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Subject: [DearMYRTLE-L] Beginning Lesson #31 - Courthouse Research
Date: Mon, 24 Apr 2000 14:06:25 EDT
DearMYRTLE's DAILY GENEALOGY COLUMN
Beginning Lesson #31 - Courthouse Research
DearREADERS,
You don't need to be a lawyer to benefit from searching the records at the
courthouse near the ancestral home of your progenitors. Your progenitor
didn't have to be a criminal or even a wealthy merchant for records of his
activities to show up in courthouse files. Whether your research takes you to
Arkansas, Virginia or England, states and civilized countries usually
maintain court records which prove useful to genealogists.
REMEMBER COURTHOUSE RECORDS WERE ORIGINALLY CREATED TO DOCUMENT LEGAL
ACTIONS, NOT TO CHRONICLE FAMILY HISTORY.
The types of courthouse records will vary according to the mandates of the
particular governmental jurisdiction and your ancestor's point in time. This
means as researchers we must acquaint ourselves with the name of the local
courts and their assigned responsibilities.
For instance, a will might be found in the probate court in a state in the
US, but the Prerogative Court of Canterbury is a source of many wills in
England. Notice that although the responsibility to probate estates is the
same, the name of the court is different from locality to locality. There
are also differing laws which govern the right of inheritance, etc. You're
going to become an expert in these matters if you are to decipher the clues
where heirs received 1/3 of a quarter portion of the estate.
HOW CAN YOU BEST ORIENT YOURSELF TO THE LOCAL COURT SYSTEM?
Check basic genealogy reference works books such as:
COUNTY COURTHOUSE BOOK by Elizabeth Bentley. 2nd Edition. 405 pp., (1995),
1996. ISBN 0806314850. www.GenealogyBookShop.com
>From the publisher: "This is a complete overhaul of the 1990 classic,
featuring updated coverage of 3,125 county jurisdictions and 1,577 New
England towns and independent Virginia cities, details of the 18 Vermont
probate districts, 9 Massachusetts districts, and 12 Connecticut judicial
districts, plus informative state profiles and cross-references to name
changes and extinct towns and counties.Based on her written survey of county
courthouses and other jurisdictions, Mrs. Bentley here presents the names,
addresses, phone numbers, and dates of organization of all county
courthouses, and for those that responded (65 percent), a concise summary of
record holdings, personnel, and services.
Besides its obvious genealogical uses, the County Courthouse Book can also be
used for land title searches, legal investigations, questions of property
rights and inheritance, and indeed for personal searches and investigations
of all kinds. But it is the genealogist who stands to benefit most from the
book because it offers a concise guide to the county courthouses and
courthouse records which are the main focus of his research. Just the book
he's always needed!"
SOURCE GUIDES from FamilySearch.org
See http://www.familysearch.org/sg
These online printable research outlines are designed to help you find
records about your ancestors. For instance, in the research outline for the
state of Louisiana we locate an informative chart which explains the various
courts from 1679 through the present including:
-- Conseil Superieur, or the French Superior Council
-- Spanish cabild
-- District Courts
-- Parish Courts
-- The Supreme Court - described as "a statewide court located in New
Orleans, which has records of appeals from inferior courts. It was originally
created in 1804 as the Superior Court. Supreme Court records are at the
Division of Archives, Records Management, and History."
To find out more about these SourceGuide research outlines, see DearMYRTLE's
Step-By-Step Lesson #1 "Become Aware of Available Records" located at:
http://www.dearmyrtle.com/00/sbs1.htm
USING THE LDS FAMILY HISTORY LIBRARY CATALOG
>From a practical point of view, perhaps the easiest way to quickly orient
yourself to what's available, use the LDS Family History Library Catalog
(FHLC) available on CD-ROM and fiche at local LDS Family History Centers, and
searchable online at: http://www.familysearch.org/Search/searchcatalog.asp
When you look in the locality section of the FHLC and then look at the topics
available at the township, county or country level, you'll run across the
topic COURT RECORDS. The available microfilm will be listed, with
descriptions and listings for the time period covered on each roll. Viewing
court records on microfilm can save you time and money you would have to
spend traveling to all the little courthouses throughout the country tracing
your ancestry.
Don't get me wrong -- the LDS Family History Library doesn't have it all by
any means. I'm simply saying that you can save research dollars by viewing
the microfilm wherever possible. Reserve your letters or visits to court
clerks for those areas and time periods not yet available on microfilm.
