North Carolina, United States Genealogy

United States   North Carolina Welcome to the North Carolina page, First in FlightMost unique genealogical features:
 * 8 proprietors granted land 1663-1729; Granvilles continued to 1763
 * Poor natural harbors forced most settlers to come overland to NC
 * State births and deaths start 1913
 * The best U.S. handbook is Helen F. M. Leary, ed, North Carolina Research

Extinct or Historical Counties
Albemarle| Bath | Bute | Cherokee Reservation | Clarendon | Dobbs | Glasgow | Tryon

Counties
Click on the map below to go to a county page. Hover over a county to see its name. To see a larger version of the map, click here.

Counties gone to Tennessee or Virginia:  State of Franklin· Blount· Caswell (TN)· Davidson (TN)· Fincastle (VA)· Greene (TN)· Hawkins· Sevier· Spencer· Sullivan· Sumner· Tennessee· Washington (old)· Wayne (TN)

Extinct or Renamed Counties:  Albermarle· Albermarle Precinct· Archdale· Bath· Berkeley· Bute· Carteret Precinct· Clarendon· Cleaveland· Dobbs· Glasgow· Pamptecough· Pelham · Shaftesbury Precinct· Tryon· Wickham

Major Repositories
North Carolina State Archives· North Carolina State Library· University of North Carolina Library· Duke University Perkins Library· National Archives Southeast Region (Atlanta)· Library of Congress

Migration Routes
Black Fox Trail · Catawba and Northern Trail · Catawba Trail · Chesapeake and Ohio Railroad · Fall Line Road (or Southern Road) · Fayetteville, Elizabethtown, and Wilmington Trail · Great Valley Road · Jonesboro Road · King's Highway · Lower Cherokee Traders' Path · New River and Southern Trail · Occaneechi Path · Old Cherokee Path · Rutherford's War Trace · Secondary Coast Road · Unicoi Trail · Upper Road · Wilmington, Highpoint, and Northern Trail

Research Tools

 * Guide To Research Materials In the North Carolina State Archives 379 page county record inventory. Lists county formation date, courthouse disasters, record types (bonds, corporate, court, election, estate, land, marriage, roads, tax, wills), dates covered, if a book, boxed, or filmed.
 * The North Carolina GenWeb Project provides county information about formation date, parent county, county seat, bibliography, cemeteries, census, churches, towns, history, look ups, obituaries, queries, repositories, surname registry, and many Internet links.
 * Message Boards and other Internet sites can help. CyndisList links to 24 categories of NC genealogy Internet sites.
 * Family History101.com North Carolina Genealogy Internet aggregator site. Includes a brief state history, extinct counties, burned counties, statewide genealogy links, mailing lists, and county genealogy links. [[Image:North-carolina.png|right|180px]]
 * North Carolina Blacksheep Ancestors, NC prisoners, outlaws, court records, and executions.

Things you can do
Below list some of the many tasks you can help with: