Vita Brevis

Calculating age at death - and why

Written by Lindsay Fulton | Jun 30, 2014 1:59:40 PM
Griffith Thomas' gravestone in the Ebenezer Baptist Church Cemetery, Bluemont, Loudoun County, Virginia

Instead of identifying a person’s date of birth, death certificates and gravestones sometimes identify the deceased person’s age in years, months, and days. But what is the purpose of giving an exact age rather than a birth date, and how is this age determined? Are there any consistent rules for this process?

In Colonial America it was traditional practice to inscribe a tombstone with the deceased’s age in years, months, and days. For example, the cemetery marker for Griffith Thomas was inscribed with the following: “In Memory of Griffith Thomas who departed this life October 25th 1800 Aged 58 years, 9 months and 10 days.”

While it was customary to record a person’s age narratively, it is unlikely that the informant presented this information in that format. Rather, the informant would have provided the clerk/engraver with the deceased’s date of birth, and the specific age would be calculated for the gravestone. To help determine the date of birth of your ancestors, I include several links to tombstone calculators below:

Nineteenth and twentieth century death records also recorded the age at death, but this practice was not just customary. Instead, these modern death records provided statistical information for the nation’s politicians and doctors, as well as for life insurance companies. For example, in a Report of the Vital Statistics of the United States, made to the Mutual Life Insurance Company of New York, the author reported that the average age at death of the residents of Plympton, Plymouth Colony, Massachusetts, between the years 1812 and 1842 was 40 years, 10 months, 25 15/24 days. I have included a link to the 1857 report here.

Because the death information was originally recorded using age in years, months, and days, the above statistical information would have been easier to calculate. Therefore, some (but not all) town, counties, and states recorded deaths using this format.