Start your family tree. We'll start searching. It's FREE. - Enter a few simple facts about recent generations of your family. We'll use what you enter to try and find more about your family in the world's largest online collection of historical records and family trees.
Bookmark and Share
SITE DIRECTORY
NJ County Selection List
NJ Home Page - Includes
County Links, State History &
Facts, Burned Courthouses
and Discontinued Counties
NJ Genealogy Records -
Includes State Census, Court,
Probate, Church, Cemetery, Land,
Military and Vital Records Info
NJ Online Resources -
Includes Online Databases, Maps,
Help Tools & Message Boards
NJ Societies & Archives -
Includes State Archives,
Historical & Genealogical
Societies, Genealogical
Publications and Newspapers
NJ Cities & Municipalities -
Includes List of cities &
Municipalities. Also Links to the
official websites.
SEARCH THIS SITE
 
New Jersey State Facts & Information
New Jersey State History | New Jersey Counties with Burned Courthouses

New Jersey County Listings -  The State of New Jersey is divided into twenty-one counties in which are recorded transfers of land, estates, court, and other records. Each county is governed by a Board of Freeholders, whose records should not be overlooked. Other useful county records may be located in the courthouses or at the New Jersey State Archives, including Justice of the Peace Dockets; tavern, peddler's, and shopkeeper's licenses; road books; and slave births and manumissions.

 Some New Jersey counties have established or are establishing county record centers and archives, to which older records are transferred for better preservation and use by researchers. Such facilities, in one stage or another, exist in the counties of Bergen, Cape May, Hudson, Middlesex, Monmouth, Morris, Ocean, and Somerset. Most clerks still retain custody over such material and should be contacted first about the location and access to a particular record.

 Most municipal records are still in the townships, boroughs, and cities, but some are at the state archives and the New Jersey Historical Society. These list earmarks (although some are also found in county records), indigents, elected officials, stray animals, and so forth. Choose from the counties below to view the county information.

Back to top

New Jersey State History -New Jersey, state in the Middle Atlantic region of the United States. Its long eastern coast faces the Atlantic Ocean. To the northeast and north it is bordered by the Hudson River and New York. To the west lies Pennsylvania. New Jersey is separated from Delaware on the south and southwest by Delaware Bay and the Delaware River. Trenton is the capital of New Jersey. Newark is the largest city.

New Jersey is the fifth smallest state but one of the most diversified. Lying between New York City and Philadelphia, in the heart of the highly urbanized area called a megalopolis by some population experts, it is the second most urbanized state, behind only California, and the most densely populated. New Jersey is the only state in which all 21 counties are officially classified as “metropolitan” by the census. Yet it has wilderness areas, in the mountains of the northwest and the sparsely settled southern tidelands. New Jersey is in the forefront of industrial research and development, but the continuing importance of farming is reflected in its nickname, the Garden State. New Jersey’s ready access to the markets of New York City and Philadelphia led to an early specialization in fresh fruits and vegetable production. As early as the 17th century, colonists described the area as a garden because of its agricultural bounty.

Proud of its status as the third state to ratify the Constitution of the United States, entering the Union on December 18, 1787, New Jersey traces its history back more than 350 years. Its name derives from the island of Jersey in the English Channel, the birthplace of Sir George Carteret, a co-owner of New Jersey in the 17th century. The state contains many well-preserved monuments commemorating the American Revolution (1775-1783), many of whose battles were fought on New Jersey soil, including George Washington’s famed crossing of the Delaware River in December 1776, to defeat the British at Trenton. The Official State Website is http://www.state.nj.us/.

After Henry Hudson's initial explorations of the Delaware River area, some Dutch settlements were attempted in New Jersey as early as 1618 but were soon abandoned because of real or imagined threats from the Lenni-Lenape (or Delaware) original inhabitants. A more lasting settlement was made from 1638 to 1655 by the Swedes and Finns along the Delaware as part of New Sweden, which continued to flourish although the Dutch eventually gained control over this area and made it part of New Netherland. From 1660 to the end of the century, many Dutch from New York established farms in northern New Jersey.

