Orange County, North Carolina Genealogy

United States   North Carolina    Orange County

Guide to Orange County, North Carolina ancestry, family history, and genealogy birth records, marriage records, death records, census records, family history, and military records.

County Courthouse
Orange County Courthouse 200 S Cameron St Hillsborough, NC 27278 Phone:  919-245-2675  Courthouse burned 1789 Registrar of Deeds has Birth and Death rec from 1913 marriage and land records from 1754, divorce records from 1869 probate records from 1756 and court records from 1865 Register of Deeds PO Box 8181 Hillsborough, NC 27278 Telephone: 919-245-2676 Fax:	919-644-3018 Website Clerk of Superior Court 106 E Margaret Lane Hillsborough, NC 27278 Telephone: (919) 644-4500

History
Orange County NC was created out of parts of Bladen, Granville, and Johnston counties in 1752. At that time, it comprised a large section of the middle of the NC colony, extending halfway from the VA line to the SC line. It was named for the infant William V of Orange. His mother Anne, who was a daughter of King George II of England, was the dowager princess of the Dutch Republic.

At the time that the county was formed, there were 5 Native American tribes living in the area.

As other counties were created out of parts of Orange’s territory, these counties were created wholly out of Old Orange: Chatham (1771), Caswell (1777) and Person (created out of Caswell in 1791), and Alamance (1849). Other sections of the old county were combined with parts of other counties to create: Guilford (1771) –which gave birth in turn to Randolph (1779) and Rockingham (1785) — Wake (1771), Durham (1881), and Lee (1907). After all of this, Orange County was just a fraction of its original size.

Parent County
1752--Orange County was created from Bladen, Granville and Johnston Counties. County seat: Hillsborough

Boundary Changes
For animated maps illustrating North Carolina county boundary changes, "Rotating Formation North Carolina County Boundary Maps" (1664-1965) may be viewed for free at the MapofUS.org website.

Record Loss
For a list of record loss in North Carolina counties see: North Carolina Counties with Burned Courthouses

Neighboring Counties

 * Alamance
 * Caswell
 * Chatham
 * Durham
 * Person

Baptist

 * Rocky River, near Siler City, N.C. Organized about 1757. Now located in Chatham County.
 * South Country Line or Waters of Haw River. Constituted 1783.

Church of England

 * St. Matthew's Parish. Established 1752.

Presbyterian

 * Eno. Founded in 1755.
 * Hawfields. Founded about 1755. Now located in Alamance County. Official website.

Family Histories

 * [Clendenin] White, Jo White. "Clendenin of Orange County, North Carolina: An Exercise in Southern Genealogical Problem Solving," The Genealogist, Vol. 6, No. 2 (Fall 1985):186-190.
 * [Thompson] Buchanan, Jane Gray. Thomas Thompson and Ann Finney of Colonial Pennsylvania and North Carolina, Lawrence, Closs, and John Thompson. Allied Lines of Finney, McAllister, Buchanan, and Hart. Oak Ridge, Tenn.: J.G. Buchanan, 1987..

Civil War
Civil War Confederate units - Brief history, counties where recruited, etc.
 * 1861 - 1865 at FamilySearch.org — index and images
 * 1861 - 1865 at FamilySearch.org — index and images


 * -1st Regiment, North Carolina Infantry, usually known as the Bethel Regiment.
 * -1st Regiment, North Carolina Infantry
 * -6th Regiment, North Carolina Infantry
 * -11th Regiment, North Carolina Infantry
 * - 11th Regiment, North Carolina Infantry, Company G :- 13th Battalion, North Carolina Infantry, Company A :-1st Brigade, North Carolina Reserves, Company I :-1st Regiment, North Carolina Infantry, Company D :-1st Regiment, North Carolina Infantry,usually known as the Bethel Regiment, Company D :-1st Regiment, North Carolina Junior Reserves, Company I :-2nd Regiment, North Carolina Cavalry, Company K :-3rd Battalion, North Carolina Senior Reserves, Captain Mark Durham's Company :- 3rd Regiment, North Carolina Artillery, 2nd Company G :-6th Regiment, North Carolina Infantry, Company B :-6th Regiment, North Carolina Infantry, Company C

Newspapers

 * UNC Black Student Movement Newspapers (1969-1981) -- available from the NC Digital Heritage Center
 * North Carolina Newspaper Digitization Project, North Carolina State Archives. Search full text newspapers published in Hillsboro.

Probate

 * Pre-1790 - Pre-1790 Wills stored at the North Carolina State Archives are online - free. Website tips.


 * 1752-1946 - have been digitized by FamilySearch - free.

Birth Records

 * 1800 - 2000 at FamilySearch.org — index
 * 1866 - 1964 at FamilySearch.org — index

Death Records

 * 1898 - 1994 at FamilySearch.org — index and images
 * 1908 - 2004 North Carolina Death Indexes 1908-2004 at Ancestry.com — index $
 * 1909-1975 North Carolina Death Certificates 1909-1975 at Ancestry.com — index and images $
 * 1931 - 1994 at FamilySearch.org — index

Divorce Records

 * 1958 - 2004North Carolina Divorce Index 1958-2004 at Ancestry.com — index $

Marriages

 * 1741 - 2004 North Carolina Marriage Index 1741-2004 at Ancestry.com — index $
 * 1759 - 1979 at FamilySearch.org — index
 * 1762 - 1969 at FamilySearch.org — index and images

Yearbooks

 * UNC-Chapel Hill: 1890-1978
 * Orange County students at NC colleges - via the NCGenWeb Yearbook Index

Societies and Libraries
The Durham-Orange Genealogical Society of North Carolina P.O. Box 4703 Chapel Hill, NC 27515-4703 Orange County Genealogical Society

Family History Centers

 * Introduction to LDS Family History Centers
 * Durham North Carolina Family History Center

Web Sites

 * Orange County, NC History, Records, Facts and Genealogy (Genealogy Inc)
 * NCGenWeb: Orange County - part of the USGenWeb Project
 * USGenWeb Orange County Archives - many additional genealogical records of all kinds
 * USGenWeb Orange County Archives - many additional genealogical records of all kinds