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Hi. A library card will not suffice. You will need to ask your grandparent to update either their passport or driver's license. In my case my grandfather had already passed away so I just needed his birth, marriage and death certificate.BJN13 wrote: ↑Thu Nov 07, 2019 4:13 pmHello. New here, so please forgive me if this is the wrong place.
The grandparent through whom i am making my application does not have a current state-issued identification (from the UK). Both passport and driving license are out-of-date. Would a bus pass suffice? What other options do I have?
Thanks,
BJN
Sorry, I meant to say a bus pass wouldn't sufficeRoibeard wrote: ↑Sat Nov 09, 2019 11:20 pmHi. A library card will not suffice. You will need to ask your grandparent to update either their passport or driver's license. In my case my grandfather had already passed away so I just needed his birth, marriage and death certificate.BJN13 wrote: ↑Thu Nov 07, 2019 4:13 pmHello. New here, so please forgive me if this is the wrong place.
The grandparent through whom i am making my application does not have a current state-issued identification (from the UK). Both passport and driving license are out-of-date. Would a bus pass suffice? What other options do I have?
Thanks,
BJN
One generation different but my parent has neither a passport or driving license so used a certified copy of their bus pass. I cleared it with the department dealing with it and they said just include a note explaining the situation. FBR processed with no issues.BJN13 wrote: ↑Thu Nov 07, 2019 4:13 pmHello. New here, so please forgive me if this is the wrong place.
The grandparent through whom i am making my application does not have a current state-issued identification (from the UK). Both passport and driving license are out-of-date. Would a bus pass suffice? What other options do I have?
Thanks,
BJN
If you're quick, you can do a load of online research for free. www.findmypast.com are temporarily allowing full access to their research facilities to mark Veterans Weekend. On the UK (.co.uk) website, this will last until midday tomorrow, i.e. 18 hours from when I've posted this. Not sure when the cut-off time on the US website will be. I've just logged in and tried it and it's a pretty impressive portal to all sorts of online databases, e.g. census records, military service records, newspaper records etc., which you otherwise can't search online without paying.
That's the key to it all. What would they take in lieu of a marriage certificate? The church and all records were probably destroyed.All pre-1906 San Francisco government records were destroyed. No newspaper announcement which would help I'd think. I'm guessing amassing death certificates, the father's birth certificate,a letter from the California government about why no record exists & maybe a notarized letter from my cousin stating it's all true might cover it ....but dealing with the government so ya never know hahaBrexitEscapee wrote: ↑Sun Nov 10, 2019 6:03 pm...... if you can provide them with sufficient evidence that the marriage took place?
My guess would be any other official documents which demonstrate they were married, e.g. death certificates, mortgage/property papers etc. However, you say you're waiting for an official response (from Ireland or California?) so there's no point me guessing. If you've already done an exhaustive search for evidence, then your cousin's only hope is if California/Ireland will make allowances for people whose records were lost in the earthquake/fire. It would seem unfair on your cousin otherwise as even if his grandfather hadn't got married, he should still be able to produce birth/death records to show he is his descendant.
Indeed. Actually, one of my older brothers obtained his FBR 20 years ago via our grandmother from that branch so I decided to spread the appreciation around and applied through her husband (our grandfather-a different line). They were married in NYC -getting their marriage cert was as easy as it gets from the NYC Archives.BrexitEscapee wrote: ↑Sun Nov 10, 2019 8:58 pm
And what an accommodating great grandfather you have - coming all the way back to have his kids in Ireland just to make sure you qualify for FBR 130 years later.
That's great Lee. I am happy to hear of your progress. About 10 months from application to physical receipt marks a bit of an improvement on times we were seeing earlier this year.Lee2521 wrote: ↑Mon Nov 11, 2019 9:34 pmI received some great news today I am now an Irish citizen.
9 months and 5 days of waiting from application receive date to e-mail confirmation and then the estimated time of 2-3 weeks to receive the FBR certificate.
Application received 06/02/19 ( UK to Balbriggan IRE)
Citizenship confirmation e-mail 11/11/19
Certificate print date ?
Certificate received ?
I really fancy some Guinness this weekend to celebrate
Hi Sulla ,Sulla wrote: ↑Mon Nov 11, 2019 11:45 pmThat's great Lee. I am happy to hear of your progress. About 10 months from application to physical receipt marks a bit of an improvement on times we were seeing earlier this year.Lee2521 wrote: ↑Mon Nov 11, 2019 9:34 pmI received some great news today I am now an Irish citizen.
9 months and 5 days of waiting from application receive date to e-mail confirmation and then the estimated time of 2-3 weeks to receive the FBR certificate.
Application received 06/02/19 ( UK to Balbriggan IRE)
Citizenship confirmation e-mail 11/11/19
Certificate print date ?
Certificate received ?
I really fancy some Guinness this weekend to celebrate
Sadly,no on Sacramento. All the records were in San Francisco when the earthquake hit.Just about anything before then was destroyed in the earthquake or the fires afterward. Many set intentionally for insurance purposes! Waiting for response from the Irish government folks .Congrats againLee2521 wrote: ↑Tue Nov 12, 2019 10:16 am
For your cousin has your relative tried the state capital of Sacramento ? I might be wrong but would any of the records be here or there must be a record in the national archives or maybe in DC
https://www.archives.gov/
Good luck to you and your cousin
Hi Lee glad to see you have been added to the fbr register. As you said we both received our confirmation of receipt email in the same day in February. I am yet to hear any news from the FBR team. I called them yesterday after seeing so many on here already being successful but was told that February applications haven't been processed yet and to continue waiting. You must of been lucky to get through already. CongratsLee2521 wrote: ↑Sun Nov 03, 2019 9:55 amLenny1463 wrote: ↑Sun Nov 03, 2019 7:28 amNice to see people from Jan and Feb making process. I also applied online 31st Jan 2019 and posted the next day. Confirmation email that documents arrived in Ireland on 6th Feb 19. Hopefully going by a few other people's timelines I might receive some news soon. Fingers crossed!
Hi Lenny
I applied online 28th December 18 and my application were sent on the 1st Feb 19 and was received in Balbriggan the same day as yours on the 6th Feb.
So I hope we both get some good news in the next few weeks.
Regards
Lee