Statewide recording of births and deaths began in October 1908, although compliance was incomplete for several years in most counties and for two decades or longer in others. Registration was mandated in 1917, but it was another decade before 90 percent compliance was attained. Although county clerks record births and deaths and provide information on request, certificates are available only from the Vital Records Section, State Department of Health, 1000 Northeast Tenth Street, P.O. Box 53551, Oklahoma City, Oklahoma 73152. Purpose and relationship statements are required. Early birth certificates contain much less information than those recorded presently.
Tribal records at the Oklahoma Historical Society contain some earlier birth records in relationship to land allotments (see Land Records) as well as death records. Children of mixed marriages may be included in the births.
Some marriage records for the Five Civilized Tribes and some other tribes are also at the Oklahoma Historical Society. Others are at the National Archives-Southwest Region. Nonnative settlers whose marriages were recorded in U.S. Federal District Court records for Indian Territory are included. Marriage records (June 1890–1907) in Indian Territory, which predate statehood, may be located in the office of the court clerk in either Muskogee or Pittsburg counties. After 1895, pre-statehood marriage records in Indian Territory may additionally be found in county court clerk offices in Carter or Craig. Still others may be found in Atoka, Bryan, Latimore, and LeFlore counties. Creek County marriages may have been recorded in the cities of Bristow, Drumright, Sapulpa, or Muskogee, now in Muskogee County. There is no centralized index for these marriages.
Some marriage records are also available at the county level for Oklahoma Territory before statehood. Some of these have been published. After statehood, marriage and divorce records are available from the clerk of the court in the county in which the license was issued or divorce granted.
On-Site County Court Records Search - Find nearly any Oklahoma court record online! Many court records are not digitized yet, which means the only way to obtain these records is by going to the actual courthouses. Someone from our network of court-runners will go retrieve the records and then send you the results. Average response time is 38 hours. Civil Records include Lawsuits, Bankruptcies, Liens and judgments, Marriage/divorce litigation, Child custody, Civil rights violations ands Other. Criminal Records include Violent crimes, Theft and robbery, DUI/DWI's, Drugs and alcohol, Sexual offenses, Some traffic violations, Behavioral.
Vital Records Service, Oklahoma State Department of Health, 1000 Northeast 10th, Oklahoma City, OK 73117;(405) 271-4040, They have the following records: