Asheboro North Carolina FamilySearch Center

''The Asheboro Family History Center is a branch of the famous Family History Library in Salt Lake City, Utah (home to one of the largest genealogical collections in the world). The Asheboro FHC is one of more than 4,700 FHCs in 134 countries. There is no cost to visit or use the resources in the Family History Center—it is open to anyone in our Asheboro/Randolph county community with an interest in genealogical research. It is operated by The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints (LDS).''

Center Contacts and Hours
Location Map:


 * Location Map

Address:


 * 1109 McDowell Rd Asheboro NC 27203 United States


 * Language: English

Phone:


 * 1-336-309-9060

E-mail:


 * AsheboroFHC@gmail.com

Open Hours:


 * Wednesdays: 6:00pm-8:30pm
 * Other times by appointment

Holiday Schedule: n/a

Closed all major holidays

Class Schedule
We offer free classes and special seminars to help community members get started with their genealogy and family history—and also to help in specialized areas such as Internet Research, American Research, British Isles Research, European Research, Scandanavian Research, Central and South American Research, and much more.

Collections

 * FamilySearch Catalog: This center has the ability to order any of the films and fiche available through the FamilySearch Catalog.
 * We have a very nice collection of "How To" books for conducting family history research in most countries around the world.

Databases and Software

 * FHC Portal This center has access to the Family History Center Portal page which gives free access in the center to premium family history software and websites that generally charge for subscriptions.

Hardware and Equipment

 * We have 6 computer workstations (2 with scanners). We also have a microfilm reader for those patrons who order microfilm from the vast Salt Lake Family History Library collection.

Staff Research Specialties
Our Family History Consultants are excellent at helping those who are just getting started, and also specialize in the following areas: US, New England, Great Britain, Italy, France, and Switzerland.

Resources in the Local Area
The Randolph Room at the Asheboro Public Library

This is the repository of the county’s history and history of families who have lived here. It’s an interactive and cooperative effort because what you leave helps future researchers. There are more than 1,000 family files. Barbara N. Grigg collected many of the histories over the years. Families have started many others.

To preserve your family’s history, gather the information, take it to the Randolph Room, have it copied, and, voila, you’ve started a file. It also features three rows of bookshelves that hold tomes on everything from churches to industries. Filing cabinets are crammed with a world (well, a county) of information on area people, places and things. Old maps and other historical items cover the walls. Complete editions of more than a century’s worth of newspapers – The Courier-Tribune and others – can be viewed on microfilm.

Visitors receive individual help. When you enter the room you sign in. The room averages 250-350 visitors each month. The records show that people have come from all over the United States to do research.

No materials can be checked out, but you can make copies, take notes on a pad or a computer, or take pictures of documents with a camera or a cell phone.

The Randolph Room is at 201 Worth Street on the lower level of the Asheboro Public Library (just to the right inside the entrance from the parking lot). It is open Monday, Thursday and Saturday, 9 a.m.-5 p.m.; Tuesday and Wednesday, 9 a.m.-9 p.m.; and closed on Sunday. The web address is randolphlibrary.org/randolphroom.htm. For information, contact Marsha Haithcock at mfhaithcock@randolphlibrary.org or at (336) 318-6815.

Links
http://familyhistoryisfun.com