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Coos County History and Information
County Facts
County Website: ?
Date Created: 1803 County Seat: Lancaster
Name Origin: ? Formed From: Grafton County

County Records

  • Please call the clerk's department to confirm hours, mailing address, fees and other specifics before
    visiting or requesting information because of sometimes changing contact information. All other record types not listed here are located in the town in which the event occured. Check NH's Cities & Towns and City & Town Clerks
  • Probate Court has Probate Records from 1887
    55 School Street, Suite 104, Lancaster, NH 03584; Phone : (603) 788-2001
    Hours : Monday - Friday, 8:00am to 4:00pm
  • Register of Deeds has Land Records from 1803
    55 School St. Suite 103, Lancaster, NH. 03584; 788-2392 Fax: 788-4291; HRS: 8:00-4:00
  • New Hampshire Vital Records Office [Order Online] [Search the Social Security Death Index] has Births, Death and marriage records after 1883 see also Vital Records Page
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Genealogical Addresses

Military Resources

County History

Coös County, named for the Indian word for pines, cohos, encompasses the entire northern section of the state, covering 1,804 square miles, 20% of the land area of the state of New Hampshire. The Abnaki word, also spelled cowass, cohoss, and coo-ash, was used to identify inhabitants of the region. Those living in the area were customarily know as "Coo-ashe-aukes", or "dwellers in the pine tree place."

The first reference to the area is found in the 1704 records of New Hampshire, which names the area "Cohoss – a large and valuable tract of land along the Connecticut River." Over 90% of the land is forested, 24% of which is either State or National Forest. The area is well known as an outstanding area for recreational ski areas, campsites, picnic grounds, snowmobiling, fishing, and hunting. More than half of the moose population (2,600 out of 5,000) and the bear population (13,500 out of 25,000) are in Coös County. The twenty towns and one city are chiefly located along the Connecticut and Androscoggin Rivers Valleys.

The first white settlers of the area arrived in 1763. Once a pathless wilderness claimed only by wild animals and the Indians of the Abnaki tribes, the population had swelled to 3,000 when the county was established in 1803. Growth in the North Country during the 19th century was quite rapid, at least 3 times that of the state as a whole. Although the population reached 39,000 by 1930, it has since diminished to less than 35,000.

It includes the following cities and towns: Appalachia, Berlin, Bowman, Bretton Woods, Bungy, Carroll, Clarksville, Colebrook, Columbia [formerly Cockburn 1770-1811], Crystal, Cushman, Dalton, Dixville Notch, Dummer, Errol, Fabyan, Glen House, Gorham, Groveton, Hazens, Jefferson, Kidderville, Lancaster, Mapleton, Meadows, Milan, Millsfield, Northumberland, Paris, Percy, Pittsburg, Randolph, Riverton, Scott, Shelburne, South Lancaster, Stark, Starr King, Stewartstown, Stratford, Twin Mountain, Upper Kidderville, Wentworths Location, West Stewartstown, and Whitefield. See City & Town Clerks for more

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