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United States
Massachusetts
Plymouth County
Contents |
Brief History
Plymouth County was one of the three original counties when Plymouth Colony made such subdivisions in 1685. For a brief time, the county was part of the Dominion of New England from 1686 to 1689. The county was in limbo until the "Colony" was merged with Massachusetts Bay Colony in 1691 that eventually became the Commonwealth of Massachusetts.
Historical Data[1]
| Dates | Events |
|---|---|
| 2 June 1685 | Plymouth County created as one of the three original counties formed out of New Plymouth Colony. [Ply. Laws, ch. 6, p. 19] |
| 7 Oct. 1691 | Plymouth County became part of the new Massachusetts Bay Colony when its new charter absorbed New Plymouth Colony with no border changes. [Mass. Col. Acts, v. 1, ch. 27 [1692-1693], sec. 1, p. 63] |
| 19 Nov. 1707 | Plymouth County added the town of Rochester from Barnstable County. [Mass. Col. Acts, v. 21, ch. 60 [1707], p. 755] |
| 29 Oct. 1708 | Plymouth County added a small non-county area lying between Bristol and Plymouth counties. [Mass. Col. Act, |
| 18 Mar. 1711/2 | The "Old Colony Line" that formerly divided Massachusetts Bay and New Plymouth colonies was declared as the border between Suffolk, Bristol, and Plymouth counties with no changes. [Mass. Col. Acts, v. 21, ch. 152 [1711], p. 799] |
| 20 Nov. 1770 | When Bridgewater annexed land from Stoughton, that area moved from Suffolk to Plymouth County. [Mass. Col. Acts, v. 5, ch. 15 [1770-1771], sec. 1, p. 116] |
| 8 Feb. 1798 | When Bridgewater annexed a strip of land from Stoughton, that area moved from Suffolk to Plymouth County. [Mass. Acts 1798, ch. 10, sec. 1, p. 164] |
| 18 June 1803 | Plymouth County added the towns of Hingham and Hull from Suffolk County. [Mass. Acts 1803, ch. 14, sec. 1, p. 246] |
| 14 June 1823 | When Cohassett annexed land from Scituate, that area moved from Plymouth to Norfolk County. [Mass. Acts 1823, ch. 28, p. 237] |
| 9 Apr. 1836 | When Rochester and Fairhaven redefined their border, that also redefined the line between Plymouth and Bistol counties. [Mass. Acts 1836, ch. 193, sec. 1, p. 876] |
| 20 Mar. 1840 | When Scituate annexed land from Cohasset, that area moved from Norfolk to Plymouth County. [Mass. Acts 1840, ch. 58, sec. 1, p. 206] |
| 31 Mar. 1847 | When Abington and Weymouth redefined their border, that also redefined the line between Plymouth and Norfolk counties. [Mass. Acts 1847, ch. 138, p. 391] |
| 1 June 1867 | When Taunton and Lakeville redefined their border, that also redefined the line between Plymouth and Bristol counties. [Mass. Acts 1867, ch. 352, sec. 1, p. 745] |
| 14 Apr. 1897 | When Wareham and Bourne redefined their border, that also redefined the line between Plymouth and Barnstable counties. [Mass. Acts 1897, ch. 281, sec. 1, p. 258] |
| 30 Apr. 1897 | When Hingham and Cohasset redefined their border, that also redefined the line between Plymouth and Norfolk counties. [Mass. Acts 1897, ch. 330, sec. 1, p. 318] |
| 23 Mar. 1928 | When Hingham and Cohasset redefined their border, that also redefined the line between Plymouth and Norfolk counties. [Mass. Acts 1928, ch. 160, sec. 1, p. 184] |
Towns and Cities
The following is a list of present-day towns and cities in the county that are linked to their own individual pages. There you will find a list of other names used for the town or city and a list of villages and sections of the town or city. There will be a future master list found from the state page.Duxbury (1637) - East Bridgewater (1823) - Halifax (1734) - Hanover (1727)
Hanson (1820) - Hingham (1635) - Hull (1644) - Kingston (1726)
Lakeville (1853) - Marion (1852) - Marshfield (1640) - Mattapoisett (1857)
Middleborough (1669) - Norwell (1849) - Pembroke (1712) - Plymouth (1620)
Plympton (1707) - Rochester (1686) - Rockland (1874) - Scituate (1633)
Wareham (1739) - West Bridgewater (1822) - Whitman (1875)
Top of Page
County Histories
[[Image:]] Works written on the town include:
- Thomas Noyes, "Complete List of the Congregational Ministers, in the County of Plymouth, Mass. from the Settlement of the Country to the Present Time" in American Quarterly Register, 8 [1835-1836]: 144-159.
Digital versions at Internet Archive and Google Books
- The Plymouth County Directory, and Historical Register of the Old Colony, Containing Historical Sketch of the County, and of each Town in the County; a Roll of Honor, with the Names of all Soldiers of the Army and Navy, from this County, who lost their lives in service; an alphabetical list of voters; a complete index to the mercantile, manufacturing, and professional interestes of the county (Middleboro, Mass., 1867), v.p. [ca. 450 pp.]
Digital versions at Internet Archive and General Files.
WorldCat (Other Libraries); FHL book 974.482 E4p or film 928257 Item 4; FHL fiche 6078749.
- D. Hamilton Hurd, ed., History of Plymouth County, Massachusetts, with Biographical Sketches of Many of its Pioneers and Prominent Men (Philadelphia, 1884), viii, 1199 pp.
Digital versions at Internet Archive, Google Books (pt. 1, pt. 2, pt. 3), and on Ancestry ($).
WorldCat (Other Libraries); FHL book 974.482 H2h (in 2 pt.) or film 1000072 Item 2 (with digital link).
- William Root Bliss, Colonial Times on Buzzard's Bay (Boston, 1888). 238 pp.
Digital versions at Internet Archive, Google Books, and on Ancestry ($).
WorldCat (Other Libraries); FHL book 974.482 H2bw.
- Lloyd Vernon Briggs, History of Shipbuilding on North River, Plymouth County, Massachusetts, with Genealogies of the Shipbuilders, and Accounts of the Industries upon its Tributaries 1640 to 1872 (Boston, 1889), xv, 420 pp.
Digital versions at Internet Archive and Google Books.
WorldCat (Other Libraries); FHL book 974.482 U2b.
- Biographical Review ... containing Life Sketches of Leading Citizens of Plymouth County, Massachusetts ... (Boston, 1897), 638 pp.
Digital versions at Internet Archive and on Ancestry ($).
WorldCat (Other Libraries); FHL book 974.482 D3b or film 1035878 Item 4.
- Lucy Hall Greenlaw, ed., The Genealogical Advertiser: A Quarterly Magazine of Family History, v. 1-4 [1898-1901].
This journal often included many Plymouth County record abstracts.
Digital versions at: v. 1, v. 2, v. 3, v. 4.
WorldCat (Other Libraries); FHL film 856109 Item 1.
- Lincoln Newton Kinnicutt, Indian Names of Places in Plymouth, Middleborough, Lakeville and Carver, Plymouth County, Massachusetts, with Interpretations of Some of Them (Worcester, Mass., 1909), 64 pp.
Digital versions at Internet Archive and Google Books.
WorldCat (Other Libraries); Not at FHL.
- Representative Men and Old Families of Southeastern Massachusetts, Containing Historical sketches of Prominent and Representative Citizens and Genealogical Records of Many of the Old Families ... (Chicago, 1912), 3 v.
Digital versions at Internet Archive (v. 1, v. 2, v. 3), Google Books(v. 1 and v. 3 only), and on Ancestry ($).
WorldCat (Other Libraries); FHL books 974.4 D2r v.# or films 905546-905547.
- Elroy Sherman Thompson, History of Plymouth, Norfolk and Barnstable Counties, Massachusetts (New York, 1928), 3 v.
No digital version available .
WorldCat (Other Libraries); FHL book 974.4 H2t v.# (with digital links) or film 1697980 Item 1 (v.2 only).
- Ebenezer W. Peirce, Peirce's colonial lists. Civil, military and professional lists of Plymouth and Rhode Island colonies, comprising colonial, county and town officers, clergymen, physicians and lawyers. With extracts from colonial laws defining their duties, 1621-1700 (Boston, 1881; rep. Baltimore, 1968).
