Lehigh County, Pennsylvania Genealogy

United States Pennsylvania Lehigh County

Historical Facts

 * Parent Counties: Formed from Northampton County 6 March 1812.
 * County Seat: Allentown
 * Neighboring Counties: residents may also have records in Carbon (north) • Northampton (east) • Schuylkill (west)  • Montgomery (south)  •  Berks (southwest)  •  Bucks (southeast)

Cemeteries
Cemetery records often reveal birth, marriage, death, relationship, military, and religious information.

The records of the Fountain Hill Cemetery, Fountain Hill, Bethlehem, PA have been digitally immaged. Records from 1872 to the present were recorded. The persons interred in the cemetery are mostly from the Bethlehem, PA area, especially those from the South side of Bethlehem and ethnic Slovenes who lived there.

The Genealogical Society of Utah created the images as part of project PENN0061D. They are not available to the public as of October 2009.

The Mennonite Heritage Center 565 Yoder Road Harleysville PA 19438-1020 215-256-3020 [mailto:library@mhep.org library@mhep.org] Hours: Tuesday thru Friday, 10am–5pm, Saturday, 10am–2pm The Cemetery Database at the Mennonite Heritage Center includes 86,000 burial records from 125 local cemeteries. Records cover cemeteries in the counties of Berks, Bucks, Butler, Chester, Lehigh, Montgomery, Northampton, and Westmoreland. The database provides transcriptions from Mennonite, Brethren, Lutheran, Reformed, Union, Baptist, Methodist, Episcopal, community, and private cemeteries. Search the list of cemeteries and the alphabetical surname lists in Adobe PDF format. Visit the Mennonite Heritage Center to search the cemetery database by various criteria. The transcriptions are available for further research at the MHC library.

Church Records
The Lehigh County Pennsylvania Historical Society has a list of church records available in their collection. You can access these records by completing a search request form.

County-wide Database – Multi-denominational



 * 1708-1985 - Pennsylvania, Church and Town Records, 1708-1985 at Historical Society of Pennsylvania – ($), free to members of the society; Also available at Ancestry.com – ($); 7,542,774 entries. This database is incomplete for all counties.
 * 1730–1779 – Pennsylvania, Lutheran Baptisms and Marriages at Ancestry.com – ($); records of southeastern counties kept by Rev. John Casper Stoever.
 * 1784–1882 – Trexlertown Union Church, Lehigh County, Pennsylvania, 1784-1882 at Ancestry.com – ($); now known as St. Paul's; denomination not specified.
 * Lehigh County, Pennsylvania: Hilffrich Pastoral Records at Ancestry.com – ($), denomination not specified.

Lutheran

 * Membership and burial record of Jerusalem Lutheran and Reformed congregations and cemeteries at Ancestry.com – ($).

Early records of the "Blue Church" have been published:


 * 1750-1764 – Beckel, Clarence E. "Records of St. Paul's Evangelical Lutheran Congregation, Lehigh Co., Penna., 1750-1764," The Pennsylvania Magazine of History and Biography, Vol. 35 (1911):188-198. Includes marriages, deaths, and communicants. For free online access, see WeRelate.
 * Churches of Coopersburg Lutheran Charge, St John's, St. Paul's, the Blue, Upper Saucona, New Jerusalem or Apples, Leithsville – at Ancestry.com – ($).

Burials at Christ Church (united Lutheran and Reformed congregation) at Shoenersville have been published:


 * 1780-1880 – Centennial of Christ Church at Shoenersville, Pa. 1880. Digital version at Ancestry ($).
 * 1782–1856 – Lehigh County, Pennsylvania, 1782-1856: Christ Lutheran Congregation at Ancestry.com – ($).

A register of burials for St. John's Evangelical Lutheran Church survives:


 * 1861-1874 - St. John's Evangelical Lutheran Church Records - birth, death, burial 1786-1874 at The USGenWeb Project - free.

Ebenezer Union Church 1740-1990 -- Stones of Help. Appendixes B and D have lists of baptisms with names of children with their dates of birth and baptism and names of their parents. Also lists of confirmations, marriages, and funerals. - free.

Moravian
Moravians established a settlement at Bethlehem in 1741. The Bethlehem Digital History Project (winner of a National Endowments for the Humanities prize) includes community records, Bethlehem diary, bills of sale and manumissions, business activity, meeting minutes, Moravian Indian diaries 1763-1765, registers of baptisms, marriages, and deaths, and church regulations.


 * 1740s-1790s - Moravian Church, Bethlehem Marriages at The USGenWeb Project - free.

There was also a Moravian congregation at Emmaus:


 * 1758-1800 - Moravian Church Marriage Records, Emmaus, Pa. 1758-1800 at The USGenWeb Project - free.

Reformed

 * 1734-1834 - Roberts, Charles R., translator. Records of Egypt Reformed Church, Lehigh County, 1734-1834, in Pennsylvania Archives, Sixth Series, Volume VI. (Harrisburg, PA: Harrisburg Publishing Co., 1907). Includes baptisms.


