Missouri Military Records

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United States U.S. Military  Missouri  Military Records

Introduction
Many military records are found at the Family History Library, the National Archives (WW1-Present NARA in St. Louis, Mo.; Pre-WW1 records at NARA in Washington DC), and other federal and state archives. United States Military Records provides more information on the federal military records and search strategies.

Forts
Civil War Forts:


 * Cape Girardeau- Acutally contained 4 forts (A, B, C and D),
 * Curtis, aka Hovey,
 * Davidson,
 * Dette,
 * Hamer,
 * Insley,
 * New Madrid,
 * Thompson,
 * Wyman

Other Forts:


 * Fort Bellefontaine-- 1805- 1826  First United States fort west of Mississippi river.
 * Fort Carondolet
 * Fort Celeste -- 1789-
 * Fort Orleans-- 1723-1728/9
 * Fort Osage --1808-1827; originally named Fort Clark
 * Jefferson Barracks-- St. Louis Public Library owns the portion of the NARA microfilm set, Returns From U.S. Military Posts, 1800-1916, that includes Jefferson Barracks. Textual records of this fort, 1827-1909, including registers, reports, and correspondence, are in the National Archives and are described in Records of United States Army, Continental Commands, 1821-1920, under the section entitled Records of Posts, 1820-1940 (Record Group 393.7).

For Missouri the following sources are also very helpful. Most are available at:

Office of the Adjutant General 1717 Industrial Drive Jefferson City, MO 65101

Copies of many of the records are also available at the Family History Library and the St. Louis Public Library.

Revolutionary War (1775-1783)
An alphabetical list of soldiers, their birth dates, death dates, and military service is Alice Kinyoun Houts, Revolutionary Soldiers Buried in Missouri (Worldcat)and St. Louis Public Library owns NARA's microfilm set, General Index to Compiled Service Records of Revolutionary War Soldiers.

The 1835 Pension Roll

On June 5, 1834, the U.S. Senate required the Secretary of War to submit a statement showing the names of pensioners who were on the pension rolls or had previously been on the pension rolls. For more information on the 1835 Pension Roll see Revolutionary War Pension Records. The 1835 Pension Roll for Missouri is available online:


 * Report from the Secretary of War... Vol. III (Google Books)
 * The Pension Roll of 1835, Vol. IV (Ancestry) ($)

War of 1812 (1812-1815)
The War of 1812 between Britain and the United States confirmed the separate existence of the United States and the future Canada. See the Wiki article, Missouri in the War of 1812, for information concerning military records, histories, links to relevant web sites, etc. for Missouri Territory.

There are helpful nationwide records for soldiers of the War of 1812. For more information, see United States in the War of 1812.

Mexican War (1846-1848)
The Mexican War was caused by the annexation of Texas by the United States in 1845. Most volunteer regiments were from southern states. Records of Mexican War veterans might exist in a state where the veteran later resided.


 * Mexican War Index to Pension Files, 1887–1926. (NARA T317). Alphabetically arranged and includes the veteran’s name, rank, and unit; names of dependents; date of filing and application; certificate numbers; act filed under; and state from which application was made. Also available at:


 * (FamilySearch) Free digital copy. (Learn more.)


 * Robarts, William Hugh. Mexican War Veterans : A Complete Roster of the Regular and Volunteer Troops in the War Between the United States and Mexico, from 1846-1848… Washington, D.C. : Brentano’s, 1887. Digital version available at Internet Archive.

The Missouri Soldier's Database: War of 1812 - WWI is a database from the Missouri State Archives that provides information from service cards created by the Missouri Adjutant General's Office. The service cards include more than 576,00 Missouri soldiers who served in conflicts from the War of 1812 to World War I. The Missouri State Archives has a brief description of Missouri troops in the War with Mexico.

Click on these links to learn more about the Mexican War and about Mexican War pension records.

Civil War (1861-1865)
See Missouri in the Civil War for information about Missouri Civil War records, web sites, etc. with links to articles about the Missouri regiments involved in the Civil War.

