Download Free 1847 1874 New Madrid County Missouri Marriage Records Book in PDF and EPUB Free Download. You can read online 1847 1874 New Madrid County Missouri Marriage Records and write the review.

In 2015, New Madrid County Missouri celebrated its courthouse centennial. To mark the occasion, the classical Greek revival courthouse gained a spruced-up stained glass dome over the rotunda, a resurrected 1821 County Seal, new portraits of founding fathers, festive banners surrounding the building and branching down Main Street, and special events for the citizens. This book recounts tales, old and new, of the courthouse. The reader begins in the frontier world of early judges sitting in unheated or stifling log cabins as they sort out justice and bring the law to a wilderness area. Hear how in the old days, the all-male jurors were sequestered in the attic overnight. A sheriff tells how he reluctantly hung two men convicted of murder. He had to do it; he had asked for the office. One official found himself running for office against his own son. This story made news all around the state. Come inside the distinguished courthouse building today, as county officials talk candidly about their current roles as well as recall a few tall tales.
By: Mary Brown & Fay Hedgepath, Pub. 1973, Reprinted 2018, 220 pages, Index, ISBN #0-89308-804-8. Even though New Madrid was organized in 1805, these marriage records begin with the first two books on file in the office of the county recorder. There is a gap in the marriage records of New Madrid County and is probably accounted for by that at one time the records were kept in various buildings and some of the buildings burned. The researcher will also discover that due to New Madrid's geographical location in the Most Southeastern corner of the State, along the Mississippi River, that you will find some Kentucky and Tennessee marriages being mixed within those of New Madrid County.
A cumulative list of works represented by Library of Congress printed cards.
Jesse Hamilton was born in about 1745. He married Margaret in about 1770 and they had thirteen children. They lived in Natchez, Mississippi. Jesse died in about 1819. Descendants and relatives lived mainly in Mississippi, Kentucky, Alabama, Texas and Missouri.