Carroll County, New HampshireEdit This Page
From FamilySearch Wiki
United States
New Hampshire
Carroll County
County Courthouse
Carroll County Courthouse
Rt 171
Ossipee, NH 03864
Phone: 603.539.7751
The Clerk of the Court has divorce and court records from 1859.
Town Clerks have birth, marriage, death and burial records.
The Probate Judge has probate records, and the Register of Deeds has land records.[1]
Towns Organized Before 1800:
Albany 1766
Brookfield 1794
Chatham 1767
Conway 1765
Eaton 1766
Effingham 1788
Moultonborough 1777
Ossipee 1785
Sandwich 1768
Tamworth 1766
Tuftonborough 1795
Wakefield 1774
Wolfeborough 1770
History
- The county was named for Charles Carroll of Carrollton (September 19, 1737 – November 14, 1832) who was a delegate to the Continental Congress and later United States Senator for Maryland. He was the only Catholic signer of the Declaration of Independence. He was the longest lived signer of the Declaration of Independence and the Continental Congress. He lived to age 95.
Parent County
Created 22 December 1840 from Strafford County. [1]
Boundary Changes
Record Loss
Places / Localities
Populated Places
| ||||||
[[Image:
]]
Villages:
- Center Conway
- Chocorua
- Melvin Village
- North Conway
- Redstone
- Silver Lake
- Wonalancet
Neighboring Counties
Belknap | Coös | Grafton | Strafford | Maine counties: Oxford | York
Resources
Cemeteries
- Carroll County Cemeteries, hosted by Findagrave, (accessed 20 August 2011).
- Carroll County Cemetery List, hosted by epodunk, (accesssed 20 August 2011).
Cemetery Records: Courtesy of the Conway Public Library
- Albany, NH Cemeteries Records Database
- Brownfield, Maine Cemetery Records Database
- Conway, NH Cemeteries Records Database
- Eaton, NH Cemetrey Records Database
- Fryeburg, Maine Cemetery Records and other Fryeburg genealogy sources
- The New Hampshire Old Graveyard Association has the most complete list of cemeteries. This list is available athttp://www.rootsweb.ancestry.com/~nhoga.
- 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.
- If the above internet sources do not list your ancestor's name, you may wish to contact the cemetery sexton, town clerk, town library, or town historical society. Also check the Family History Library Catalog at www.familysearch.org, since the records may have been microfilmed.
Census
Censuses for 1790 through 1940, except for the 1890 population schedules, are available on several internet sites. The site www.familysearch.org is currently indexing many of these census records. Volunteers are needed! Check with familysearch.org about many indexing opportunities.
The 1890 census, except for the list of Civil War veterans or their widows, was destroyed by a fire in Washington, D. C. in 1921. An interesting help for 1890 is the Town and City Atlas of the State of New Hampshire, published in 1892 in Boston by the D. H. Hurd Company. The atlas has maps for almost every city, town, and village in New Hampshire. The maps show the locations of homes, and the map gives the name of the person living in the home. The above web site is from the University of New Hampshire Library.
Note: the 1890 census veterans' schedules for New Hampshire were preserved. They list Civil War veterans or their widows, and are available at ancestry.com.
Church Records
If you know the name of the town or city, and the denomination, you may wish to contact the local town historical society. They may be able to send you the names and addresses of churches of that denomination for the town.
Or, if you know the town of residence and the ancestor's denomination, 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 Records
Carroll County court records are kept at the courthouse at Ossipee, New Hampshire. Some records may begin in 1841 when the county was established from Strafford county. For information before 1841 see the wiki sections for Strafford county.
The Family History Library has microfilms of the following Carroll County court records:
Supreme Court, 1861-1876 and 1876-1901
Circuit Court 1874-1876
Superior Court 1901-1916
Court Judgements 1861-1916
The records include plaintiff and defendant indexes for 1859-1897, and 1897-1928.
Some New Hampshire counties are transferring their county records to the New Hampshire State Archives in Concord, New Hampshire. You may wish to contact the County Clerk or State Archives to learn if records have been transferred.
Gazetteers
- Carroll County Town Descriptions from Merrill's Gazetteer of New Hampshire (1817), (accessed 20 August 2011).
