Monroe County, New York Genealogy



United States &gt; New York &gt; Monroe County

County Courthouse
County Clerk’s Office 101 County Office Building 39 W. Main St. Rochester, NY 14614 Phone: 585 753-1600 Fax: 585 753-1624

Web Site of County Government Offices

Quick History
Monroe County was named for James Monroe, the fifth President of the United States. When it became a county on February 23, 1821, it already had 28,000 settlers with several towns and villages that provided agricultural support to the mill town of Rochester. Rochester became the county seat. Today, Monroe county is composed of 19 towns, 10 villages, and the City of Rochester.

Wikipedia

Monroe County History

Parent Counties
23 February 1821: Created from Genesee and Ontario counties.

Boundary Changes
Monroe County was part of several counties before becoming its own county:

1683-1772 part of Albany County

1772-1784 part of Tryon County

1784-1789 name of the county was changed to Montgomery County

1789-1802 part of Ontario County

1802-1821 part of Genesee County

February 23,1821 Monroe County was formed from parts of Ontario County and Genesee County

City
Rochester, est.1834

Towns
Brighton | Chili, est.1822| Clarkson | Gates, est.1813 | Greece, est.1822 | Hamlin, from 1806 | Henrietta, est.1818 | Irondequoit, est.1839 | Mendon, est.1813 | Ogden | Parma, est. 1808 | Penfield, est.1810 | Perinton, est.1812 | Pittsford, est.1814 | Riga, est.1809 | Rush, est. 1818 | Sweden, est.1814 | Webster, est.1840 | Wheatland

Villages
Brockpor, est. abt.1820 | Churchville, from 1808 | East Rochester | Fairport | Hilton | Honeoye Falls from 1791 | Pittsford from 1789 | Scottsville from 1789 | Spencerport from 1804 | Webster from 1812

Census Designations
Brighton | Gates-North Gates | Greece

Neighboring Counties
Genesee | Livingston | Ontario | Orleans | Wayne |

Cemeteries
Kentucky cemetery records often identify birth, death, relationship, and military information, as well as religious affiliation. Local volunteers through Random Acts of Genealogical Kindness may take photographs of headstones found in county cemeteries.


 * Find A Grave can be searched by the name of a person or family to find where a person is buried. Usually gives birth and death dates often with a picture of the tombstone.  May give obituaries, names of family members and links to their information in Find A Grave.


 * Find A Grave also gives a list of cemeteries in Monroe County and links to the information for the individuals buried there.


 * USGenWeb Archives Project for Monroe Countyhs transcriptions from several small cemeteries.


 * Monroe County. New York USGenWeb Tombstone Project usually gives the names of the deceased in alphabetical order by last name with birth and death dates plus any remarks.


 * The Family History Library Catalog lists some records of cemeteries in Monroe County. Some of the books or others may be on Google Books or available at public libraries.


 * ePodunk list of Monroe County cemeteries gives the names of the cemeteries in the county with a link to more information such as address, phone number, and web site.

Church
The major religious denominations in 1980 were the Catholic Church, the American Baptist Churches, the Presbyterian Church, and the United Methodist Church. For more information about the denominations in Monroe County, see the Association of Religion Data Archives (ARDA) Web site.


 * The Family History Library Catalog lists some Monroe County church records. Some of the books or others may be on Google Books or available at public libraries.

LDS Ward and Branch Records


 * Rochester

Court
Monroe County Clerk’s Office 39 W. Main Street, Room 105 Rochester, New York, 14614 Phone number: 1-585-753-1600

A search can be made of the public court records in person at the County Clerk's office or a request by phone or fax can be made asking the Clerk to do a search. For information about making such requests, including costs, see the County Clerk General Information and Requests web site.

Land
History of Land

New York and Massachusetts both claimed the area of Monroe County. After the Revolution, the two states settled by allowing New York to have the right to govern, while Massachusetts had the right of pre-emption or first right to sell the land. Massachusetts sold those rights to Oliver Phelps and Nathaniel Gorham. Most of these rights later went to Robert Morris. Morris sold most of his rights to the Holland Land Company. The purchasers were also to acquire rights to the land from the Indians. For additional information, see Wikipedia and My New York Genealogy, Monroe County.

Land Records

The Monroe County Clerk, as county registrar, has land records since 1821 when the county was created. The Clerk preserves and indexes the records.

An online index is available from 1973 to the present with images from 1976 to the present.

Local Histories
History of Monroe County, New York, by W.H. McIntosh is online at Internet Archive.

Newspapers
The Rochester Newspaper Index is a project of the Rochester Public Library. The database consists of references to articles that appeared in the Rochester newspapers during the period 1818-1897.

Web Sites

 * The Monroe County NYGenWeb Project, an member of The NYGenWeb Project, an affiliate of The USGenWeb Project.
 * The USGenWeb Archives Project for Monroe County.
 * The USGenWeb Archives Project for Monroe County. (Backup site)
 * FamilySearch.org Family History Library catalog for Monroe County