Allegheny County, Pennsylvania Genealogy

United States Pennsylvania Allegheny County


 * This article is about a southwestern Pennsylvania county. For other uses, see Allegheny.

Historical Facts

 * Parent Counties: Formed from Washington and Westmoreland Counties 24 September 1788.
 * County Seat: Pittsburgh
 * Neighboring Counties: residents may also have records in Butler (north) • Westmoreland (east) • Beaver (northwest) • Washington (southwest)  • and Armstrong (northeast)

Boundary Changes

 * Allegheny County was disputed between Virginia and Pennsylvania until the Mason-Dixon Line was finalized in 1780.
 * 1750: Southern half of Allegheny County was included in Cumberland County when Cumberland was created in 1750; northern half of Allegheny County was not included in any county until 1785.
 * 1771: Southern half of Allegheny County was included in Bedford County when Bedford County was created out of Cumberland County in 1771.
 * 1773: Southern half of Allegheny County was included in Westmoreland County when Westmoreland was created out of Bedford county in 1773.
 * 1783: Northern half of Allegheny became part of Depreciation Lands; part of the southern half of Allegheny County became part of Washington County when Washington County was created in 1781, while the rest remained part of Westmoreland County.
 * 1785: Northern half of Allegheny was annexed to Northumberland County.
 * 12 March 1800: Allegheny Co. boundaries were finalized as it appears today after the parts were set to form Armstrong, Beaver, Butler, Crawford, Erie, Mercer, Venango and Warren counties.


 * }

Cemeteries
Allegheny Cemetery

BillionGraves:


 * Laird Cemetery, Plum
 * Plum Creek Cemetery, Plum
 * McKeesport and Versailles Cemetery, McKeesport
 * Saint Anne Cemetery, Castle Shannon

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

Census

 * U.S. Census Schedules - University of Pittsburgh for Allegheny City 1850, 1860, and 1870 and for Pittsburgh 1850, 1860, 1870, and 1880. There is no coverage for schedules outside these two cities.

Catholic

 * Roman Catholic- Diocese of Pittsburgh Archives and Records Center
 * Father Peter Helbron's baptismal register, on microfilm from Family History Centers. Contains baptisms 1799-1828, marriages 1800-1830, funerals 1800-1819.
 * "100 years of the Pittsburgh Catholic Diocese 1843–1943". Western Pennsylvania Genealogical Society Quarterly, 17:1. FamilySearch Library book 974.8 B2wg. Contains chronolgy, map, county-by-county information.

Episcopalian



 * Page, Oliver Ormsby. "Sketch of the 'Old Round Church,' 1805-1825, the Original Edifice of Trinity Church, Pittsburgh," The Pennsylvania Magazine of History and Biography, Vol. 19 (1895):351-358. For free online access, see WeRelate.

German
Pennsylvania German Cultural Heritage Center at Kutztown University

Jewish

 * Rodef Shalom, oldest Jewish congregation in Western Pennsylvania
 * Rauh Jewish Archivesat the Heinz History Center

LDS Ward and Branch Records

 * Family History Centers
 * Pittsburg
 * Wilson

Methodist

 * The Smeltzer Bell Research Center at Allegheny College

Presbyterian

 * Pittsburgh Presbytery

Learn if the records of the individual parish or Church your ancestors attended are available.

Court Records
Department of Court Records Wills/Orphans' Court

Directories
Fold3 ($) has Pittsburgh City Directories 1861-1923 (3 yrs. missing) available online.

"Historic Pittsburgh - Full Text Collection" has Pittsburgh City and Allegheny City Directories (and outlying areas) from 1815 through 1930. Directories were not issued annually until the mid-1850s. Homestead Directories may be found on the same site.

History

 * Over 950 fully-searchable books and published works covering much of western Pennsylvania have been posted online at Historic Pittsburgh, nosted by the University of Pittsburgh's Digital Library

Land and Property
Land records in Allegheny County began in 1788. These records are filed with the Department of Real Estate office (formerly the Record of Deeds) in Pittsburgh, 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


 * 1792–1857; 1986–present Allegheny County offers online access to indexes and images. Fees apply for copies.

Land Records on Microfilm


 * 1788–1904 Deeds, 1788-1901; index, 1788-1904.

Maps


 * Fishman, Joel. The Warrantee Atlas of Allegheny County, Pennsylvania. Pittsburgh [Pennsylvania] : Western Pennsylvania Genealogical Society, 1982. Originally published by the Pennsylvania State Land Office ca. 1914. Digital version of the 1914 edition available at the University of Pittsburgh's "Historic Pittsburgh Maps Collection."

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

Additional Resources

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 Allegheny 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

 * Pittsburgh and Allegheny City 1856 from the David Rumsey Map Collection.

