4. The best place to start your search

The first thing to do is to contact the General Office of the hospital where your baby was stillborn or died.

The hospital staff will need to know:

  • the full name and address of the mother at the time of
  • the baby’s birth
  • the date of the baby’s birth
  • any other information that you may have, such as the stage the pregnancy had reached

The staff should then be able to tell you if the baby was buried or cremated and/or the name of the funeral director who made the arrangements at that time. If the funeral director is still in business and still has records from that time, he or she should be able to tell you which cemetery or crematorium was used. You can then contact the cemetery or crematorium and ask the staff to carry out a search of their registers.

If neither the hospital nor the funeral director has a record of which cemetery or crematorium was used, you will need to contact local cemeteries and crematoria yourself. Start with those nearest to the hospital where your baby was stillborn or died. If you cannot find any record of your baby at the nearest cemetery or crematorium, the staff may be able to suggest which other cemetery or crematorium you could ask. You may find the Institute of Cemetery and Crematorium Management website useful in finding cemeteries and crematoria in your area.

Remember to keep a record of your search, including a list of the places you have contacted and the names of the people you spoke to. Members of the public are legally permitted to inspect burial registers, but you don’t have an automatic right to inspect cremation registers. This is due to data protection legislation. However, the staff can search on your behalf if you provide the following information:

  • the baby’s surname
  • the date of the death or stillbirth

3. Stillbirths and babies who died after birth

It was only in the mid-1980s that parents of stillborn babies and babies who died shortly after birth began to be consulted about funeral arrangements for their baby. Before then, parents were not usually involved and many were not told what happened to their baby’s body. Some parents who have tried to trace the grave or cremation record of a baby who died some time ago have been successful. However it is not always easy:

  • Hospitals do not keep records indefinitely and some records may not contain enough detail to be helpful.
  • The hospital where the baby was stillborn or died may have closed, or the funeral director  who was involved may no longer be in business. However, cemeteries and crematoria are legally obliged to keep permanent records.

2. ‘Late miscarriages’

Cemeteries and crematoria have always been required to keep records of all stillborn babies and babies who die after birth. However, they have not been, and are still not, required by law to keep records of babies who were born dead before 24 weeks gestation (until 1992, 28 weeks gestation). In law, these babies are regarded as ‘late miscarriages’. They cannot be registered as stillbirths and the law does not require them to be formally buried or cremated. In recent years there has been greater understanding of the significance of the death of a baby at any stage of pregnancy and so more ‘late miscarriages’ have been formally buried or cremated and proper records are more likely to have been kept. But sadly, if your baby was born before 1992 and before 28 completed weeks of pregnancy, there may not be a record of burial or cremation.

1. Introduction

At Sands, we know that parents never forget their babies. We are often contacted by bereaved parents whose baby died many years ago and who now want to find out what happened to their baby’s body. We know that this can be very important not just to parents, but also to surviving brothers and sisters. However, tracing a baby’s grave or a record of cremation may not be easy. It can take time and persistence and can be frustrating.

10. Other useful links

British Humanist Association

Information about Humanist funeral ceremonies and a list of Humanist funeral celebrants
https://humanism.org.uk/ceremonies/
Tel: 020 7324 3060
Email: info@humanism.org.uk

Institute of Cemetery and Crematorium Management

Develops and promotes best practice in cemeteries and crematoria.
https://www.iccm-uk.com/
Tel: 020 8989 4661
Email: info@iccm-uk.com

Institute of Civil Funerals

Lists accredited civil funeral celebrants who will accommodate people’s wishes, beliefs and values, whether religious or non-religious.
https://www.iocf.org.uk/
Tel: 01480 861 411 (10 to 2, Mon to Fri)
Email: info@iocf.org.uk

Brief Lives Remembered

www.brieflives-remembered.co.uk
For the online contact form

9. UK National Register Offices

Obtaining a birth or death certificate

You can order a copy of a birth or death certificate from the General Register Office in the country where the event took place. You can order by post, by telephone or online. Certificates cost £9.25 (2014 prices).

Obtaining a stillbirth certificate

The UK General Register Office’s policy states: “Due to the sensitive nature of stillbirth registrations, the procedure for ordering a certificate of the entry differs from other types of [birth and death] certificates. We will only send out the application form after we have been contacted by phone or in writing by the mother or father (if he is named on the certificate). In cases where the parents are deceased, a brother or sister can apply if they can provide their parents’ dates of death.”

