Things You'll Need:
- List of family members
- Newspaper guidelines
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Step 1
Ask your local newspaper if there are guidelines to writing the obituary, such as the format of the first paragraph or the word count.
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Step 2
Follow the newspaper guidelines completely.
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Step 3
Start the obituary's first paragraph with the name of the deceased, where he or she lived, when he or she died, and how old he or she was.
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Step 4
Include a paragraph where you list all family members preceding the deceased in death. You should include spouses, children, grandchildren, siblings, and parents.
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Step 5
Include a paragraph where you list the names of survivors. You should include spouses, parents, siblings, children, grandchildren, great-grandchildren, and grandparents.
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Step 6
List all relatives mentioned above, even if the deceased did not get along with some of them.
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Step 7
Do not list out the names of aunts, uncles, nieces, nephews, cousins, and other distant relatives, except under certain circumstances, such as if the decreased was particularly close to them.
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Step 8
Include information about the deceased's education, profession, hobbies, church membership, accomplishments, and other biographical information if space permits.
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Step 9
Direct people to a place where flowers or memorial donations can be sent as the closing sentence.











Comments
wikedwestwitch said
on 12/3/2007 Correction, please...you state -"...obituaries run for every person who dies..." - this is NOT reality. Today, many newspapers DO NOT automatically publish death information, as they used to do (as a courtesy).
jcorn said
on 10/30/2007 Thanks for the information.