Revolutionary War
Men living in what is now Allegheny County (then Westmoreland and Washington counties) served in the 8th Pennsylvania Regiment.

Civil War

 * Hively, Henry. "Black Civil War Soldiers, Allegheny County Pennsylvania," Western Pennsylvania Genealogical Society Quarterly, Vol. 17, No. 1. (Summer 1990):39. FHL Book 974.B2wg

Newspapers

 * University of Pittsburgh's Hillman Library for old newspapers.
 * Allegheny Times - full-text digital issues in Google News Archive; covers 1988-2008
 * Pittsburgh Post-Gazetteis available on Google News Archive. It covers 1916 through 2007

Probate
Department of Court Records Wills/Orphans' Court

Courthouse
Allegheny County Courthouse 436 Grant St. Pittsburgh, PA 15219 Phone: (412) 350-6500 FAX:(412) 350-6512

Family History Centers

 * Introduction to LDS Family History Centers
 * Pittsburgh Pennsylvania Family History Center (Greentree)
 * Pittsburgh Pennsylvania 3rd Family History Center (Plum Borough)

Libraries

 * Carnegie Library of Pittsburgh-Pennsylvania Department

Societies

 * West Jefferson Hills Historical Society
 * Western Pennsylvania Genealogical Society
 * North Hills Genealogists
 * Historical Society of Pennsylvania

Taxation

 * 1791 - Returns of Taxables for the Counties of Bedford (1773 to 1784), Huntingdon (1788), Westmoreland (1783, 1786), Fayette (1785, 1786), Allegheny (1791), Washington (1786) and Census of Bedford (1784) and Westmoreland (1783). (Pennsylvania Archives, Series 3, Vol. 22). Digital versions at Ancestry ($); Google Books - free.


 * 1798 - Pennsylvania, U.S. Direct Tax Lists, 1798 at Ancestry ($).

County-wide Database

 * 1700-1821 – Pennsylvania Marriage Records Ancestry.com – ($) This database is incomplete for all counties.


 * Pre-1810 – Pennsylvania Marriages Ancestry.com – ($) This database is incomplete for all counties. It includes 35,000 marriage records from volume VIII of the second series of the Pennsylvania Archives.


 * Allegheny County Vital Statistic Indexes from Pittsburgh Newspapers at USGenWeb - Indexes to deaths, marriages (bride and groom indexes), and divorces.

Birth

 * 1892-1906 - - free index. Not complete for all years. There are a very few entries in the early 1700s.
 * 1852-1854 – Pennsylvania Births Ancestry.com – ($) Index with images.

Births and Deaths
Microfiche of birth and death registers recorded in Allegheny County prior to 1906 are now at the Carnegie Library of Pittsburgh. Search and copy fees range from $5-17 with a limit of four names per order.

Carnegie Library of Pittsburgh Pennsylvania Department, Records Research 4400 Forbes Ave Pittsburgh, PA 15213


 * 1870 to 1905 Birth and death registers Carnegie Library of Pittsburgh.
 * 1906 to Present see Pennsylvania Vital Records.
 * Birth records from 1893 to 1905 see Registrar of Wills.

Marriage

 * 1888-1911 - - free index. Not complete for all years.
 * 1786-1925 Marriage notices from newspapers index 1786-1910; Pennsylvania Marriage records,1852-1854; and Allegheny County Marriages index, 1885-1925, Carnegie Library of Pittsburgh.

Search and order Allegheny County marriage records online or visit in person. Department of Court Records Wills/Orphans' Court Division Marriage License Bureau 414 Grant Street 1st Floor, City-County Building Pittsburgh PA 15219

Divorce
Divorce records are handled by the Department of Court Records Civil/Family Division (formerly the office of the Prothonotary). While no on-line indexes or records are available, records may be obtained on site or by correspondence. An index to divorce records is included in the Ejectment and Miscellaneous Index. Request at the main desk. Older records may be in storage and have to be ordered. Department of Court Records Civil/Family Division City-County Building 414 Grant Street, First Floor Pittsburgh PA 15219-2469 Phone: (412)350-4200 Fax: (412)350-5260 civil@alleghenycounty.us

Death

 * 1852-1854 – Pennsylvania Deaths Ancestry.com – ($) Index with images.
 * 1870–1905 -Free index with images.

Web Sites

 * Allegheny County Resources for Genealogical Research from the county website
 * Linkpendium - Allegheny County
 * The Allegheny County PAGenWeb Project, a member of The PAGenWeb Project, an affiliate of The USGenWeb Project.
 * The USGenWeb Archives Project for Allegheny County
 * The USGenWeb Archives Project for Allegheny County (backup site)

Populated Places
Pittsburgh, Forest Hills, Aleppo, Leet, Versailles, Braddock, more...