What Did Families Do in the Colony of North Carolina

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Online Records [edit | edit source]

  • 1600-1959 - Land records, North Carolina and Tennessee; indexes - images just.
  • 1669-1759 - Colonial estate papers - images only.
  • 1679-1775 - North Carolina wills and court records - images simply.
  • 1704-1846 - Minutes and standing committee - images only. Society of Friends. North Carolina Yearly Meeting.
  • 1712-1781 - Messages from N and Southward Carolina to England regarding the weather of the Church building of England - images merely.
  • 1740s-1790s - Sextons and curators of the Church building of England in England, 1740's-1790'south; list of plantation owners, 1740's-1800 - images but. In that location are some North Carolina records included in this collection, including some messages of recommendation and ordination for ministers and missionaries of the Church building of England to come to North Carolina.
  • 1755-1774 - North Carolina court of claims of land records - images only.
  • 1762-1934 - Quarterly coming together minutes- images only. Guild of Friends. N Carolina Yearly Coming together. Eastern Quarterly Coming together .
  • 1764-1853 - State grants, country entries and warrants and listing of grants for various counties of North Carolina - images only.
  • 1769-1771 - Listing of warrants for various counties of North Carolina - images only.

History [edit | edit source]

The kickoff European settlements in Northward Carolina were along the Albermarle Sound. The Concessions and Agreements of Albermarle Province were written in 1665 with the name being inverse to North Carolina in 1691. The Carolina lease was declared null and void in 1706, and Carolinas were divided into two provinces, with governors, in 1712. N Carolina officially became a royal colony of Not bad Britain in 1729. Due north Carolina was ane of the original 13 colonies of the United States.[ane]

Earliest Church Records Earliest Country Records Earliest Court Records Earliest Newspapers
1677 1663 1663 1751

[two]

Resources [edit | edit source]

Court and State Records [edit | edit source]

  • An Abstract of North Carolina Wills from about 1760 to most 1800: Supplementing Grimes' Abstruse of North Carolina Wills 1663 to 1760 past Fred A. Olds. (Baltimore: Genealogical Publishing, 1965).
  • Colony of North Carolina, Abstracts of Land Patents by Margaret M. Hofmann. 2 Vols. (Roanoke Rapids, NC: The Author, 1982).
  • The Colonial Records of Due north Carolina, 1662-1790 by William Saunders. 30 Vols. (1886. Reprint. Wilmington, NC: Broadfoot Publishing, 1993).
  • Human activity Abstract of Tryon, Lincoln and Rutherford Counties, Due north Carolina, 1769-1786: Tryon County Wills and Estates past Brent H. Holcomb. (Easley, SC: Southern Historical Press, 1977).
  • Early Records of Northward Carolina: From the Secretary of State Papers, 1677-1794 by Stephen E. Bradley. (Keysville, VA: The Writer, 1992).
  • The Governor, Council, and Assembly in Imperial North Carolina by Charles S. Cooke. (Chapel Hill: N Carolina Academy, 1912).
  • The Granville District of North Carolina, 1748-1763: Abstracts of Land Grants by Margaret M. Hofmann. (Weldon, NC: Roanoke News, 1986).
  • Alphabetize to Colonial & state records of North Carolina compiled by Stephen B. Weeks. 4 Vols. (Goldsboro, Due north Carolina : Nash Brothers, 1909-1914).
  • Land Tenure in Proprietary North Carolina by Lawrence Morgan. (Chapel Hill, North Carolina University, 1912).
  • Due north Carolina State Grants in South Carolina past Brent H. Holcomb. (Clinton, SC: The Writer, 1975).
  • North Carolina Taxpayers, 1679-1790 by Clarence E. Ratcliff. two Vols. (Baltimore: Genealogical Publishing Co., 1987-1989).
  • North Carolina Wills and Inventories Copied from Original and Recorded Wills and Inventories in the Role of the Secretary of Land past John Bryan Grimes. (Raleigh: Edwards and Broughton, 1912).
  • North Carolina Wills: A Testator Alphabetize, 1665-1900 by Thornton W. Mitchell. (Baltimore: Genealogical Publishing Co., 1965).
  • The Proprietors of Carolina by William Stevens Powell. (1963. Raleigh: Department of Archives and History, 1968).
  • Province of North Carolina, 1663-1729, Abstracts of State Patents past Margaret M. Hofmann. (Roanoke Rapids, NC: The Author, 1983).

Church Records [edit | edit source]

