Caldwell County, North Carolina Genealogy

United States   North Carolina    Caldwell County

History
Caldwell County was formed in 1841 from Burke and Wilkes counties. It was named in honor of Joseph Caldwell, the first president of the University of North Carolina. He strongly advocated a public school system and a railroad across the center of the State from Morehead City to Tennessee.

Caldwell County is in the west central section of the State and is bordered by Alexander, Catawba, Burke, Avery, Watauga and Wilkes counties. The present land area is 471.60 square miles and the 2000 population was 77,386.

The court was ordered to be held at the store of George Powell near the house of George Smith, Jr., until a courthouse was erected. Commissioners were named to select a site as near the center as possible, acquire land and a town, and erect a courthouse. Lenoir, named in honor of William Lenoir, is the county seat.

Parent County
1841--Caldwell County was created 11 January 1841 from Burke and Wilkes Counties. County seat: Lenoir

Populated Places
Towns in Caldwell County are: Lenoir, Granite Falls, Hudson, Gamewell, Sawmills, Blowing Rock, Cajah's Mountain, Cedar Rock, Collettsville, Northlakes, Rhodhiss.

Neighboring Counties

 * Alexander
 * Avery
 * Burke
 * Catawba
 * Watauga
 * Wilkes

Court
Caldwell County Courthouse 216 Main St NW Lenoir, NC 28645 (828) 759-8403

Mailing Address: PO Box 1376 Lenoir, NC 28645

Land
The Register of Deeds office is the primary custodian of permanent records for the county. We record a variety of real property documents including deeds, deeds of trust, mortgage cancellations, powers of attorney, maps and others. The Vital Records Division maintains Caldwell County birth records, death records, marriage licenses issued in Caldwell County, Military Discharges, and Notary records. Our online records search can be accessed from this site and contains all of our real estate indexes since the formation of the county and images of all of our real estate documents from the early 1900's forward. Indexes of all of our vital records can also be found there.

Caldwell County Register of Deeds

Caldwell County Registry of Deeds Records Search

Probate
The Caldwell County Clerk of the Court has probate records starting with 1830, if they have not been transferred to the North Carolina State Archives.

The Clerk of Superior Court is elected for four years and must be a resident of the county in which he or she is elected. Unlike clerks of court in other states, the Clerk of Superior Court in North Carolina has numerous judicial functions.

As judge of probate, the Clerk has exclusive original jurisdiction over matters relating to the probate of wills, and the administration of estates, including appointing personal representatives, auditing their accounting, and removing them from office if necessary. The Clerk also presides over many other legal matters including adoptions, incompetency proceedings, condemnation of private lands for public use, and foreclosures. The Clerk is responsible for all clerical and record-keeping functions of the district and superior court. In addition, the Clerk receives and disburses money collected each year from court fees and fines.

Clerk of Superior Court (828) 759-8402 Ext. 8376

Caldwell County Courthouse 216 Main St NW Lenoir, NC 28645 Mailing Address: PO Box 1376 Lenoir, NC 28645

Marriages

 * Caldwell County marriage licenses, 1878-1882 - index available from NC State Library - Word format | PDF format

Yearbooks

 * Davenport College: a few yearbooks between 1905-1932

Societies and Libraries

 * Caldwell County Public Library
 * Caldwell Heritage Museum
 * North Carolina Genealogical Society, P.O. Box 30815, Raleigh, NC 27622-0815

Web Sites

 * Caldwell County NCGenWeb- free genealogy resources; a site within the USGenWeb Project
 * USGenWeb Archives-Caldwell County, NC
 * NCpedia
 * NCpedia