These more commonly used court records include:
wills & probate records
guardianships
land records
oaths of allegiance
naturalization
claims and equity cases
Less commonly used court records include:
criminal proceedings
name changes
adoption records
military court martial
Admiralty court records
court minutes, dockets
INDEXES MAY BE AVAILABLE
Often in the FHLC you'll find a printed index to the court records, usually
available in book format. Though the main FHLibrary does not circulate books
to local FHCenters, you can perhaps find the book in a nearby public library
or through inter-library loan.
There may be an online searchable index for court records in the locality
where your ancestor once lived. This area of the internet is expanding
rapidly. The following resources might provide clues:
Ancestry.com's Searchable Databases
http://www.ancestry.com/search.htm
Cyndi's List of Genealogy Sites
http://www.cyndislist.com
US GenWeb Project
http://www.usgenweb.com
INDEXES IN PROGRESS
Many early courthouse record collections were "indexed in progress." This is
my little name for the loosely alphabetical cross-reference index pages
created at the time the case was processed. Here's how it works:
1. The local clerk receives a new empty book to record all wills.
2. The clerk creates index pages by labeling each of the first 26 pages of
the book with a letter of the alphabet.
3. As the clerk enters the first will on page 25 of the book, perhaps for
John Smith, he also enters the name of the testator on the "S" page of the
index, indicating page 25 as the location of the actual will.
4. In this manner a chronological listing of all wills filed by people whose
last names begin with the letter "S" will develop on this index page, etc.
5. Note that since the letter "S" is popular, any overflow might be carried
to a less popular index page, such as the one designated "Q." Genealogists
are wise to search the entire set of "index in progress" pages to ensure they
will find listings for their ancestors.
WHY USE COURTHOUSE RECORDS?
In researching my step-mother's line, I found the will of her grandfather. At
least I hoped it was her grandfather! We were most fortunate, because the
gentleman did as was customary by listing his heirs by name, but went even
step further. In the case of his son, who eventually became the father of
my step-mother, the will mentioned "my son Edward Bethel Jackson, who moved
to Seattle..." Indeed, we knew Edward had broken the mold and moved from the
eastern seaboard to the Seattle area where my step-mother was born. The will
of her grandfather confirmed the father-son relationship.
PROOF OF RELATIONSHIPS IS WHAT WE HOPE TO GAIN BY REVIEWING COURTHOUSE
RECORDS.
For Further Reading:
Baxter, Angus. In Search of Your British & Irish Roots. 320 pp., Indexed.
(1994), 1999. ISBN080631611X. www.genealogybookshop.com
_______. In Search of Your European Roots. 304 pp., (1994), 1999. ISBN
080631446X. www.genealogybookshop.com
_______. In Search of Your Canadian Roots. (3rd Edition) 400 pp., Indexed.
(1994), 2000. ISBN 0806316268. www.genealogybookshop.com
Colette, John Philip . Finding Italian Roots: The Complete Guide for
Americans. (1993) ISBN: 0806313935 www.genealogybookshop.com
Cerny, John & Elliot, Wendy, The Library: A Guide to the LDS Family History
Library. 1988, Ancestry Publishing. www.ancestry.com
Eichholz, Alice. Ancestry's Red Book: American State, County, and Town
Sources. 858 pps. Rev edition (1992) ISBN: 0916489477. www.ancestry.com
Everton, Lee, editor. Everton’s Handbook for Genealogists. 9th Edition. 619
pp. (1999) ISBN: 1890895032. www.everton.com
Filby, P. William. Bibliography of American County Histories. 449 pp.,
(1985), 1987. ISBN 0806311266. www.genealogybookshop.com
Greenwood, Val D. The Researcher's Guide to American Genealogy. 3rd ed. 676
pp. (2000) ISBN 0806316217. www.genealogybookshop.com
Meyerink, Kory, editor. Printed Sources : A Guide to Published Genealogical
Records.
800 pp., (1998) ISBN: 0916489701 www.ancestry.com
Ryan, James G. Irish Records : Sources for Family and Local History. 860 pp.
ISBN: 0916489760 www.ancestry.com
Schaefer, Christina K. Genealogical Encyclopedia of the Colonial Americas.
830 pp., Indexed. Illus. 1998. ISBN 0806315768. www.genealogybookshop.com
Szucs, Loretto & Luebking, Sandra, The Source: A Guidebook of American
Genealogy, Revised Edition, 1996, Ancestry Publishing. www.ancestry.com
Myrt :)
DearMYRTLE,
Daily Genealogy Columnist
America Online Keyword: gf, roots or myrtle
www.DearMYRTLE.com
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