Digital version at Google Books.
WorldCat (Other Libraries); FHL book 974 M2p, film 897454 Item 1, or fiche 6046832.
Land Records
Land transfers, commonly called deeds, are recorded on the county level in Massachusetts. Realize that deeds were not required to be recorded, though this common practice today. The earliest transactions were charters or grants from the English Crown. Once local government was established, the colony would grant land to settlers directly or to towns to dole out. Some towns first start of a proprietorship and records was recorded there. Once counties were created, deeds were records there. For Plymouth County, they start in 1685.
The Plymouth County Registry of Deeds has a main office at Plymouth and two satellite offices:
Plymouth County Registry of Deeds
50 Obery Street
Plymouth MA 02360
508-830-9200
Email admin@plymouthdeeds.org
Brockton Satellite Office
155 West Elm Street
Brockton MA 02301
508-586-6998
Rockland Satellite Office
920 Hingham Street
Rockland MA 02370
781-792-2800
in Plymouth
All online records can be viewed from their Search Page.
- Land Record books, 1685 to present. [all online]
- Grantor/Grantee Index, 1685 to present. [online from 1955]
- Plan books and index, 1899 to present. [online index from 1975]
- Highway, county taking, and other road related. [no index online]
- Land Court records, 1899 to present. [all online]
- Land Court registerd land. [online index from 1926]
- Microfilm of the originals created by the Family History Library, 1664-1900 (indexes to 1914), v. 1-792, FHL film 567747 (first of 462).
There is no book that transcribes, abstracts, or indexes the Plymouth County land records. Abstracts were created by George Ernest Bowman. He published them in first in Pilgrim Notes and Queries from 1916 to 1917 and continued in The Mayflower Descendant from 1933 to 1937. He completed the first 117 pages from volume 1. Ann Smith Lainhart continued the abstracts in the latter journal from 1985 to 1998 and completed up to volume 2, page 41. That work is available online by article and issue at the Mass. Society of Mayflower Descendants website for those years of the Mayflower Descendant. Ms. Lainhart's work from 2000 to 2005 in the same journal is not available online where she ended her work at volume 3, page 13. For a current full citation to "Plymouth County, Mass., Records of Deeds" series, see Dale H. Cook's Consolidated Contents for the journal.
Probate Records
Probate and Family Court is organized on a county level in Massachusetts since the creation of the counties. The main records genealogists seek are testate (wills), intestate (administrations), guardianships, and divorces (since 1922), though there are many more that are valuable to any researcher, too. See a further discussion of the topic in general on the Massachusetts page.
Plymouth County Probate and Family Court
52 Obery Street
Plymouth MA 02360
Phone 508-747-6204
Email plymouthprobate@dacbase.com
Brockton Satellite Office
215 Maine Street, Suite 220
Brockton MA 02301
Phone 508-897-5400
- First series, 1685-1881:
Record books:
Supreme Judicial Court Archives has in off-site storage (microfilm available).
FHL films 549782 (first of 157) (and at the New England Historic Genealogical Society).
File papers: [Note: Missing case numbers 1-1881 and 13134-13176]
Supreme Judicial Court Archives has these files.
Online at Massachusetts, Plymouth County, Probate Estate Files, 1686-1881. - Second series, 1882-1935:
Record books:
Plymouth County Probate and Family Court has all the record books.
File papers:
Supreme Judicial Court Archives has in the archives to 1915 and the files from 1916-1935 is in off-site storage. - All records, 1936-present:
Plymouth County Probate and Family Court has all these records except for domestic abuse and paternity records that are stored at the Brockton Satellite Office.
The Family History Library (Note: The New England Historic Genealogical Society in Boston has the probate records only) has the following microfilms of the originals:
- Probate records, 1686-1903, with index (1685-1881, 1881-1939) and docket (1881-1967), 1685-1967.
FHL films 549782 (first of 157)
Other Court Records
The court system can appear to be complex. The system was reorganized in 1686/1692, 1859, and 1978. Described below are the most commonly used records for history and genealogy, but realize that this list is incomplete. For more detailed information regarding court structure, see the Massachusetts page.
