Death of a British merchant seaman at sea. ____________________________________________________________________________ The General Register Office's Marine Registers record deaths at sea on ships registered in Great Britain or Ireland from 1 July 1837. These are available through LDS libraries everywhere. The IGI covers events 'at sea.' Less well known however are the records held at the Public Record Office in Kew, England. If the name you are seeking does not appear in the Marine Registers of the GRO, then you should consider a search in the records held at Kew. The PRO records may record additional information of use to the researcher. They are held in the following series of records. Note that many of these registers have been filmed and may therefore be available through your nearest LDS library. 1. BT153 Registers of Wages and Effects of Deceased Seamen 1852-1889 Registers for 1852-1866 show the following: name ticket number date of engagement on this vessel place, date and cause of death name and port of registry of ship master date and place of payment of outstanding wages amount of same and date of receipt by Board of Trade Registers for 1867-1889 also include: age rating official number of vessel voyage details This class of documents is separately indexed in two ways - alphabetically by seaman's name in BT154, or by ship name in BT155. 2. BT156 Monthly Lists of Deaths of Seamen 1886-1889 These records show: name age rating on board nationality/birthplace previous address cause of death place of death ship's name, o.n and port of registry 3. BT157 Registers of Seamen's Deaths Classified by Cause 1882-1888 This is indexed according to cause noting specific illnesses or accidents and gives the informaiton shown in BT156 with the addition of information about the last voyage and may contain additional information in the column marked 'remarks.' 4. BT159 Registers of Deaths of British Nationals at Sea 1875-1888 These registers also include deaths of passengers. 5. BT334 Registers and Indexes of Births, Deaths and Marriages of Passengers and Seamen at Sea, 1891-1972 In an ideal situation, all these entries should appear in the GRO Marine Registers but in practice there are many omissions as records were not always forwarded. The GRO Marine Registers themselves began much earlier than the BT records mentioned above but again there are many omissions in the early years. It will be seen therefore that in order to search for a record of an event at sea, it may be necessary to search all of the above sources. Finally there is also a class of miscellaneous returns at the PRO: 4. RG32 General Register Office: Miscellaneous Returns of Briths, Marriages and Deaths. These record births, baptisms, marriages, deaths and burials of British subjects, nationals of the Colonies, Commonwealth and countries under British jurisdiction, on British and foreign ships. These records are available on film, are indexed in RG43 also filmed, and may therefore be available through the LDS library system. This is just an overview of the most likely sources for locating information of events at sea. You may wish to view the information and on-line leaflets at the PRO's website