 * 1757–1885 – Lehigh County, Pennsylvania, 1757-1885: Upper Milford Reformed Congregation at Ancestry.com – ($).


 * 1765-1846 – Records of Schlosser's or Union Reformed Church, Unionville, North Whitehall Township, Lehigh County, Pennsylvania, 1765-1846 at The USGenWeb Project – free.


 * 1765–1858 – Lehigh County, Pennsylvania, 1765-1858: Jordan Reformed Congregation at Ancestry.com – ($).


 * 1790-1990 - Ebenezer Union Church 1740-1990 -- Stones of Help. Appendix C has lists of baptisms with names of children with their dates of birth and baptism and names of their parents. Also lists of marriages and funerals by date. - free.


 * Membership and burial record of Jerusalem Lutheran and Reformed congregations and cemeteries at Ancestry.com – ($).

Land and Property
Land records in Lehigh County began in 1812. These records are filed with the Recorder of Deeds office in Allentown, Pennsylvania.

Land and property records can place an ancestor in a particular location, provide economic information, and reveal family relationships. Land records include: deeds, abstracts, indexes, mortgages, leases, grants, sheriff sales, land patents, and maps. Property records include liens as well as livestock brands and estray records.

The following are examples of available resources:

Online Land Records


 * 1984–present Images are available online using the Landex system. There is a fee to view the images.

Land Records on Microfilm


 * 1812–1911 Deed Records 1812-1901; Index 1812-1911
 * 1812–1911 Mortgage Records, 1812-1886; Mortgage Index 1812-1911.

Additional Resources

Note that the "Maps" section below also includes maps related to land ownership.

See Pennsylvania Land and Property for more information about using land records, especially about original land warrants, surveys, and patents filed at the state land office.

Additional resources can sometimes be found using search phrases such as Lehigh County Pennsylvania Land in online catalogs such as:


 * Historical Society of Pennsylvania
 * WorldCat (For instructions see WorldCat Online Catalog.)
 * (For instructions see FHL Catalog Place-name Search.)

Maps
Click the image to see an enlarged version

Ancestor Tracks has posted free downloadable images from the 1876 Illustrated Atlas of Lehigh County, Pennsylvania. This atlas located in the Library of Congress shows major landowners and geographic sites at the date of publishing. While the physical maps are in the public domain, the images we have taken of the maps belong to us and are not be used commercially. We hereby give permission to use them strictly for personal use; please attribute to Ancestor Tracks.

Migration
Early migration routes to and from Lehigh County, Pennsylvania for settlers included:


 * Delaware River a pre-historic patthway serving as the border between New Jersey and Pennsylvania rises in Schoharie County, New York and flows by the Lehigh Canal in Pennsylvania, Frenchtown, Trenton where river meets tidewater, and past Bordentown in New Jersey, Philadelphia in Pennsylvania to empty into the North Atlantic Ocean.
 * Delaware and Raritan Canal 1834 connected New Brunswick, New Jersey on the Raritan River (and NY City) to Bordontown, New Jersey on the Delaware River. Lehigh County, Pennsylvania connected via the feeder canal at Frenchtown, New Jersey.

Probate Records
Online Probate Records

Original probate records for some Pennsylvania counties are available free online as digital images at FamilySearch.org. The dates vary significantly for each county and not all counties are listed. Some counties may only have probate indexes. This Pennsylvania collection of images may be browsed through the links listed below:

Complete Collection:


 * 1683-1994 – at FamilySearch.org

Lehigh County Only:


 * 1812-1965 – Lehigh County Probate Records

Courthouse
Lehigh County Courthouse 455 West Hamilton Street Allentown, PA 18101-1614

Family History Centers

 * Introduction to LDS Family History Centers
 * Allentown Pennsylvania Family History Center (Whitehall)

Libraries
The Mennonite Heritage Center 565 Yoder Road Harleysville PA 19438-1020 215-256-3020 Hours: Tuesday thru Friday, 10am–5pm, Saturday, 10am–2pm

The Mennonite Historians of Eastern Pennsylvania support the the John L. Ruth Historical Library and Museum at the Mennonite Heritage Center. Located in Montgomery County, Pennsylvania the records and resources of this treasure also cover the counties of Bucks, Chester, Berks, Lehigh, Northampton, and Philadelphia. The website provides a comprehensive overview of library resources, online cemetery database, manuscript collections, photo collections, archival collections, and more.

Museums
Lehigh Valley Heritage Museum 432 W. Walnut Street Allentown, PA 18102 Phone: (610) 435-1074

Birth

 * 1852-1854 – Pennsylvania Births Ancestry.com – ($) Index with images.
 * 1709-1950

Marriage

 * 1709-1940

Death

 * 1852-1854 – Pennsylvania Deaths Ancestry.com – ($) Index with images.

Web Sites

 * USGenWeb project. May have maps, name indexes, history or other information for this county. Select the state, then the county.