Quarterly Court of General Sessions of the Peace
This court was active from 1692 to 1827. The court heard criminal cases and had authority over county affairs that included levying taxes, reviewing town bylaws, highways, licensed liquor, regulated jails, supervised the administration of the poor laws, and appointed some county officials. A county copy of marriages were recorded here from 1726 to 1737.
The record books of this court have been published:
- David Thomas Konig, ed., Plymouth Court Records 1686-1859 [General Sessions of the Peace, 1686-1827, and Court of Common Pleas, 1686-1859] (Wilmington, Del., 1978-1981), in 16v.
This is available on a searchable CD from the New England Historic Genealogical Society and on their website ($).
WorldCat (Other Libraries); FHL book 974.482 P2p v. # (with digital link).
v. 1 - General Sessions of the Peace, 1686-1721 and Court of Common Pleas, 1686-1702.
v. 2 - General Sessions of the Peace, 1719-1749 (includes marriages, 1726-1737).
v. 3 - General Sessions of the Peace, 1748-1781.
v. 4 - General Sessions of the Peace, 1782-1827.
- Court records, 1686-1817, FHL films 906746-906748.
Inferior Court of Common Pleas
This court was active from 1692 to 1859. The court heard all civil cases over 40s unless a case involved freehold or was appealed from a justice of the peace. A county copy of births, marriages, and deaths were recorded here from 1724 to 1788 for the towns of Abington, Bridgewater, Duxbury, Halifax, Hanson, Kingston, Marshfield, Middleborough, Pembroke, Plymouth, Plympton, Rochester, Scituate, and Wareham. Note: Volume 19 of original records contains marriages from 1771 to 1795.
The record books of this court have been published:
- David Thomas Konig, ed., Plymouth Court Records 1686-1859 [General Sessions of the Peace, 1686-1827, and Court of Common Pleas, 1686-1859] (Wilmington, Del., 1978-1981), in 16v.
This is available on a searchable CD from the New England Historic Genealogical Society and on their website ($).
WorldCat (Other Libraries); FHL book 974.482 P2p v. # (with digital link).
v. 1 - General Sessions of the Peace, 1686-1721 and Court of Common Pleas, 1686-1702.
v. 5 - Court of Common Pleas, 1702-1736.
v. 6 - Court of Common Pleas, 1736-1744.
v. 7 - Court of Common Pleas, 1744-1760.
v. 8 - Court of Common Pleas, 1760-1772.
v. 9 - Court of Common Pleas, 1773-1785.
v. 10 - Court of Common Pleas, 1785-1796.
v. 11 - Court of Common Pleas, 1796-1807.
v. 12 - Court of Common Pleas, 1807-1815.
v. 13 - Court of Common Pleas, 1816-1825.
v. 14 - Court of Common Pleas, 1825-1834.
v. 15 - Court of Common Pleas, 1835-1845.
v. 16 - Court of Common Pleas, 1846-1859.
- Court records, 1702-1859, FHL films 906732-906745, 906749.
Superior Court
This court was created in 1859 and combines the authority of the two courts listed above. Though one court, the civil and criminal matters are handled separately and today that is achieved through two physical courts: Plymouth (civil) and Brockton (criminal).
Plymouth Superior Court
52 Obery Street - Suite 2041
Plymouth MA 02360
Phone 508-747-8565
Plymouth County Superior Court (criminal sessions)
72 Belmont Street
Brockton MA 02301
Phone 508-583-8250
Older records are held by:
Supreme Judicial Court Archives
(administration)
16th Floor, Highrise Court House
3 Pemberton Square
Boston MA 02109
Phone 617-557-1082
(physical archive)
Massachusetts Archives
220 Morrissey Blvd.
Boston MA 02125
Phone 617-727-2816 (ask for Archives Reference Desk [this is not the Judicial Archives Reference])
Miscellaneous Court Records
Divorce Records
Jurisdiction over divorce matters changes over time. The Governor and Council heard cases before 1785, then it was the Supreme Judicial Court until 1887, followed by the Superior Court until 1922, and presently this is a matter for the Probate and Family Court (with minor exceptions in all periods).