- See the Gazetteers section in the New Hampshire wiki article for information about several early New Hampshire gazetteers.
Genealogy - How to get started?
1. Check new.familysearch.org and see if your ancestor's information is listed there.
2. Check familysearch.org and see if your family's vital records of births, marriages, and deaths are listed.
3. Check familysearch.org and see if your family is listed on the U. S. census records of 1850-1940. You can also see those censuses at the Family History Center using Heritage Quest, and ancestry.com.
4. If you know the county where your ancestor lived, take a look at the free internet site www.usgenweb.com. A volunteer helper gathers information about ancestors who lived in that county. You might find biographies, cemetery records, deeds, obituaries, queries, vital records, etc. You can leave a query.
5. If you know the town where they lived, look for a town history with a genealogical section. See the section below for how to find out if there is a town history.
6. Read the wiki articles on Carroll County, and on New Hampshire, for ideas of sources. Study the Records Selection Table in the New Hampshire article. This can help you think of new sources to try.
7. Enter your ancestor's information on new.familysearch.org., genforum.com, or ancestry.com. You can also share your quest with the local historical society, genealogical socieety, or town library and ask for help. Send them a family group form and a pedigree chart.
Genealogy - Town Histories often have Genealogical Sections
For Carroll County the Family History Library has genealogical books or manuscripts for the following towns:
Conway - There is an alphabetical genealogical collection on six microfilms.
Eaton - There is the Keith Henney Family Records Card File, 1760-1947 on one film.
Tamworth - A collection is available on one microfilm with forms sent out by the town clerk to be completed by families.
Tuftonboro - A history book was written by John William Hayley in 1923. It has over 1100 pages and has genealogies. The Family History Library has the book. It is not on film.
Wakefield - There is a film with various records compiled about 1949 by members of the Daughters of the American Revolution.
NOTE: For most of the towns in Carroll County, the birth records to 1900, and marriage and death records to 1947, are on microfilms or in book form available through the Family History Library. These include Albany, Bartlett, Brookfield, Chatham, Conway, Eaton, Effingham, Freedom, Hart's Location, Jackson, Madison, Moultonboroough, Ossipee, Tamworth, Tuftonboro, Wakefield, and Wolfeboro.
Land and Property
The Registry of Deeds at the county courthouse at Ossipee, New Hampshire has the deed records beginning in 1841. Some county records may be transferred from time to time to the New Hampshire State Archives in Concord, New Hampshire. You may wish to check with the county clerk, or the State Archives to ask if records have been transferred.
The Family History Library has microfilms of the following deed records:
Grantor (seller) indexes 1841-1860, and 1861-1909
Grantee (buyer) indexes 1841-1860, and 1861-1909
Deed volumes, 1-115, for 1841-1901.
Please go to the Family History Library Catalog at familysearch.org and look under Carroll, New Hampshire - Land and Propery, for the film numbers.
Local Histories
There are many local history books available for Carroll County, and, towns in Carroll County. See the Family History Library Catalog and type New Hampshire, Carroll for county histories and genealogies. See New Hampshire - Carroll - [name of town] - Genealogy or History for town genealogy and history books. Following are examples:
- History of Carroll County, New Hampshire, hosted by New Hampshire Genealogy Trails, (accessed 20 August 2011).
- Wiley, Benjamin G., Incidents in White Mountain history, together with many interesting anecdotes illustrating life in the backwoods, (Boston: N.Noyes; Dover, N.H., E. J. Lane; 1856). IOnline book at Internet Archives.
The New Hampshire State Library at Concord, New Hampshire has a vast collection of books about New Hampshire towns and counties. Check their internet catalog for a town of interest.
The New Hampshire Historical Society also in Concord has a very large collection of local history books and other publications.
Maps
- Map of Carroll County, New Hampshire 1861, (accessed 20 August 2011).
- Contact the local historical society or public library. They may be able to photocopy a map or a section of a map for a small fee.
Military Records
American Revolution
The most complete listing of New Hampshire Revolutionary War soldiers is found in volumes 14-17 of the New Hamsphire State Papers. You can go to google.com, and look forNew Hampshire State Papers with the link to ancestry.com. There you will find a name index to voloumes 14-17, then you can go to the needed volume and page for information on the soldier. Often the place of residence is given.
