The New York State Death Index, created after a new vital statistics law passed in 1880, only has one Lansingburgh death recorded for 1881. That's not because there was just one death in Lansingburgh that year, but because municipal compliance with the state law lagged somewhat. Twenty-three deaths were recorded in 1882, and with each successive year it should have been progressively more thorough.The Oakwood Cemetery interment book records sixty-four deaths of people in 1882 whose residence was given as Lansingburgh. Their residence may or may not have been their place of death, but the much higher number relative to the New York State Death Index does suggest compliance may still have been short that year, particularly since Oakwood is just one Lansingburgh cemetery. People who died in Lansingburgh in 1882 may have been buried at St. John's, or any number of other cemeteries in Troy or elsewhere.In addition to deaths in 1882 of people who were born in or had resided in Lansingburgh, the spreadsheet also includes a few deaths of people who were interred in Oakwood Cemetery in 1882 but who had died in earlier years or decades. In cases of reinterments such as the latter, Oakwood's interment books often do not indicate what the cemeteries of origin were; possibly other record books might. For this spreadsheet, Oakwood's "Name" field has been divided into Surname and Given Name fields, and a new Estimated Year of Birth field has been added. The estimated birth year is simply the age in years subtracted from the year of death, without accounting for months. The interment book had also included fields that are not, for now, included here: Disease; Father's Name; Mother's Name; Lot; Remarks.[gdoc key="https://docs.google.com/spreadsheets/d/1Fnj7R-RZ0Kv5LAnmioRd6BEDZq2Sjl4LrETL9PHKYJc/edit?usp=sharing" http_opts='{}']