The regimental pages often include lists of the companies with links to the counties where the companies started. Men in the companies often lived in the counties where the companies were raised. Knowing a county can help when researching more about the soldiers and their families.

The Civil War Soldiers and Sailors System allows name searching for soldiers. The result set gives the regiments for the soldiers. Then you can check the Wiki regiment pages to determine counties. Often knowing the counties that had men in a regiment will help you determine if a soldier was your ancestor.

FamilySearch Historical Records Online Databases:


 * Missouri, Civil War Service Records of Confederate Soldier
 * Missouri, Confederate Pension Applications and Soldiers' Home Admission Applications
 * Missouri, Civil War Service Records of Union Soldiers
 * Missouri Confederate Death Records at Ancestry.com ($)
 * Missouri Civil War Records at Ancestry.com ($)
 * History of the First and Second Missouri Confederate Brigades, 1861-1865 : and, From Wakarusa to Appomattox, a military anagrap at Ancestry.com ($)
 * Missouri Confederate Volunteers at Ancestry.com ($)

Wiki articles describing these online records are found at:


 * Missouri, Civil War Service Records of Confederate Soldiers (FamilySearch Historical Records)
 * Missouri, Confederate Pension Applications and Soldiers' Home Admission Applications (FamilySearch Historical Records)
 * Missouri, Civil War Service Records of Union Soldiers (FamilySearch Historical Records)

Indian Wars (1780s-1890s)
The Missouri Soldier's Database: War of 1812 - WWI is a database from the Missouri State Archives that provides information from service cards created by the Missouri Adjutant General's Office. The service cards include more than 576,00 Missouri soldiers who served in conflicts from the War of 1812 to World War I. The Missouri State Archives gives a brief description of each of the wars. The database includes the following conflicts:


 * Black Hawk War, 1832
 * Heatherly War, 1836
 * Seminole War, 1837
 * Osage War, 1837

Spanish-American War (1898)
The Spanish-American War was largely fought in Cuba and the Philippines. Spanish-American War records might exist in the state from which the soldier served or in a state where the veteran later resided.

Indexes


 * (NARA T288). (FamilySearch) Free digital copy. The index covers veterans of the Civil War, Spanish‑American War, Philippine Insurrection, Boxer Rebellion (1900 to 1901), and the regular Army, Navy, and Marine forces. (Learn more.)


 * (FamilySearch) Free digital copy. (Learn more.)

In addition to the federal records, the Missouri Adjutant General's office has muster rolls and an index to volunteers. St. Louis Public Library owns the NARA microfilm set, General Index to Compiled Service Records of Volunteer Soldiers Who Served During the War with Spain and the Philippine Insurrection. SLPL also provides on its websitea bibliography of items the Library owns about the Spanish-American War, including rosters, general histories, and regimental and battle histories.

Missourians of the Spanish American War

The Missouri Soldier's Database: War of 1812 - WWI is a database from the Missouri State Archives that provides information from service cards created by the Missouri Adjutant General's Office. The service cards include more than 576,00 Missouri soldiers who served in conflicts from the War of 1812 to World War I. The Missouri State Archives has a brief description of Missouri troops in the Spanish-American War.

Click on the link to learn more about the Spanish American War.

World War I (1917-1918)
World War I was a global war fought on multiple continents with several nations involved. Over four million men and women served from the United States.


 * United States. Selective Service System. Missouri, World War I Selective Service System Draft Registration Cards, 1917-1918. National Archives Microfilm Publications, M1509. Washington, DC: National Archives, 1987-1988. (On Family History Library films beginning with St. Louis Public Library owns the portion of this microfilm set that contains records for men from St. Louis City and County. also available at:


 * (FamilySearch) - free

United States World War I Draft Records provides additional information.


 * The Missouri Adjutant General's office has service files and bonus application papers. The latter often contain family information.