General Register Office (England and Wales)

www.gro.gov.uk/gro/content/
General Register Office
PO Box 2, Southport PR8 2JD
Tel: 0300 123 1837
Email: certificate.services@gro.gsi.gov.uk, include “GQ” in the email Subject

The National Records of Scotland

www.gov.uk/national-records-of-scotland For the online contact form
New Register House
3 West Register Street, Edinburgh EH1 3YT
Tel: 0131 314 4411

General Register Office for Northern Ireland

https://www.nidirect.gov.uk/contacts/district-registrars-northern-ireland
Oxford House
49 – 55 Chichester Street, Belfast BT1 4HL
Tel: 0300 200 7890 (from other UK countries: 028 9151 3101)
Email: gro.nisra@dfpni.gov.uk

8. Ideas for commemorating your baby

It’s never too late to commemorate your baby. You may wish to name your baby if you haven’t felt that you could before now, order a certificate from Sands, arrange a ceremony, attend a Remembrance event, or plant a tree…

Arrange a ceremony to commemorate your baby

You might want to have a ceremony of your own to honour, or perhaps to name your baby. You can create something with special relevance to you and your family. For example, you could scatter flower petals on water or light candles at a place with special meaning for you. You might want to ask family members or close friends to do this with you, and you could ask someone to recite a favourite poem or sing a special song.You might want to have a ceremony of your own to honour, or perhaps to name your baby. You can create something with special relevance to you and your family. For example, you could scatter flower petals on water or light candles at a place with special meaning for you. You might want to ask family members or close friends to do this with you, and you could ask someone to recite a favourite poem or sing a special song.

If you prefer a faith-based ceremony, you may wish to contact your local place of worship and arrange prayers, or alternatively you could contact the Institute of Civil Funerals (www.iocf.org.uk) or search the internet for an independent celebrant who will help you plan a service with as much or as little religious or spiritual content as you want. For a secular ceremony the Humanist Society may be able to help. These days it is much more widely accepted that the death of a baby needs to be acknowledged in the same way as the death of an older child or an adult.

Plant a tree

You could explore the possibility of planting or dedicating a tree either in your own or a friend’s garden or local park, the Woodland Trust, or National Trust.

Visit a memorial garden

Sands has a garden at the National Memorial Arboretum in Alrewas in Staffordshire. This garden was established in 2000 and is dedicated to the memory of all babies who have died. It is a tranquil place where families can remember their own baby in beautiful and peaceful surroundings. There is a sculpture in the garden with the inscription “Remembered but un-named”, for parents who were not given the opportunity to name their baby. The Arboretum is open every day except Christmas Day. The paths within the Sands Garden are lined with stones or pebbles on which families have written their baby’s name or a short message. If you would like to add your own stone, please use one that is no bigger than 7 centimetres in diameter and write on it or decorate it with indelible markers. Suitable stones and markers are available at the Arboretum.

You might also want to come to the Sands memorial service that is held each June at the National Memorial Arboretum. Information about this service is posted on our website each year in spring (www.sands.org.uk).

Some local cemeteries and crematoria have created memorial areas for babies and children who have died. Even if your baby is buried, or his or her ashes are scattered elsewhere, you may find it helpful to spend time in one of these quiet places. There are several Sands memorial gardens around the UK . Our Helpline (0808 164 3332) or (helpline@sands.org.uk) can tell you if there is one near you and can give you the contact details.

Come to a Sands Lights of Love service

Sands holds Lights of Love services in December every year around the UK. The dates and venues for each year’s Lights of Love services are announced on the Sands website in the autumn. You could also go to a hospital memorial service. Many hospitals organise an annual non‑denominational memorial service for babies who have died. You can contact the chaplains at the hospital where your baby died, or at a hospital that is close to where you live, to find out when their service will be held. Some crematoria also hold annual memorial services.

Memorial services can be quite emotional, so you may want to ask a close family member or friend to go with you or to meet you afterwards. You could also let the people who are organising or leading the service know that you might be coming, so that they can look out for you.

Baby Loss Awareness Week is held every year between 9-15 October and ends with the international Wave of Light at 7pm on 15 October for parents to remember their baby at the same time as others across the world. More information is available at www.babyloss-awareness.org.

Other things you might like to do

  • If your baby’s stillbirth or birth and death were registered and you don’t have a certificate, you can contact the register office in the UK country where the baby was born to ask for one, or order one from Sands
  • Light a special candle for your baby on the anniversary of his or her birth, at festivals or at family gatherings.
  • Write a letter or letters to your baby. You could write about what happened, the hopes you have, any siblings and family who know about your baby.
  • Have something made with your baby’s name on.
  • Add your baby on to your family tree.
  • Make a donation in memory of your baby to help to support bereaved parents, to ensure that the care they receive is a good as it can possibly be and to promote research to find out why babies die. Sands has a range of sporting and other events which you would be welcome to join or support. Donations to Sands enable us to continue our vital work.

To find out more, please visit our website sands.org.uk, email fundraising@sands.org.uk or call 020 7436 7940

7. Where to start

You could start by contacting the Bereavement Office of the hospital where your baby was born or died. You will need to tell them:

  • the full name and address of the mother at the time of
  • the baby’s birth
  • the date of the baby’s birth
  • any other information that you may have, such as the
  • stage the pregnancy had reached

If the hospital does not have a Bereavement Office, you could try contacting the General Office or the chaplain. If the hospital still has the relevant records for that year, the staff may be able to tell you if your baby was buried or cremated, and possibly the address of the cemetery or crematorium.

Alternatively, the staff may be able to give you the name of the funeral director who made the arrangements. If the funeral director is still in business and still has records from that time, his or her staff should be able to tell you the name of the cemetery or crematorium. You can then contact the cemetery or crematorium staff and ask them to carry out a search of their registers. However, hospitals don’t keep medical records of births indefinitely, and some hospital records may not contain enough detail to be helpful. If the hospital where the baby was born has closed, records may have been transferred to the nearest large hospital, or sometimes destroyed.

If neither the hospital nor the funeral director has a record of the cemetery or crematorium

You will need to contact local cemeteries and crematoria yourself. Start with those nearest to the hospital where your baby was stillborn or died. If you cannot find any record of your baby at the nearest cemetery or crematorium, the staff there may be able to suggest where else you could ask.

You may find the following website useful in finding cemeteries and crematoria in your area: www.iccm-uk.com

Some cemeteries and crematoria are run by the local council. The council may have a Bereavement Services Department, and the staff there may be able to help or advise you.

By law, anyone can inspect a burial register. However, cremation law only permits the inspection of cremation records at the discretion of the crematorium as there may be data protection issues. (This is because there may be information in the records about people who are still alive). If you are not able to see the cremation records yourself, the crematorium staff will search on your behalf if you provide the following information:

  • the baby’s surname
  • the date of the death or stillbirth

You may find it helpful to keep a record of your search, including a list of the places you have contacted and the names and contact details of the people you spoke to.

If you find the cemetery or crematorium

If the baby was buried

In many places, stillborn babies were buried in a shared grave with other babies. This is still the practice in some cemeteries. Shared graves are not usually marked, though they do have a plot number and can be located on a cemetery plan. Sometimes a baby was buried in a grave with an adult.

Finding the place where a baby is buried can be bittersweet, or it can be a relief. It can also feel upsetting, even if the baby has his or her own grave. Sometimes babies were buried in a less attractive part of a cemetery, and some graves may not have been well looked after.

If the baby was cremated

In the past, several babies were sometimes cremated together. This still happens when a hospital arranges funerals for very premature babies. Until recently, ashes were not usually offered to parents following a shared cremation: they were generally scattered or buried, often in a little used area of the crematorium gardens. The crematorium should have a record of where the ashes from a shared cremation were scattered or buried. However, there is unlikely to be a plaque or any formal recognition of the importance of these areas.

You can make an appointment to be shown the exact location of the grave, or the area where the ashes were scattered or buried. Most cemetery and crematoria staff are very helpful and will give you as much information and help as they can. Most cemeteries and crematoria can provide a certified extract from a burial or cremation register. If you decide to visit the place where your baby was cremated or buried, you may want to take photographs. However, you may find that there are restrictions on what can be placed on a grave, especially if it’s a shared grave. In a crematorium, there may be restrictions on what can be placed in an area where ashes from several babies were scattered or buried. The staff will tell you what is allowed. You may want to ask to have your baby’s name inscribed in the cemetery or crematorium memorial book or ask if you can plant a tree or trees in their memory. If this is not possible at the place where your baby is buried The Woodland Trust have memorial woodlands.

6. Stillborn babies and babies who died after birth

Even though stillborn babies and those who died after birth were registered, it can still be difficult to trace the cemetery or crematorium where the baby was buried or cremated, especially if this happened a long time ago. For example, the hospital where the baby was born may have closed, records may have been lost or destroyed, or, if a funeral director was involved, the firm may no longer be in business.

However, cemeteries and crematoria have always been required by law to keep permanent records of these babies. So if you can identify the cemetery or crematorium, you should be able to find out where the baby’s body was buried or the ashes were buried or scattered.

Please note: family members making enquiries on behalf of a parent who is alive will usually need to show a letter of authority from their parent to anyone they contact during their enquiry.

5. “Late miscarriages”

Sadly, if your baby was born dead before 1992 and before 28 completed weeks of pregnancy, there will probably be no record of his or her birth, or of burial or cremation. Until 1992, the legal definition of stillbirth was a baby born dead before 28 completed weeks of pregnancy. In 1992, the legal definition was changed to 24 completed weeks. All babies born dead before the legal age of stillbirth are considered in law to be “late miscarriages”. Their birth cannot be registered and the law does not require them to be formally buried or cremated, so cemeteries and crematoria have never been required to keep records of these babies. In recent years, with greater understanding of the significance of the death of a baby at any stage of pregnancy, more babies born before 24 weeks have been formally buried or cremated. Proper records are more likely to have been kept for some of these babies. Sands can provide certificates for you to complete with your baby’s details here (shop-sands.org.uk/en/products/bereavementsupport)