- Plymouth County divorce records, 1798-1812, FHL film 2196184 Items 2 - 3.
- Plymouth County record books (inc. divorces), 1813-1950 and divorce index, 1918-1930, FHL films 2196338-2196342.
- Plymouth County divorce records index, 1888-1973, FHL films 2196182-2196184.
Naturalization Records
Naturalization records were created on a variety of governmental levels from the Federal down to the city at the same time. The county records are outlines below.
Indexes
- Mass. 3rd District Court, Naturalization index cards, 1885-1906, FHL film 1530503.
- Plymouth Co. Superior Court, declarations of intention index, 1906-1984 (Plymouth court), FHL films 2166478, 2166544 Item 1.
- Plymouth Co. Superior Court, petition and records index, 1906-1984 (Plymouth court), FHL films 2166544-2166545.
- Plymouth Co. Superior Court, certificates stub index, 1907-1990 (Brockton court), FHL films 2166938 (first of 5 films).
- Plymouth Co. Superior Court, petition and declaration index, 1906-1984 (Brockton court), FHL films 2166545 (first of 5 films).
Records
- Mass. 3rd District Court, Docket books, 1885-1898, papers, no. 1-722, 1885-1906, FHL films 1530503-1530504.
- Mass. 4th District Court, applications for naturalization, 1885-1906, FHL film 1523040.
- Plymouth Co. Superior Court declarations records, 1906-1945 (Plymouth court, v. 1-8, no. 1-2753), FHL films 2167558-2167559.
- Plymouth Co. Superior Court declarations records, 1909-1945 (Brockton court, v. 1-27, no. 1-9279), FHL films 2167425-2167429, 2167557-2167558.
- Plymouth Co. Superior Court naturalization declarations and petitions, 1907-1945 (Plymouth court, v. 1-26, no. 1-1834), FHL films 2167560, 2167908-2167913.
- Plymouth Co. Superior Court naturalization declarations and petitions, 1910-1945 (Brockton court, v. 2-62, no. 251-1834 [Note: v. 1, 1907-1910 missing]), FHL films 2167913 (first of 25 films).
Taxation Records
The county had the power to tax its citizens through action of the Quarterly Court of General Sessions (listed above). Most taxes after this time are levied by the state or town.
Warnings Out
Warnings out was the court's action regarding the poor laws of the colony and commonwealth to create a legal public notice that a town was not responsible for a new person or family settling there, but the town from which they came. This did not force people out so much as made the town not responsible for their welfare. These warnings were issued by the Inferior Court of Common Pleas to the selectmen of a town for notification of the person or persons. These are recorded in the volumes noted above under this court. An index was created.
- Ruth Wilder Sherman, Robert M. Sherman, and Robert S. Wakefield, An Index to Plymouth County, Massachusetts Warnings Out from The Plymouth Court Records 1686-1859 (Plymouth, Mass., 2003).
WorldCat (Other Libraries); FHL book 974.482 P22s.
Maps
This is a small list of historical maps for reference. There are so many it would be impossible to have them all here.
- Henry F. Walling, Map of the County of Plymouth, Massachusetts (Boston, 1857).
WorldCat (Other Libraries); FHL fiche 6079556.
Digital version at Harvard University. - Atlas of Plymouth County, Massachusetts (Boston, 1879).
WorldCat (Other Libraries); FHL X Large Folio 974.482 E7a (in high density).
There are several sites that sell reproductions of the individual maps of this atlas. Search the web for this atlas and you will find several sites that will previous the image online. We cannot endorse any one site here. - John H. Long, ed., Atlas of Historical County Boundaries: Connecticut-Maine-Massachusetts-Rhode Island (New York, 1994).
WorldCat (Other Libraries); FHL book 974 E3c.
Digital version online from the Newberry Library (Chicago) for download or viewing online.
Societies
Plymouth County Genealogists
PO Box 1766
Brockton MA 02301
Email plymcountygen@gmail.com
The group meets on the first Saturday each month except July and August
South Shore Genealogical Society
PO Box 396
Norwell MA 02061
Email uechika@msn.com
The group meets on the second Saturday each month except July and August
References
- This page was last modified on 7 May 2012, at 15:21.
- This page has been accessed 268 times.
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