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 Wednesday, September 26, 2012
Courthouse Research Tips from the Virtual Genealogy Conference
Posted by Diane
Courthouse records can be some of the most revealing sources about
your ancestors.
These Fall 2012 Virtual Genealogy Conference tips
come from our live chat on Researching Courthouse Records, hosted by
the Legal Genealogist
Judy G. Russell.
- Types of records you might find at a
courthouse include civil and criminal court records,
naturally, but also deeds and mortgages, tax lists,
county commissioner meeting
minutes, vital records,
business licenses, voter registrations, cattle brand
registrations and more.
- But depending on the place your family
lived, older records may have been turned over to a local or
state archives, historical society or library. Check in
advance before you plan a courthouse trip.
- "Keep in mind is that most of these
facilities aren't really archives," Russell advised. "They're
working offices trying to keep up with the day-to- day
business of government. For the most part, they're not set up
to do a lot of hand-holding." Find out as much as you can
about the records you need—the date, a microfilm number or
volume and page number, where they're located, etc.—before you
go.
- More things to know before you go:
Check online for courthouse hours, holiday schedules and access information.
The court may have limited hours when staff will pull files.
Some won't allow personal scanners or cameras. Different types
of records might be in different buildings or rooms. The local genealogy librarian and
genealogical society are good sources to ask ahead of time
about courthouse quirks.
- See if the office holding the records
you need has a busy season. Russell gave this example: "If the
records you really want are the tax records, and the tax
office's busy season is October, then going there in October
just about guarantees that nobody is going to be available to
help you—and they may not even allow record lookups at that
time."
- One chat participant advises you to dress
nicely—"so you look like you might be a lawyer or paralegal."
And if you have allergies to dust or mold, bring medication.
- Look for an online or microfilmed
index so you have all the volumes and page numbers you need in
advance. Also see whether the Family History Library
has microfilm of the records you
need or even posted them online at FamilySearch.org.
- "Even
'burned counties' have some records," Russell said. "And don't
forget many people re-recorded deeds, etc., after a courthouse
fire."
Ready to head to the courthouse now? Click
here to find out about our downloadable guide to researching in courthouse
records, available in ShopFamilyTree.com.
Video
classes
from our Virtual Genealogy Conferences are available in
ShopFamilyTree.com. And mark your calendar now for our Winter
2013 Virtual Genealogy Conference, Feb. 22-24.
court records | Genealogy Events | Research Tips
Wednesday, September 26, 2012 10:21:02 AM (Eastern Daylight Time, UTC-04:00)
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