Throughout the colonial period, only the English outnumbered the Dutch in New Jersey. When England conquered the Dutch in 1664 King Charles II gave his brother, the Duke of York (later King James II), all of New York and New Jersey. The duke in turn granted New Jersey to two of his creditors, Lord John Berkeley and Sir George Carteret. The land was named Nova Caesaria for the Isle of Jersey, Carteret's home. Within the year that England took control there was a large influx of English from New England and Long Island who, for want of more or better land, settled the East Jersey towns of Elizabethtown, Middletown, Piscataway, Shrewsbury, and Woodbridge. A year later, Newark was founded by migrants from New Jersey. In 1685 a large group of Scots came to Perth Amboy, but they were not part of the great wave of Ulster-Scots who in the 1720s began their immigration to the New World, including New Jersey. For a brief period in 1673-74, the Dutch regained control of New Jersey and New York, but it soon reverted back to the English.

The southern part of the state drew English Quakers, some of whom spilled over from the Philadelphia area. They gained control of the southern part when it was sold by Lord Berkeley to Quaker John Fenwick. In 1676 New Jersey was divided into two provinces, East and West, controlled by proprietors, with capitals at Perth Amboy and Burlington, respectively. William Penn, a proprietor of both provinces, forced the setting of a boundary. It was poorly surveyed but cut across the state such that all of the more settled southern part fell in West Jersey. For two years beginning in April 1688, New Jersey was, with New York, part of the Dominion of New England, but no significant records of New Jersey seem to have been generated in its capital of Boston. The proprietors of both provinces gave up their right to rule in 1702 but continued to control first sales of the land, as they still do today. New Jersey was then under united rule by the royal governor of New York until 1738, after which she had her own royal governor.

Significant migrations and immigrations continued into the eighteenth century. These included French Huguenots fleeing France, and Long Islanders who settled at Cape May in the 1690s and Morris County in the 1730s. Many of the Palatines who immigrated to New York in 1709 came to New Jersey, as did Germans who entered through Philadelphia throughout the 1700s. Descendants of some of these families migrated to northwestern New Jersey.

New Jersey was a major battleground during the Revolutionary War and many American and British troops passed through, to and from New York and Pennsylvania, all of which caused some destruction of records. Like New York, New Jersey residents were quite divided by the war, and a large number of Loyalists left for Canada.

Throughout the nineteenth century, the state continued to grow through increased development of transportation, including the completion in 1834 of a canal connecting the Delaware and Raritan rivers that enabled faster travel between Philadelphia and New York. (Except for its 48-mile border with New York, New Jersey is completely surrounded by water, which remains one of its major modes of transportation.) This was also the time of the coming of the railroads and eventually the roadways, which today make New Jersey the major corridor between the northeast and the south. The 1800s saw New Jersey develop industrially, starting with the establishment of the nation's first factory town at what is today Paterson. New Jersey is one of the more densely populated states in this country, with many of its residents commuting to work in neighboring New York and Pennsylvania.

Back to top

New Jersey Burned Courthouses -  The destruction of courthouses greatly affects genealogists in every way. No only are these historic structures torn from our lives, so are the records they housed: marriage, wills, probate, land records, and others. Once destroyed they are lost forever. Even if they have been placed on mircofilm, computers and film burn too. The most heartbreaking side of this is the fact that many of our courthouses are destroyed at the hands of arsonist. However, not all records were lost.

   Below is a list of New Jersey Counties and the years the Courthouses were subjected to a disaster. This does NOT mean that ALL RECORDS were lost. Often, folks took their documents again in for recording after a disaster and later deeds will contain long chains of title, etc.

  • Somerset County - Courthouse burned in 1799

Back to top

New Jersey County Selection Table - Select a county from the table below to to view more information on genealogical information & records pertaining to each county.

Atlantic County Bergen County Burlington County Camden County Cape May County
Cumberland County Essex County Gloucester County Hudson County Hunterdon County
Mercer County Middlesex County Monmouth County Morris County Ocean County
Passaic County Salem County Somerset County Sussex County Union County
Warren County New Jersey Municipalities

Back to top

New Jersey Site Map l l Site Hosted by HostMonster.COM. l Copyright © 2008 Genealogy Inc,