 * The Missouri Soldier's Database: War of 1812 - WWI is a database from the Missouri State Archives that provides information from service cards created by the Missouri Adjutant General's Office. The service cards include more than 576,00 Missouri soldiers who served in conflicts from the War of 1812 to World War I. The Missouri State Archives has a brief description of Missouri troops in World War I.

World War II (1941-1945)
On April 27, 1942, the Selective Service conducted the fourth of six draft registrations related to WWII. The "World War II Selective Service Draft Cards: Fourth Registration, 1942" is often referred to as the “Old Man’s Registration” or the “Old Man’s Draft" because it included men with a date of birth from April 28, 1877 to February 16, 1897. Since there is overlap in the WWI and WWII Selective Service registration, men born in the years 1877 to 1900 may have registered twice and have both WWII and WWI draft records.


 * (FamilySearch) - free
 * (images with partial index) (FamilySearch) - free


 * Also available at:


 * Ancestry ($)
 * Fold3 ($).

World War II United States Military Records provides additional information.

Korean War (1950–1953)
The Korean War was a conflict between North Korea (and its communist allies) and South Korea (with support of the United Nations, primarily the United States). See the Korean War wiki article for information on records and their availability.

Vietnam War (1964–1972)
The Vietnam War was a conflict between North Vietnam (and its communist allies) and South Vietnam (with support of its anti-communist allies, including the United States). See the Vietnam War wiki article for information on records and their availability.

Additional Records
Divided State: Missouri Military Organizations in the Civil War is an index on the St. Louis Public Library website of books and periodical articles about Missouri military organizations, Union and Confederate. There is also an article on the website about Missouri Union Militia Organizations.Further information about Missouri Civil War soldiers, regiments, and battles can be discovered in The Civil War In Missouri: a Selected, Annotated Bibliography (available on the website of St. Louis Public Library).

The book "A Compendium of the War of the Rebellion, V.III" by Frederick H. Dyer, lists on pages 1301-1343 many of the Union units, both federal and local milita, which served in the Civil War. With some units, lists of soldiers and brief unit histories are given. This book is available on Portions are also available [http://home.usmo.com/~momollus/MOVOLFED.HTM#HG. online].

The Missouri State Archives has state records of volunteers and state militia, including descriptive muster rolls and enlistment and discharge rolls.

A special 1890 census of Union veterans is at the National Archives and on. A published index to this census is available.

The Family History Library has 214 microfilms of records in various collections created by the Missouri Adjutant General's office for service in the War of 1812, Black Hawk War, Seminole War, Mormon War, Heatherly War, Iowa War, Mexican War, and Civil War. The records include burial information, state militia rolls, and county enrollments.


 * The service of the Missouri National Guard on the Mexican border, under the President's order of June 18, 1916 : with a roster at Ancestry.com ($)
 * Missouri National Guard, the Mexican Border, 1916 at Ancestry.com ($)
 * Adjutant General's report of Missouri state militia at Ancestry.com ($)
 * Missouri State Offices Political and Military Records, 1919 - 1920 at Ancestry.com ($)

National Personnel Records Center (NPRC)
1 Archives Drive

St. Louis, MO 63138

Telephone:  314-801-0800

Fax:  314-801-9195

E-mail: MPR.center@nara.gov

Internet: http://www.archives.gov/st-louis/

This facility holds WW1 records - present. Records 1912-1952 are open to the public. Documents after 1952 are private, but available to decendants.

National Archives Washington D.C.
National Archives and Records Administration

700 Pennsylvania Avenue, NW

Washington, DC 20408-0001

Telephone: 202-357-5000

Customer Service Center Telephone: 1-866-272-6272

Lost and Found: 202-357-5023

Email: N/A

Website: http://www.archives.gov/dc-metro/washington/

This NARA facility holds military records from the Revolutionary War until 1912.

Web Sites

 * Missouri Digital Heritage
 * Missouri State Archives
 * St. Louis Public Library
 * Access Genealogy
 * Missouri Military Records (Missouri Genealogy)
 * Ancestry.com (paid site)
 * Fold3.com (paid site)
 * FamilySearch.org