Introduction
The
Episcopal Church was started in South Dakota in the 1880’s, and the
Diocese of South Dakota welcomes inquiries from genealogical
researchers.
The
Episcopal Church does not maintain central membership lists. Information
on families or individual members of a church, church registers, and
church directories can best be found by contacting the church directly.
The
Diocesan Office can help with that contact information.
Vital Records Inquiries
Church
registers containing records of baptisms, burials, and marriages are
kept by the church where the event took place. Contact the
priest-in-charge of the church.
Church
registers older than 1970, and registers of closed churches, are kept in
the Diocesan Archives. Contact the Diocesan Office.
Church
registers may reveal full names, names of parents, dates
and places of birth, dates of baptism, dates of marriage, dates of
funerals, places of burial. Extremely rarely is further information
noted.
Please
note: A few old records and registers have been lost or destroyed, and
the oldest are often fragile and partly illegible.
Clergy Biography
The
Church does not collect biographical data on most of its clergy, but
directories can frequently provide a rough outline of ministerial
service and sometimes provide vital information. This outline can be
fleshed out by contacting the churches where the priest served or by
locating an obituary in the local newspapers.
Information the Diocese may be able to provide: date & place of birth,
parents’ names, education, ordination dates, spouse’s name, number of
children, and dates & locations of places served.
Please
note: there will be much less personal information for priests who lived
prior to 1920. We do not maintain contact information for the children
and/or descendants of Episcopal clergy.
Inquiries
Keep your
inquiry brief, giving only the essential information and requesting only
the information you need. Your chances of receiving a reply are better
if you do not ask broad or vague questions or provide unnecessary
details of your family history.
The Vital
Records information is kept in chronological order, so exact or
approximate dates are critical. Few clergy have staff members, and they
rarely have the time to search un-indexed records when priority must be
given to pastoral concerns, church administration, and worship. Please
have patience while awaiting a reply.
If
possible, an offer to visit the church to perform the research yourself
may be preferable. Additionally, donations to the church for its time is
always appreciated.
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