For a military history of New Hampshire, see:
Potter, Chandler Eastman, The Military History of the State of New Hampshire. Concord, N.H.: McFarland & Jenks, 1866. (Family History Library film 1033664; fiche 6046858.) You can search this book on-line by going to google.com. Look for ancestry.com as the internet way to search this book. This history comprises events from the first settlements in New Hampshire to the rebellion in 1861. It includes biographical notices of many of the officers and explanatory notes.
Civil War
Familysearch.org is a free source for locating names of Civil War soldiers and sailors. Ancestry.com is available free at FamilySearch Centers and is also valuable for finding names of soldiers and sailors.
You can go to ancestry.com and search for names in The Revised Register of the Soldiers and Sailors of New Hampshire in the War of the Rebellion, 1861-1866, by Augustus D. Ayling. This book gives the age, residence, and service information about approximately 32,000 New Hampshire Civil War veterans. The book is also available on microfilm or microfiche from the Family History Library.
Town history books are available through the Family History Library, and other large libraries, for some of the towns in Cheshire County. They often contain extensive information concerning the war and the soldiers.
- History of Carroll County, New Hampshire, by Georgia Drew Merrill - Chapter XVII - Military Affairs in Carroll County Prior to 1860 - Soldiers in the Rebellion 1861-1865. See pages 134-185.
- Civil War service men from Carroll 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 Carroll County.
- - 2nd Regiment, New Hampshire Infantry, Company F.
- - 3rd Regiment, New Hampshire Infantry, Company G.
- - 4th Regiment, New Hampshire Infantry, Company D.
- - 5th Regiment, New Hampshire Infantry, Company H.
- - 6th Regiment, New Hampshire Infantry, Company D.
- - 8th Regiment, New Hampshire Infantry, Company I.
- - 11th Regiment, New Hampshire Infantry, Company C.
- - 12th Regiment, New Hampshire Infantry, Companies G and K.
- - 13th Regiment, New Hampshire Infantry, Company A.
World War I
A very helpful source for World War I is an index at www.ancestry.com of World War I draft registration records, 1917-1918. All men between ages eighteen and forty-five were required to register. Their birth date and place, address, and sometimes the name of nearest kin, are listed on the card. Many of these men served in the war.
World War II
There is an index on www.ancestry.com of the 1942 World War II draft registrations for New Hampshire, of men forty-five to sixty-five. Some of these men served in that war. The records contain name, address, birth date and place, name of kin or friend, name and address of employer, and signature. (See www.ancestry.com for further information.) The following book may be helpful:
- Carroll County, New Hampshire World War II Casualties Army and Air Force, (accessed 20 August 2011).
Naturalization and Citizenship
There are naturalization records at the Carroll Countycourthouse in Ossipee, New Hampshire. The Family History Library has microfilms of those naturalization records for the time period 1871-1942. These are records in the various courts in Carroll County. See the Family History Library Catalog, New Hampshire, Carroll, Naturalization and Citizenshsip for the microfilm numbers.
If you are looking for naturalization records during the years 1861-1870 you might possibly find them among the court records. See the Court Records section above for information on the indexes and records.
Newspapers
A good way to find newspaper birth, marriage, death records, and obituaries is to contact the local historical society or public library They may be able to tell you which organization has the newspapers for their region. Go to the internet site of the Association of Historical Societies of New Hampshire to see if there is a historical society in the town or region where your people lived. Look on the internet for a public library in the town.
The New Hampshire Historical Society and the New Hampshire State Library, both in Concord, New Hampshire, have large collections of newspapers.
Several companies are putting newspapers on the internet. They are indexed by ancestors' names. One company is genealogybank.com. They are adding newspapers regularly. They have many newspapers from New Hampshire, for example, newspapers of Concord, for 1790-1890, and some from the years 2002 to the present. You can do some searching free, and then you can purchase a subscription for a fee if you desire.
Other companies include fold3.com and ancestry.com. Ancestry.com has some Portsmouth, New Hampshire newspapers. Type the name of the city and state in the Card Catalog Search.
Probate Records
Carroll County probate records begin with 1840 one year before the county was established from Strafford county. The Carroll County records are kept at the county courthouse at Ossipee. For probate records from the 1770s to 1840 see the records of Strafford County.
