North Carolina County Church and Bible Records

Link To This PageContact Us

AlamanceAlexanderAlleghanyAnsonAsheAveryBeaufortBertieBladenBrunswickBuncombeBurkeCabarrusCaldwellCamdenCarteretCaswellCatawbaChathamCherokeeChowanClayClevelandColumbusCravenCumberlandCurrituckDareDavidsonDavieDuplinDurhamEdgecombeForsythFranklinGastonGatesGrahamGranvilleGreeneGuilfordHalifaxHarnettHaywoodHendersonHertfordHokeHydeIredellJacksonJohnstonJonesLeeLenoirLincolnMaconMadisonMartinMcDowellMecklenburgMitchellMontgomeryMooreNashNew HanoverNorthamptonOnslowOrangePamlicoPasquotankPenderPerquimansPersonPittPolkRandolphRichmondRobesonRockinghamRowanRutherfordSampsonScotlandStanlyStokesSurrySwainTransylvaniaTyrrellUnionVanceWakeWarrenWashingtonWataugaWayneWilkesWilsonYadkinYancey County

See Also Research In State Church & Bible Records

Baptist - The Baptists reached North Carolina during the mid-eighteenth century, and the Sandy Creek Church, called the “Mother of Southern Baptist Churches,” was founded in 1755. Over the next two centuries, the Baptist church became the leading religious denomination in the state. Baptist church records do not offer the wealth of information found in Quaker or Moravian records, but useful historical details and migrational clues sometimes are found in their records. Many types of Baptist churches split off from the host denomination.

The principal depository of Baptist records is the Baptist Historical Collection of the Z. Smith Reynolds Library at Wake Forest University. Write to P.O. Box 7777, Reynolds Station, Winston-Salem, North Carolina 27106. For records of the Free-Will Baptists, write to the Free-Will Baptist Historical Collection, Moye Library, Mount Olive Junior College, Mount Olive, North Carolina 28365. Primitive Baptist records are found at the Primitive Baptist Library, Route 2, Elon College, North Carolina 27244.

Lutheran - Lutheranism came into North Carolina with the Germans who first arrived in Pennsylvania early in the eighteenth century and then moved into Virginia's Shenandoah Valley before continuing south to North Carolina, where they joined the descendants of the Germanna colonists from Orange and Spotsylvania counties of north-central Virginia. Write to Archives of the North Carolina Synod, P.O. Box 2049, Salisbury, North Carolina 28144.

Church of England - The second denomination to establish a congregation in North Carolina was the Church of England in 1700. As elsewhere, that group became known as Episcopalians some years after the American Revolution. There are no surviving eighteenth century Church of England parish registers for North Carolina.

Quakers - William Edmundson and George Fox were Quaker missionaries who brought the Society of Friends (Quakers) to North Carolina in 1672. The tide of Quaker migration from Pennsylvania, Maryland, and Virginia was enough to make the Society of Friends one of the larger religious group in North Carolina during the eighteenth and early nineteenth centuries. By the start of the Civil War, the majority of Quaker families had moved to Ohio and Indiana where they hoped to escape the effects of slavery and the conflict they thought it would cause. Quakers kept excellent records, and originals of the North Carolina monthly meeting minutes and records are among the Quaker Collection at Guilford College Library in Greensboro, North Carolina. The collection consists of over 6,000 manuscript volumes of minutes and records from 1680 to the present. Early records from monthly meetings in East Tennessee, Georgia, and South Carolina that were affiliated with the North Carolina Yearly Meeting also are found there. Many North Carolina Quaker records are published in part in William W. Hinshaw, Encyclopedia of American Quaker Genealogy, Vol. 1: North Carolina Yearly Meeting (1936; reprint, Baltimore, Md.: Genealogical Publishing Co., 1978).

Moravian - Known also as United Brethren, a group from Pennsylvania purchased nearly 100,000 acres in 1753 and called the tract “Wachovia.” Their first three towns were Bethabara, Bethlehem, and Salem. They, like the Quakers, kept excellent records. Write the Moravian Archives, Southern Province of the Moravian Church in America, Drawer M, Salem Station, Winston-Salem, North Carolina 27108. The collection contains historical books and manuscripts concerning Moravians in North Carolina. Early congregational diaries have been translated and published in Adelaide L. Fries, et al., eds., The Records of the Moravians in North Carolina, 11 vols (Raleigh, N.C.: State Department of Archives and History, 1922–69).

Presbyterian - Presbyterianism came with the Highland Scots families who settled in the Cape Fear River area in the 1730s and the Scots-Irish who came down into North Carolina from Pennsylvania and Virginia. Write to the Presbyterian Historical Foundation, P.O. Box 847, Montreat, North Carolina 27410.