  • Early Methodism in the Carolinas by A. M. Chreitzberg. (1897. Reprint. Spartanburg, SC: The Reprint Co., 1972).
  • The Episcopal Church building in North Carolina, 1701-1959 past Lawrence London and Sarah Lemmon. (Raleigh: Episcopal Diocese of North Carolina, 1987).
  • History of the German Settlements and of the Lutheran Church in Northward and Southward Carolina: From the Primeval Catamenia of the Colonization of the Dutch, German and Swiss Settlers to the Close of the First Half of the Present Century by Yard. D. Bernheim. (Philadelphia: Lutheran Book Store, 1872).
  • History of the Lutheran Church in North Carolina by United Evangelical Lutheran Synod of North Carolina. (due north.p.: The Synod, 1953).
  • History of North Carolina past George Paschal. 2 Vols. (Raleigh: General Board, Northward Carolina Baptist Country Convention, 1930-1955). Free digital book available through Archive.org: vol. 1 and two.
  • Historic Sketch of the Reformed Church in North Carolina past Reformed Church, Classis of North Carolina. (Philadelphia: Publication Board of the Reformed Church in the United States, 1908).
  • Quaker Marriage Certificates: Pasquotank, Perquimans, Piney Woods, and Suttons Creek Monthly Meetings, North Carolina, 1677-1800 by Gwen Boyer Bjorkman. (Bowie, MD: Heritage Books, 1988).
  • Records of the Moravians in North Carolina, 1752-1879. eleven Vols. (Raleigh: Edwards and Broughton, 1922-1969).
  • The Society of the Propagation of the Gospel in the province of North Carolina and Correspondence of John Rust Eaton by David Dickson Oliver. (Raleigh: James Sprunt, 1910). Free digital volume bachelor through Google Books.

Other [edit | edit source]

  • Carolina Families: A Bibliography of Books about North and S Carolina Families by Donald M. Hehir. (Bowie, MD: Heritage Books, 1994).
  • Colonial North Carolina, a History by Hugh Talmage Lefler. (New York: Charles Scribner'due south Sons, 1973).
  • The County Courtroom in North Carolina Before 1750 by Paul M. McCain. (1954. Reprint. New York: AMS Printing, 1970).
  • Offense and Society in North Carolina, 1663-1776 by Donna J. Spindel. (Baton Rouge: Louisiana State University Press, 1989). An Due east-book can be borrowed digitally on Annal.org
  • Explorations, Descriptions, and Attempted Settlements of Carolina, 1584-1590 past Richard Hakluyt. Rev. ed. (Raleigh: Department of Archives and History, 1953).
  • The Highland Scots of North Carolina, 1732-1776 by Duane Meyer. (Chapel Colina: University of Due north Carolina Printing, 1966).
  • Indian Wars in Northward Carolina, 1663-1763 by Enoch Lawrence Lee. (Raleigh: Department of Archives and history, 1968).
  • The Mecklenburg Signers and Their Neighbors by Worth South. Ray. (1947. Reprint. Baltimore: Genealogical Publishing Co., 1966).
  • Narratives of Early on Carolina, 1650-1708 by A. Due south. Salley. (New York: Charles Scribner's Sons, 1911).
  • North Carolina Research: Genealogy and Local History past Helen Leary and Maurice Stirewalt. (Raleigh: Northward Carolina Genealogical Gild, 1980).
  • North and Southward Carolina Marriage Records: From the Primeval Colonial Days to the Ceremonious War past William m. Clemens. (1927. Reprint. Baltimore: Genealogical Publishing Co., 1981).
  • The Pirates of Colonial N Carolina past Hugh F. Rankin. (Raleigh: Section of Archives and History, 1972).
  • Records of Emigrants from England and Scotland to North Carolina, 1774-1775 past Albert Ray Newsome. (Raleigh: Department of Archives and history, 1962).
  • The Regulators in Northward Carolina: A Documentary History, 1759-1776 by William Stevens Powell. (Raleigh: Department of Archives and History, 1971).
  • Westward from Virginia: The Exploration of the Virginia-Carolina Borderland, 1650-1710 by Alan Vance Briceland. (Charlottesville: Academy Press of Virginia, 1987).

Guides to Manuscript Collections [edit | edit source]

  • Genealogical Resources in the Guilford College Library. (Greenville, NC: The Library, 1977). The Guilford Library contains records of the Society of Friends kickoff in 1680. [iii]
  • Guide to the Manuscript Collections in the Duke University Library by Nannie M. Trilley. (Durham: Knuckles University Press, 1947).
  • Guide to Individual Manuscript Collections in the Due north Carolina State Archives by Barbara T. Cain. 3rd Ed. (Raleigh: North Carolina Section of Cultural Resources, Sectionalization of Archives and History, 1981).
  • Guide to Research Materials in the North Carolina Country Archives: Section B, Canton Records. tenth ed. (Raleigh: Division of Archives and history, 1988).
  • Listing of the Papeles Procendentes De Cuba (Cuban Papers) in the Archives of the North Carolina Historical Commission past Historical Records Survey. (Raleigh: The Survey, 1942).
  • The Southern Historical Collection: A Guide to Manuscripts by Susan Sokol Blosser. (Chapel Hill: University of North Carolina Library, 1970).

References [edit | edit source]

  1. Christina G. Schaefer, Genealogical encyclopedia of the colonial Americas : a consummate digest of the records of all the countries of the Western Hemisphere (Baltimore, Maryland : Genealogical Publishing Visitor, c1998), 517, WorldCat (Other Libraries); FHL volume 929.11812 D26 1998
  2. Christina G. Schaefer, Genealogical encyclopedia of the colonial Americas : a consummate digest of the records of all the countries of the Western Hemisphere (Baltimore, Maryland : Genealogical Publishing Company, c1998), 183, 192. WorldCat (Other Libraries); FHL book 929.11812 D26 1998
  3. Christina K. Schaefer, Genealogical encyclopedia of the colonial Americas: a complete assimilate of the records of all the countries of the Western Hemisphere (Baltimore, Maryland: Genealogical Publishing Visitor, c1998), 517, WorldCat (Other Libraries); FHL book 929.11812 D26 1998

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