Discover if your ancestor was buried in the Pine Rivers District Cemeteries. There are burials from five separate cemeteries included in these records.
Discover if your ancestor was buried in the Pine Rivers District Cemeteries. There are burials from five separate cemeteries included in these records.
The earliest inscription relates to the death in 1866 of John Charles Richards, infant son of Thomas and Elizabeth Richards, in Samford Cemetery. Bunya Cemetery is no longer in use but Dayboro, Lawnton, Samford and Samsonvale Cemeteries all have recent burials. Transcription completed June 2002. Cemetery locations:
Bunya Cemetery (established 1873) - Bunya Road, Bunya
Dayboro Cemetery - McKenzie Street, Dayboro
Lawnton Cemetery - Norfolk Avenue, Lawnton
Samford Cemetery - School Road, Samford Village and Samsonvale Cemetery - Golds Scrub Lane, Samsonvale
This is a wonderful genealogy tool if you're exploring your family history or building a family tree and have ancestors from this district.
You might also find your ancestors in our extensive Census, Land & Survey Records
Searching through a PDF (Portable document format) is different from searching through fully transcribed record sets. Here are some tips to keep in mind while you search for your ancestors:
Direct Search
The search feature uses direct search. It will search for the exact word or phrase you type in the search field. There are no name variants available through this format.
All search results will bring you to the page on which your search word has been found and not to an individual transcript. You can then read through the page to find your result.
Name searches
A name search will return results which have the search terms on the same page within the document. This means that searching for John Smith will return pages where the names 'John' and 'Smith' occur. For this reason your search may return the name William Smith or John Brown. By inserting quotations around the full name the search function will locate the terms together; for example, “John Smith.”
To search for your ancestor by their name, write it as it would appear on the document. For example, if your relative was known as ‘Will’ it is likely that the name used for official records was ‘William.’
If you are unable to find your relative on your first search you can try different name variations. A number of register books only use abbreviations for first names.
For example, if your search is unsuccessful for William Smith, try W Smith or Wm Smith.
Perusing the PDF
If you wish to read through the whole document you are searching, then order the results by page number. You can start from the beginning of the document and read through to the end using the next button above the image.
Page numbers often correlate with the individual images of the documents rather than the page numbers used within the publication. Therefore page 1 starts with the cover page.