Salvatore Curiale

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rp76226
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Salvatore Curiale

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Looking for his parents and date of birth. He married Laura Lorusso on September 12, 1954 in the Bronx, NYC. He died in the Bronx, NYC at age 39 on September 18, 1957.
erudita74
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Re: Salvatore Curiale

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Relating to their 1954 marriage, the only thing online is a marriage index which contains the marriage license number and date it was issued-links below

https://www.nycmarriageindex.com/

https://archive.org/details/NYC_Marriag ... 2/mode/1up

https://archive.org/details/NYC_Marriag ... 0/mode/1up

marriage license #6819 dated Aug 28, 1954

From reclaim the records:

FOR COPIES OF RECORDS FROM 1950 TO 1966:
Copies of the three-page document set for 1950 to the present are stored at the New York City Clerk's Office, and marriage records that are more than fifty years old -- i.e. prior to 1967 -- are legally open to the public. That means that if you want to order a copy of a record between 1950 and 1966, you can do so from the City Clerk's Office.
Unfortunately, they do not yet have an online form for requesting records and providing payment. Instead, you can print, complete, and mail the PDF form on their website with your payment. You can also visit them in person and drop off your form and payment right at their office, which will likely get you your records much more quickly.

info re Office of the City Clerk-link below

https://www.cityclerk.nyc.gov/content/
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rp76226
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Re: Salvatore Curiale

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The last time I checked, NYC wanted $75 for a copy of a single marriage record. The City and State of New York are all about the money. High state and city income taxes. You live out of state and your spouse works out of state, they include your spouse's income in joint returns and tax that income too. So did NJ. Used to live in New Jersey and work in Manhattan. The biggest raise I ever got was when my company moved me to Texas in 1988 (no state income tax) and we no longer had to pay state income taxes to NY and NJ. Plus I got twice the house with many more beautiful features for less money than I sold my NJ house for and reduced my work commute by an hour each way.

Ron
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