the burial or transit permit was issued: Walter A. Lakers. (Signature of Agent of Board of Health or other)
6/2755 ilatte lier
(Official Designation) (Date of Issue of Permit)
50M-3-54-911887
STRUCTIONS FOR AL CERTIFICATE
n giving E OF DEATH not enter e than one se for each , (b) and (c)
is does not mean e of dying. such failure, asthenia, means the disease. plications which eath.
bid conditions. giving rise to the use (a) stating derlying cause
ditions contrib- the death but not o the disease or causing death.
c :- Chapter 137. of 1954, requires cians to print or e cause or causes cath on death cates.
n.s.
PLACE OF DEATH Suffolk
2 FULL NAME
(a) Residence. No. (Usual place of abode)
35 minh VIS
PHYSICIAN - IMPORTANT
(Was deceased a U. S. War Veteran. if so specify WAR)
0
9 COLOR OR RACE
8 SEX
Female Tereta
10 SINGLE
MARRIED
WIDOWED
or DIVORCED
(write the word)
have occurred on the date stated above, at 10:35 Pm
7 NAME OF
FUNERAL DIRECTOR.
180 Winthrop Str.
PARENTS
Richmond
EXTRACTS FROM THE LAWS OF THE COMMONWEALTH OF MASSACHUSETTS GOVERNING THE
RETURN OF CERTIFICATES OF DEATH
A physician or registered hospital medical officer shall forthwith. 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.
A physician or officer furnishing a certificate of death as required by the preceding section or by section forty-five of chapter one hundred and four- teen, shall, if the deceased, to the best of his knowledge and belief, served in the army, navy or marine corps of the United States in any war in which it has been engaged, insert in the certificate a recital to that effect. specifying the war, and shall also certify in such certificate both the primary and the secondary or imme- diate cause of death as nearly as he can state the same. For neglect to comply with any provision of this section, such physician or officer, shall forfeit ten dollars. For the purposes of this section and of sections forty-five, forty-six and forty-seven of said chapter one hundred and fourteen, the word "war" shall include the China relief expedition and the Philippine insurrection, which shall, for said purposes, be deemed to have taken place between February fourteenth, eighteen hundred and ninety-eight and July fourth, nineteen hundred and two, and the Mexican border service of nineteen hundred and sixteen and nineteen hundred and seventeen. G. L. Chap. 46, Sec. 10.
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 satisfactory written statement containing the facts required by law to be returned and recorded, which shall be accompanied, in case of an original inter- ment, 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 commonwealth 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 removal; 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 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 statement and certificate. shall forthwith countersign it and transmit it to the clerk of the town for registra- tion. 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 he 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., (Tercentenary Edition).
Medical examiners shall make examination upon the view of the dead bodies of persons as are supposed to have died by violence, or by the action of chemical, thermal or electrical agents or following abortion, or from diseases resulting from injury or infection relating to occupation, or suddenly when not disabled by recognizable disease, or when any person is found dead. .. - General tavs Chap:38, Sec. 6., as amended by Chap. 632, Sec. 4, Acts of 1945.
No-undertaker or other persons shall bury a human body or the ashes thereof which Have been brought into the commonwealth until he has received a permit so to dò. from the board of health or its agent appointed to issue such permits, or if there is no such board, from the derk of the town where the body is to be buried "or the funeral is to he held, or from a person appointed to have the care of the cemetery or burial ground in which the interment is made.
Chap: 114, Sec. 46, G. L., (Tercentenary Edition).
RULES OF PRACTICE
The fulfillment of the purpose of these laws calls for the observance of the follow- ing 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 unrelated to any form of injury, have died without recent medical attendance or whose physician is absent from tomy when the certificate of death is needed.
JURY 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.
Statement of Cause of Death .- Physicians: see explanatory instructions on face side of standard certificate of death.
Statement of Occupation .- Precise statement of occupation is very import- ant, 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 occupa- tion had been given up or changed, or if the deceased had retired from business, report the kind of work done during most of working life even if retired. 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. 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 whatever write none.
Need help finding more records? Try our genealogical records directory which has more than 1 million sources to help you more easily locate the available records.