Oakland County, Michigan Genealogy

United States &gt; Michigan &gt; Oakland County

County Courthouse
Oakland County Courthouse 1200 N Telegraph Rd. Pontiac, MI 48341 Phone: (248) 858-0572

History
The town of Rochester was formed at about the time Ann Arbor was formed in [Washtenaw County]. It is north and west of Detroit. The Mack Family built the road that ran from Detroit to Pontiac and the road which split off that and went to Rochester.

Parent County
1819--Oakland County was created 12 January 1819 from Macomb County. It was attached to Macomb County prior to organization 28 March 1820. County seat: Pontiac

Populated Places
Avon (extinct)

Bloomfield

Commerce

Farmington

Farmington Hills

Holly

Lake Orion

Milford

Novi

Pontiac

Rochester

Royal Oak

Southfield

Troy

Waterford

West Bloomfield

Neighboring Counties

 * Genesee
 * Lapeer
 * Livingston
 * Macomb
 * Washtenaw
 * Wayne

Church
LDS Ward and Branch Records


 * Pontiac

Vital Records

 * Michigan Birth Registrations, 1867-1902 -- Free name indexes and images at FamilySearch Record Search. Records include such information as name of child, birthdate and place, if still-born, illegitimate or twin, gender, race and record number.
 * Michigan Marriage Registrations, 1868-1925 -- Free name indexes at FamilySearch Record Search. Records include such information as names of bride and groom, date of license, ages, race, residences, birthplaces, occupations and names of the fathers of the bride and groom.
 * Michigan Death Registrations, 1867-1897-- Free name indexes and images at FamilySearch Record Search.  Records include such information as name of deceased, date and place of death, gender, color, marital status, age in years, months and days, disease or apparent cause of death, birthplace, names and occupations of parents, and the date the record was made.

Societies and Libraries
Oakland County Genealogical Society, Website.

Web Sites

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