Strafford County, New Hampshire Genealogy

United States &gt; New Hampshire &gt; Strafford County

County Courthouse
250 County Farm Road Dover, NH 03820

History

 * Strafford County, New Hampshire was named for William Wentworth, 2nd Earl of Strafford in the mistaken belief that he was the ancestor of governor John Wentworth. Although they were distantly related, William had no descendants.

Parent County

 * Strafford County was established on 10 March 1771 from the Colonial lands.

Boundary Changes

 * Belknap County was established from lands taken off from Strafford County on 22 December 1840.

Record Loss
One record source that would be helpful, but was destroyed, is the 1890 census. There was a fire in Washington, D. C. in 1921 which badly damaged the records. None of the New Hampshire population records remain. The 1890 census Civil War veterans' lists were kept in a different building and were saved. They are available on microfilms from the Family History Library, and at www.ancestry.com. You can search for veterans' or widows' names.

Populated Places
Cities:

Towns:

Villages:


 * Bow Lake
 * Burton
 * Center Strafford
 * East Rochester
 * Gonic
 * Milton Mills
 * North Rochester
 * Salmon Falls

Neighboring Counties
Belknap | Carroll | Merrimack | Rockingham | York County, Maine

Cemeteries
Cemeteries The New Hampshire Old Graveyard Association has the most complete list of cemeteries.

The Findagrave organization provides a way for you to request that a volunteer will take a photograph of a gravestone. Often a volunteer will respond and will e-mail you the photo and add it to the web site.

Another internet site may help you find gravestone records. See billiongraves.com.

Church
If you know the town of residence and the ancestor's denomination, contact the town historical society, or the public library for that town. They may have information on available church records. You can also see the Church Records section in the general information for New Hampshire. That section lists archives and other record keepers for the various religious denominations.

If you do not know the denomination, search for a marriage record. This may give the name of the minister. Then you can contact a historical society and learn at which church he was the minister. Also search for an obituary, which may mention the church the person attended. The death certificate may list the name of the cemetery. You can then write to the cemetery and ask if it is affiliated with a local church. The death certificate may mention the funeral home. Their file may have the name of the church, cemetery, or a copy of the obituary. Also, relatives might know the denomination.

Different churches contain a variety of types of records. Many churches keep baptism, marriage, and burial records. Sometimes birth and death information is included. The church records of brothers and sisters, etc. may give clues.

Court
Most of the court records for Strafford County for years after 1773 are at the county courthouse listed above. For records after 1773 the Family History Library has some records on microfilms and the records have indexes in most volumes:

Court of Common Pleas, 1773-1816, and 1840-1859. (After 1859 see Superior Court.)

Superior Court, 1773-1874, 1901-1920.

Supreme Court, 1855-1874, 1876-1901. (For 1874-1876 see Circuit Court.)

Circuit Court, 1874-1876.

Some Stafford County court records are at the New Hampshire State Archives in Concord, New Hampshire. As of July 2012 these include: court records 1780-1859, 1870-1874; dockeet books 1820-1874 (some gaps); and road records for 1840s - 1850s.

Gazetteers
You can go to google.com and do a search for the name of a city, town, or village in New Hampshire and you will often find helpful information. This may lead you to a Wikipedia article, or the official internet site for that city, town, or village.

To learn about New Hampshire gazetteer books, go to the New Hampshire article in this wiki. There is a section where New Hampshire gazetteers published in 1823, 1849, and 1874 are listed. Those gazetteers can be ordered on microfilms from the Family History Library. Check at your Family History Center to see if they already have the microfilm you are interested in.

Land
Strafford County deeds are at the county courthouse listed above. The Family History Library has microfilms of the following deed records, which can be requested through Family History Centers:

Grantor (seller) indexes, 1773-1900. Most of the indexes are for ten-year time periods.

Granteer (buyer) indexes, 1773-1900. The indexes are mostly for ten-year periods.

Deed volumes, 1773-1901, volumes 1-325.

Land transfer index, 1933-1989.

There is also a land owners' map for 1856 available on two microfiche from the Family History Library.

Civil War

 * History of Strafford County, New Hampshire and its Representative Citizens, by John Scales - History of Dover - The Civil War - Lists of Regiments and Soldiers, see Chapter 17, page 194.


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


 * - 1st Regiment, New Hampshire Infantry, Companies A, B, C, and K.
 * - 2nd Regiment, New Hampshire Infantry, Companies D and H.
 * - 3rd Regiment, New Hampshire Infantry, Companies D, I, and K.
 * - 4th Regiment, New Hampshire Infantry, Companies A, B, F, and G.
 * - 5th Regiment, New Hampshire Infantry, Companies A and D.
 * - 6th Regiment, New Hampshire Infantry, Companies D and H.
 * - 8th Regiment, New Hampshire Infantry, Companies G and I.
 * - 11th Regiment, New Hampshire Infantry, Company K.

Newspapers
Newspaperarchive.com ($) has historical newspapers available on-line. Their database has Portsmouth,NH newspapers from the early 1900's covering local news that included residents from Stafford County communities.

Vital Records
Certified copies of of birth, death, and marriage records are available from the State Division of Vital Records Administration or from the local city and town clerk where the event took place. Original records are kept by the city or town clerk and copies are sent to the state.

In 1905, when the state created the Bureau of Vital Records and Health, printed cards were distributed to the local clerks and earlier vital records were transcribed onto the cards and submitted to the state.

Births

 * are available online from FamilySearch.

Marriages

 * are available online from FamilySearch.

Deaths

 * are available online from FamilySearch.

Family History Centers

 * Introduction to LDS Family History Centers

Web Sites

 * Strafford County, New Hampshire Genealogy and Family History (Linkpendium)
 * Family History Library catalog for Sullivan County