Death certificates
Found in 21 Collections and/or Records:
Letter from C.D. Spivak to J. Schkolnick, 1911 December 27
Letter from C.D. Spivak to P. S. Hunter, 1912 January 8
Typed letter from C.D. Spivak to P.S. Hunter. Spivak enclosed one dollar for the death certificate of Adolph Schkolnick.
Letter from C.D. Spivak to P. Schkolnick, 1912 January 2
Typed letter from C.D. Spivak to Mrs. P. Schkolnick. Spivak tells Schkolnick that before he can comply with her request for her husband’s death certificate he asks her the amount of insurance her husband carried.
Letter from F. Cohen to C.D. Spivak, 1912 November 12
Handwritten letter from Mrs. Fannie Cohen to C.D. Spivak. Mrs. Cohen tells Spivak that she has attempted to obtain a death certificate from the Colorado State Board of Health for the death of her husband, but they told her that they do not have Julius Cohen’s death on record. Mrs. Cohen is asking Spivak for his help in obtaining a death certificate since he died at the sanatorium. She thanks him in advance.
Letter from H. Schwatt to C.D. Spivak, 1911 December 31
Letter from H. Schwatt to C.D. Spivak. Schwatt asks Spivak to obtain a death certificate of Adolph Schkolnick which died on December 20th, 1911.
Letter from J. Schkolnick to C.D Spivak, 1911 December 21
Letter from J. Schkolnick to C.D. Spivak, 1912 January 4
Lewis Chernoff Papers
Dr. Lewis Hill Chernoff was an accomplished violinist who played with the Denver Symphony and Carvallo's Symphony. He was also a chemist and worked for the Food and Drug Administration in Denver. Collection contains miscellaneous papers, diplomas and certificates largely relating to Lewis Chernoff and some to Sophie Chernoff.
Max and Maria Lowenstein Death Information, 1948-1983
Contains death certificate, obituaries, contains note to the Rabbi from 1948, and cemetery request for payment and receipts of payment in 1970. Also contains Maria's will, eulogies, condolence notes, and burial information.
Moritz Goldstein, 1904
Moritz Goldstein (1861-1906) was born in Hungary. After moving to Denver, Colorado, Goldstein worked as a peddler until his death by pulmonary tuberculosis which he contracted in New York during the early 1890s.