Kendall County, Illinois Genealogy

United States Illinois  Kendall County

County Organization
Kendall County's civil records start the following years:

County records are most often kept at the County Courthouse or another local repository. For further information about where the records for Kendall County are kept, see the Kendall County Courthouse page.

Historical Facts


Kendall County is named for Amos Kendall who was a journalist and statesman and served as U.S. Postmaster General under Andrew Jackson and Martin Van Buren.

Boundary Changes
Prior to County Formation 


 * 1790-1801 - Kendall part of Knox County and the Northwest Territory
 * 1801-1812 - Kendall part of St. Clair County
 * 1812-1815 - Kendall part of Madison County
 * 1815-1816 - Kendall part of Edwards County
 * 1816-1819 - Kendall part of Crawford County
 * 1819-1821 - Kendall part of Clark County
 * 1821-1823 - Kendall part of Pike County
 * 1823-1825 - Kendall part of Fulton County
 * 1825-1831 - Kendall part of Putnam County
 * 1831-1841 - Some of Kendall part of LaSalle County
 * 1836-1841 - Some of Kendall part of Kane County

County Formation and After 


 * 1841 - Kendall County created from LaSalle and Kane counties

For more information see Origin and Evolution of Illinois Counties or Kendall County Fact Sheet (Illinois State Archives). For interactive county boundary maps see Illinois County Boundaries, 1790-Present, Illinois Historical Counties, or Illinois County Maps and Atlases.

Neighboring Counties

 * DeKalb
 * DuPage
 * Grundy
 * Kane
 * LaSalle
 * Will

Cemeteries
Illinois cemetery records often identify birth, death, relationship, and military information, as well as religious affiliation.


 * Find A Grave can be searched by the name of a person or family to find where a person is buried. Usually gives birth and death dates often with a picture of the tombstone.  May give obituaries, names of family members and links to their information in Find A Grave.


 * Find A Grave also gives a list of cemeteries in Kendall County and links to the information for the individuals buried there.


 * Kendall Co. IL USGenWeb Tombstone Project usually gives the names of the deceased in alphabetical order by last name with birth and death dates plus any remarks.


 * Illinois Cemeteries by county.


 * The Family History Library Catalog lists . Some of the books or others may be on Google Books or available at public libraries.


 * ePodunk list of Kendall County cemeteries gives the names of the cemeteries in the county with a link to more information such as address, phone number, and web site.

African American
The following have information concerning African American research.


 * African American Research (US) has more information about the kinds of records


 * Illinois State Archives pamphlet on African American Research describes what records are at the State Archives with an online method for ordering records.
 * African-American Resources for Illinois

Land

 * 1800s-Present - Use the Bureau of Land Management (BLM) Land Patent Index to obtain original federal land transfer records including homestead, military warrants, and cash entry patents. These records help a research establish location and lead to National Archives' records which may include genealogical information. Earlier land transfer records are housed at the National Archives.


 * 1800s-Present - Illinois Public Domain Land Tract Sales from Illinois State Archives also provides an index to federal land sales.


 * Land Records Kendall County, Illinois at ILGenWeb includes indexes to federal lands sales, and the 1859, 1870, 1922, and 1941 plat maps of Kendall County.


 * Family Maps of Kendall County, Illinois (2005) plats the land of many nineteenth-century Kendall County residents. The publisher's bookstore includes a free online surname index.

Military

 * Civil War Civil War service men from Kendall County served in various regiments. Men often joined a company (within a regiment) that originated in their county. Listed below are companies or regiments that were formed from men of Kendall County.


 * - 36th Regiment, Illinois Infantry, Companies D, E, F, and I.
 * - 89th Regiment, Illinois Infantry, Company H.
 * - 91st Regiment, Illinois Infantry, Company E.

County Courthouse
County records are most often kept at the County Courthouse or another local repository. For further information about where the records for Kendall County are kept, see the Kendall County Courthouse page.

Vital Records

 * Kendall County Vital Records at ILGenWeb includes births, marriages, and deaths.

Births

 * 1877-1903 Birth Records IRAD-NIU; search for Kendall County Records. (Learn more about IRAD.)
 * 1817-1918 Birth Record Index IRAD-NIU; search for Kendall County Records. (Learn more about IRAD.)

Marriages

 * 1841-1900 Illinois Statewide Marriage Index at Illinois State Archives; Index
 * 1841-1915 Marriage Records IRAD-NIU; search for Kendall County Records. (Learn more about IRAD.)
 * 1841-1897 Marriage Record Index IRAD-NIU; search for Kendall County Records. (Learn more about IRAD.)

Deaths

 * 1877-1903 Illinois Statewide Death Index, Pre-1916 at Illinois State Archives; Index
 * 1916-1950 Database of Illinois Death Certificates at Illinois State Archives; Index
 * 1877-1903 Death Records IRAD-NIU; search for Kendall County Records. (Learn more about IRAD.)
 * 1877-1918 Marriage Record Index IRAD-NIU; search for Kendall County Records. (Learn more about IRAD.)

Web Sites

 * USGenWeb project. May have maps, name indexes, history or other information for this county. Select the state, then the county.
 * Kendall County, Illinois Genealogy and Family History(Linkpendium)
 * Kendall County, Illinois Genealogy and Family History(Linkpendium)