Fortunately the Family History Library has microfilms of indexes to the probate packets for 1840-1936, and microfilms of the probate packets for 1840-1936. The packets often contain wills, administration records, settlements, court accounts, etc. See the Family History Library Catalog, Carroll, New Hampshire - Probate Records for the microfilm numbers.
The Family History Library also has microfilms of several volumes of early probate court records:
Administrations, 1840-1866
Guardianships, 1840-1870
Inventories and widows' records, 1843-1862
Wills and claims, 1840-1855
If you think your ancestor should be listed in the records above, but you do not find the records, there is a microfilm with unfiled propate papers, 1840-1936. These are mostly in alphabetical order.
Taxation
Many town tax records have been preserved by town clerks and town tax officials. Town tax records were generally taken each year. The Family History Library has many town records on microfilms. For film numbers see the Family History Library Catalog under New Hampshire - Carroll County - [name of town] - Town Records.
There is an index to the town records (which include many tax records) from the early settlement of the town to about 1850. This is the Index to Early Town Records of New Hampshire, Early to 1850 (FHL films 14942-15052). The index cards list volume and page numbers for the town records, many of which are on Family History Library microfilms. The town records are listed in the Family Hiistory Library Catalog in the manner mentioned in the paragraph above.
Town Records
Town records are an important source of family history information from the 1600s to about the 1940s. The early New Hampshire town records to about 1850 have an every-name index. The index and film numbers are listed just above in the Taxation section. Many town records are still in the town offices.
To see the types of family history information you might find in town records please go to the heading Town Records in our New Hampshire wiki article.
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.
NOTE: For most of the towns in Carroll County, the birth records to 1900, and marriage and death records to 1947, are on microfilms or in book form available through the Family History Library. These include Albany, Bartlett, Brookfield, Chatham, Conway, Eaton, Effingham, Freedom, Hart's Location, Jackson, Madison, Moultonboroough, Ossipee, Tamworth, Tuftonboro, Wakefield, and Wolfeboro.
Births
- New Hampshire Birth Records, Early to 1900 are available online from FamilySearch.
Courtesy of the Conway Public Library and constructed from the Annual Reports for the Town of Conway:
- Births: Begins in 1880 - 2010
Marriages
- New Hampshire Marriage Records, 1637-1947 are available online from FamilySearch.
- Marriage: Begins in 1880 (Some marriage are prior to 1880) - 1991
- Wolfeborough, New Hampshire Marriages Nov. 1789 to July 1854, (accessed 20 August 2011). From: History of Wolfeborough, New Hampshire By: Benjamin Franklin Parker Published by the town, 1901
Surnames Starting with A to K - Wolfeborough, New Hampshire Marriages Nov. 1789 to July 1854, (accessed 20 August 2011). From: History of Wolfeborough, New Hampshire By: Benjamin Franklin Parker Published by the town, 1901
Surnames Starting with L to Y
Deaths
- New Hampshire Death Records, 1654-1947 are available online from FamilySearch.
- Deaths: Begins in 1880 - 2010
Societies and Libraries
- Carroll County Public Libraries, (accessed 20 August 2011).
- Carroll County Historical Societies, (accessed 20 August 2011).
Family History Centers
Web Sites
- FamilySearch.org Family History Library catalog for Carroll County
- The Carroll County NHGenWeb Project, an member of The NHGenWeb Project, an affiliate of The USGenWeb Project.
- The USGenWeb Archives Project for Carroll County
- Carroll County, New Hampshire Genealogy and Family History (Linkpendium)
- Carroll County, New Hampshire, hosted by epodunk, (accessed 20 August 2011).
References
- ↑ 1.0 1.1 Handybook for Genealogists: United States of America, 10th ed. (Draper, Utah: Everton Pub., 2002), Carroll County, New Hampshire page 452, At various libraries (WorldCat); FHL Book 973 D27e 2002.
| ||||||||||||||||||||||||
Need additional research help? Contact our research help specialists.
Need wiki, indexing, or website help? Contact our product teams.
Did you find this article helpful?
You're invited to explain your rating on the discussion page (you must be signed in).
New to the Research Wiki?
In the FamilySearch Research Wiki, you can learn how to do genealogical research or share your knowledge with others.
Learn More


