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Alberta Court Records: Difference between revisions

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==Online Records==
*[https://www.bac-lac.gc.ca/eng/discover/vital-statistics-births-marriages-deaths/divorce-1841-1968/Pages/acts-divorce-1841-1968.aspx#c '''Acts of Divorce, 1841-1968 Instructions'''] Index
*[https://www.bac-lac.gc.ca/eng/discover/vital-statistics-births-marriages-deaths/divorce-1841-1968/Pages/search.aspx '''Search Database'''] Index
==Divorces==
*The Provincial Archives holds divorce records for several judicial districts from around the province (ca. 1918 - ca. 1975). Indices are available for many of the records in the Reading Room.
*From 1840 to 1968, divorces in Canada were granted by the Parliament of Canada. From 1867 to 1968, anyone wanting a divorce had to place a notice of intent in newspapers. A petition was submitted to Parliament with details, including the place and date of marriage. Parliament then passed an '''Act of Divorce''' granting the divorce.
*[https://www.ancestry.com/search/collections/5776/ '''Canada Parliamentary Marriage and Divorces, 1867-1919'''] index,  at Ancestry.com ($)
::"This database includes the names of the spouses, places of residence at the time of the marriage and divorce, other marriages (if noted), and dates of marriage and divorce (the date when the act became law) for divorce acts from this period. The original records may include additional information such as other places of residence, occupations, additional court action taken, and number of children (and occasionally their names or genders), if any. The very restrictive grounds for the cost of a divorce made them quite rare; the records are, however, worth obtaining when they apply".<ref>"Canada Parliamentary Marriage and Divorces, 1867-1919," at Ancestry.com, https://www.ancestry.com/search/collections/5776/, accessed 29 Noovember 2020.</ref>


Alberta has 12 Judicial Districts. The offices are located at the courthouses in the following cities and towns (except Edmonton, where it is located at the Law Courts Building):  
===Library and Archives Canada Database of Divorce Records===
*[https://www.bac-lac.gc.ca/eng/discover/vital-statistics-births-marriages-deaths/divorce-1841-1968/Pages/acts-divorce-1841-1968.aspx#c '''Acts of Divorce, 1841-1968 Instructions'''] Index
*[https://www.bac-lac.gc.ca/eng/discover/vital-statistics-births-marriages-deaths/divorce-1841-1968/Pages/search.aspx '''Search Database'''] Index
*After finding the reference in the index, find the divorce in the Acts of Parliament. See the chart at [https://www.bac-lac.gc.ca/eng/discover/vital-statistics-births-marriages-deaths/divorce-1841-1968/Pages/acts-divorce-1841-1968.aspx#c '''How to obtain copies of divorce acts'''] for a list of parliamentary records with links to libraries holding their microfilms.


Calgary<br>Drumheller<br>Edmonton<br>Fort Macleod<br>Grande Prairie<br>Hanna<br>Lethbridge<br>Medicine Hat<br>Peace River<br>Red Deer<br>Vegreville<br>Wetaskiwin
===Senate of Canada===


*The Senate of Canada holds the original divorce files, but they are closed to the public under privacy legislation. You can obtain a certified copy of a divorce act for legal purposes from them:
<br>
'''Senate of Canada'''<br>
Office of the Law Clerk and Parliamentary Counsel<br>
Room 1310<br>
13th Floor<br>
40 Elgin Street<br>
Ottawa, ON K1A 0A4<br>
CANADA<br>
Telephone: 613-992-2416<br>
[https://hermis.alberta.ca/paa/ViewFAQ.aspx '''FAQ's''']
The court records found at the Provincial Archives are Coroners’ Files (1910–1927), Inquest Files (1884–1905, 1910–1928), Justice of The Peace Files (1898–1927), and Criminal Files (1915–1928). Most of these records are indexed.  
The court records found at the Provincial Archives are Coroners’ Files (1910–1927), Inquest Files (1884–1905, 1910–1928), Justice of The Peace Files (1898–1927), and Criminal Files (1915–1928). Most of these records are indexed.  


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