Richardson County, Nebraska Genealogy

United States Nebraska  Richardson County

Richardson County, Nebraska genealogy and family history research page. Guide to genealogy, history, and courthouse sources including birth records, marriage records, death records, census records, wills, deeds and land records, Civil War records, family histories, cemeteries, churches, tax records, newspapers, and obituaries.

County Courthouse
Richardson County Courthouse 1700 Stone St Falls City, NE 68355 Phone: 402.245.2911 County Clerk has birth and death records from 1918. County Judge has marriage records from 1800’s, probate and court records. Register of Deeds has land records Clerk District Court has divorce records.

Parent County
1854--Richardson County was created 23 November 1854 as an original county. County seat: Falls City

Record Loss
There is no known history of courthouse disasters in this county.

Neighboring Counties

 * Atchison County, Missouri
 * Brown County, Kansas
 * Doniphan County, Kansas
 * Holt County, Missouri
 * Nemaha County, Kansas
 * Nemaha
 * Pawnee

Cemeteries
ARCHER CEMETERY - Archer was the first county seat of Richardson County, Nebraska Territory. It was settled in 1854-55 and was located 3 1/2 miles northeast of Falls City in Section 36, Township 2, NR 16 also known as Ohio Township. Archer Cemetery is all that remains. Earlier graves were not marked and many were reinterred in other cemeteries.

Findagrave

Migration
Early migration routes to and from for European and African American settlers included:


 * Missouri River
 * Oregon Trail 1830s to 1890s from western Missouri to Oregon City, Oregon
 * California Trail 1846 to 1869 from western Missouri to northern California
 * Mormon Trail 1846 to 1869 from Nauvoo, Illinois to Salt Lake City, Utah

Probate
Online Probate Records
 * 1806 – 1989 Nebraska Wills and Probate Records 1806-1989 at Ancestry.com — index and images $

Web Sites

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