New Hampshire Bible Records

Online Records

 * The National Society Daughters of the American Revolution (DAR) has an index of over 40,000 digitized family Bible records and each day more records are digitized and added to the Index.
 * Index to Early Bible Records provides a free index to over 17,000 online and offline pre-1830 Bible records.

Start with the free Index to Early Bible Records (pre-1830; 17,000 entries).


 * New Hampshire Historical Society. Card File Index to Bible Records. Salt Lake City: Genealogical Society of Utah, 1975. The New Hampshire Historical Society has a large Bible records collection. The card file index lists family surnames in alphabetical order and the call numbers of the records at the New Hampshire Historical Society. For the address of the society go to New Hampshire Societies..


 * Copeley, William. New Hampshire Family Records. 2 vols. Bowie, Md.: Heritage Books, 1994. This set contains Bible records at the New Hampshire Historical Society. It is indexed.


 * Kirkham, E. Kay. An Index to Some of the Bibles and Family Records of the United States, 2 vols. Logan, Utah: Everton Publishers, 1984. This is a partial index to the records of the National Society of the Daughters of the American Revolution concerning families in the United States. Volume two shows those families in the northern states. The index to the New England section is on pages 1–49..

New Hampshire Bible Records
Many families traditionally recorded genealogies in their family Bibles. They are a good source of information about immediate family members and relatives. They may include names of parents, children, and spouses plus their dates of birth, marriage, and death. For some families, Bible records may have the only information of this kind. Family Bibles that are no longer in the family may be at a historical or genealogical society.

The Family History Library has many miscellaneous records of family Bibles. To locate those in New Hampshire, see the Place Search of the FamilySearch Catalog. Type in New Hampshire, then scroll down to Bible Records.

Copies, or abstracts of old family Bibles that are no longer known to exist, may survive in Revolutionary War Pension application files at NARA, Washington, D.C., which are available online at three commercial websites: Ancestry, Fold3, and Heritage Quest Online.