Search Bayfield County Death Records

Bayfield County Death Records are best handled as a local office search with a state fallback behind it. The county Register of Deeds in Washburn maintains the records, and the research notes give you the office location and phone number right away. That makes the search practical, because you do not have to guess which office owns the copy. If you know the name and a likely year, you can work from a small clue to a real request. Older records still benefit from the Wisconsin historical guides when the county note is not enough.

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Bayfield County Death Records Overview

Washburn Office City
Register Of Deeds
1907 State Start
$20 First Copy

Bayfield County Death Records Office

The Bayfield County Register of Deeds is located at 117 E Fifth St., Washburn, WI 54891, and the office phone is 715-373-6119. The research file is direct on that point. The office maintains birth, death, and marriage records for events that occurred in Bayfield County. That gives the page a clear local center and keeps the record path tied to the county that actually holds the file.

The county official website at Bayfield County official website is the local source behind the image below and the best official context for county services.

Bayfield County death records county official website

That image keeps the page tied to the county record desk while the office address gives the search a real place to start.

Bayfield County also handles land records and property documents through the same office. That extra duty does not change the death record path, but it helps explain why the Register of Deeds is the central records desk. When you need a death certificate, the county office is still the right first stop.

Because the research is short, the office address and the county record role do most of the work. That is enough to keep Bayfield County Death Records specific without adding facts that are not in the source material.

Note: Bayfield County Death Records are simplest when you keep the search tied to the Washburn office and the county record type.

Bayfield County Death Records History

Bayfield County history starts with the office in Washburn, but the state pages still matter when the record is old. That is especially true when the date is not exact. The county note tells you where the office sits and what kinds of records it maintains. The historical pages tell you how to bridge the gap when a family clue is all you have.

The Wisconsin Historical Society guide at CS88 is the best first look for older records. The companion page at CS1581 helps you read the death record once you find it. That matters because older records often need a little context before the county office can issue the copy you want.

The Wisconsin Historical Society guide at CS88 gives Bayfield County Death Records a clear older-record fallback.

Bayfield County death records Wisconsin Historical Society pre-1907 guide

That image keeps the page tied to the historical search path when the county office starts to run thin.

The state office at DHS Vital Records stays in the modern request path. The CDC guide at CDC Wisconsin vital records confirms the 1907 cutoff, which gives you a clean line between older and modern records. If the death falls before statewide registration, the historical pages are usually the better place to start.

Bayfield County is also a good example of why county offices matter even when the historical search comes first. Once the record is found, the county Register of Deeds is still the office that issues the certified copy. That keeps the search and the copy in the same county record lane.

Note: Bayfield County Death Records work best when the historical clue is found before the certified copy request is filed.

Get Bayfield County Death Records Copies

When you need a certified copy, the county Register of Deeds is the direct route. Bayfield County issues the record through the Washburn office, and the standard Wisconsin fee pattern still applies. The first copy is $20 and each additional copy is $3 when ordered at the same time. That gives you a simple cost baseline before you send a request or plan a visit.

The county office details matter because they keep the request local. The address at 117 E Fifth St. and the phone number 715-373-6119 are the practical facts to keep nearby. If you already know the death is in Bayfield County, you can keep the request short and avoid extra back and forth. That is usually the fastest way to get the certified copy you need.

The Wisconsin Register of Deeds Association page at WRDA vital records confirms the same fee structure. The Wisconsin Department of Health Services page at DHS Vital Records gives the fallback request path if the county route does not fit the date or the copy type. Together, they keep Bayfield County Death Records simple enough to manage.

If the record is older, the historical pages can help you identify the right person before you order. That is often the smartest move with Bayfield County Death Records because a smaller clue can prevent a wrong request. It also keeps the county office from having to sort through a vague search.

Wisconsin Statute 69.21 explains who may receive certified copies, and Wisconsin Statute 69.18 explains the death record format. Those rules explain the office's role and the reason a clean request moves faster.

The office address in Washburn and the county government site both point to the same local lane. That makes Bayfield County Death Records practical even when the research is thin, because the search still has a real office and a real seat to work from.

Note: Bayfield County death record copies are easiest when the office, year, and copy type are clear before the request is sent.

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