Other - A plethora of religious groups exists in North Carolina today, but few of them were influential during the state's early history. The Presbyterians, Lutherans, and the Moravians constituted the largest minority denominations during the eighteenth and nineteenth centuries.

North Carolina Church and Bible Records by County

Alamance Co., North Carolina Church Records
Alexander Co., North Carolina Church Records
Alleghany Co., North Carolina Church Records
Anson Co., North Carolina Church Records
Ashe Co., North Carolina Church Records
Avery Co., North Carolina Church Records
Beaufort Co., North Carolina Church Records
Bertie Co., North Carolina Church Records
Bladen Co., North Carolina Church Records
Brunswick Co., North Carolina Church Records
Buncombe Co., North Carolina Church Records
Burke Co., North Carolina Church Records
Cabarrus Co., North Carolina Church Records
Caldwell Co., North Carolina Church Records
Camden Co., North Carolina Church Records
Carteret Co., North Carolina Church Records
Caswell Co., North Carolina Church Records
Catawba Co., North Carolina Church Records
Chatham Co., North Carolina Church Records
Cherokee Co., North Carolina Church Records
Chowan Co., North Carolina Church Records
Clay Co., North Carolina Church Records
Cleveland Co., North Carolina Church Records
Columbus Co., North Carolina Church Records
Craven Co., North Carolina Church Records
Cumberland Co., North Carolina Church Records
Currituck Co., North Carolina Church Records
Dare Co., North Carolina Church Records
Davidson Co., North Carolina Church Records
Davie Co., North Carolina Church Records
Duplin Co., North Carolina Church Records
Durham Co., North Carolina Church Records
Edgecombe Co., North Carolina Church Records
Forsyth Co., North Carolina Church Records
Franklin Co., North Carolina Church Records
Gaston Co., North Carolina Church Records
Gates Co., North Carolina Church Records
Graham Co., North Carolina Church Records
Granville Co., North Carolina Church Records
Greene Co., North Carolina Church Records
Guilford Co., North Carolina Church Records
Halifax Co., North Carolina Church Records
Harnett Co., North Carolina Church Records
Haywood Co., North Carolina Church Records
Henderson Co., North Carolina Church Records
Hertford Co., North Carolina Church Records
Hoke Co., North Carolina Church Records
Hyde Co., North Carolina Church Records
Iredell Co., North Carolina Church Records
Jackson Co., North Carolina Church Records
Johnston Co., North Carolina Church Records
Jones Co., North Carolina Church Records
Lee Co., North Carolina Church Records
Lenoir Co., North Carolina Church Records
Lincoln Co., North Carolina Church Records
Macon Co., North Carolina Church Records
Madison Co., North Carolina Church Records
Martin Co., North Carolina Church Records
McDowell Co., North Carolina Church Records
Mecklenburg Co., North Carolina Church Records
Mitchell Co., North Carolina Church Records
Montgomery Co., North Carolina Church Records
Moore Co., North Carolina Church Records
Nash Co., North Carolina Church Records
New Hanover Co., North Carolina Church Records
Northampton Co., North Carolina Church Records
Onslow Co., North Carolina Church Records
Orange Co., North Carolina Church Records
Pamlico Co., North Carolina Church Records
Pasquotank Co., North Carolina Church Records
Pender Co., North Carolina Church Records
Perquimans Co., North Carolina Church Records
Person Co., North Carolina Church Records
Pitt Co., North Carolina Church Records
Polk Co., North Carolina Church Records
Randolph Co., North Carolina Church Records
Richmond Co., North Carolina Church Records
Robeson Co., North Carolina Church Records
Rockingham Co., North Carolina Church Records
Rowan Co., North Carolina Church Records
Rutherford Co., North Carolina Church Records
Sampson Co., North Carolina Church Records
Scotland Co., North Carolina Church Records
Stanly Co., North Carolina Church Records
Stokes Co., North Carolina Church Records
Surry Co., North Carolina Church Records
Swain Co., North Carolina Church Records
Transylvania Co., North Carolina Church Records
Tyrrell Co., North Carolina Church Records
Union Co., North Carolina Church Records
Vance Co., North Carolina Church Records
Wake Co., North Carolina Church Records
Warren Co., North Carolina Church Records
Washington Co., North Carolina Church Records
Watauga Co., North Carolina Church Records
Wayne Co., North Carolina Church Records
Wilkes Co., North Carolina Church Records
Wilson Co., North Carolina Church Records
Yadkin Co., North Carolina Church Records
Yancey Co., North Carolina Church Records
Site Map | Copyright © 2011 N2Genealogy.com,