Mecklenburg County residents can visit the Office of Vital Records website to obtain a certified or uncertified birth or death certificate that was registered in Mecklenburg County.
I want to get a copy of the deed to my land. How can I do that? Go to your Register of Deeds Office and look at the document there. Find your Register of Deeds in: Your phone book under county government. Look it up online. Many counties have their real property (land) records online. Go to the county website.
Under North Carolina law, death certificates must be completed by a licensed physician or, thanks to changes that took effect in fall 2011, a physician assistant or nurse practitioner who has been specifically authorized by his or her supervising physician to certify deaths.
You can get a death certificate at the deceased's local vital records office or from their county's department of health. You may also be able to get copies from the funeral or mortuary director who prepared the person's body.
Who Can Obtain Copies Of Death Certificates? Immediate family (Mother, Father, Sister, Brother, Spouse, Grandparents, Adult Children), Legal Guardian, Attorney, Case Manager, Trust Advisors, Informant named on certificate, Funeral Homes, anyone that is named as beneficiary on an insurance policy (proof required).
For divorce records from the year 1970 or later , please contact the Mecklenburg County Clerk of Court (704-686-0400).
The Mecklenburg Board of County Commissioners is the governing body of Mecklenburg County. The Board consists of nine commissioners - six representing districts and three elected at-large - that are elected in November of even-numbered years.