Excerpts From the Book "Family History Made Easy"
Even today, few people escape mention in court records at some time during their lives as witnesses, litigants, jurors, appointees to office, or as petition signatories. However, Americans of a few generations ago also expected to attend local court proceedings when they were in session.
Arlene H. Eakle, Ph.D. “Research in Court Records” In The Source: A Guidebook of American Genealogys
American court files mirror U.S. history. Buried away in courthouses and archives everywhere are the dreams and frustrations of millions of citizens. The chances are great that your ancestors have left a detailed record of at least some aspects of their lives in court records.
Most of us don’t think of court records as the rich source of personal history that they are. But America’s English heritage established a tradition of court processes in which the people have a right to participate actively—and we always have. With relative freedom from royal supervision and with court enforcement of religious as well as civil laws, American courts tried many matters that were not subject to court action in other parts of the British empire and that are now considered too minor to warrant criminal action.
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When a person dies, every state has laws that provide for public supervision over the estate that is left, whether or not there is a will. The term “probate records” broadly covers all the records produced by these laws, although, strictly speaking, “probate” applies only when there is a will.
Family historians use probate case files far more than any other kind of court record. Probate case files are logical sources because they tend to include so much personal data, and because Americans have depended on the courts to settle their estates since North America was colonized. According to Val Greenwood in his Researcher’s Guide to American Genealogy, “All records which relate to the disposition of an estate after its owner’s death are referred to as probate records. These are many and varied in both content and value, but basically, they fall into two main classes: testate and intestate” (page 255) . Probate case files generally provide names, addresses, and biographical data for the deceased, but frequently provide the same information for other relatives named in the papers. Relationships, maiden names of wives, married names of daughters, past residences, and place of origin in a native country are just a few of the details that can be discovered in probate files. And probate files can be found in courthouses and archives across the United States.
When requesting probate information from the county clerk, it is important not to limit yourself by asking for a person’s “will.” The clerk will usually take you at your word and not copy other papers in the probate file that may have equally important information if there is no will.
Even if your ancestor is not mentioned in a probate case, consider all of the other procedures which might have resulted in him or her appearing in court records.
Search South Carolina Historical Records - Databases include Court, Land, Wills & Financial Records; Birth, Marriage & Death Records; Voter Lists & Census Records; Immigration & Emigration Records; Obituary Records; Military Records; Family Tree Records; Pictures; Stories, Memories & Histories; Directories & Member Lists and much more....
Even today, few people escape mention in court records at some time during their lives as witnesses, litigants, jurors, appointees to office, or as petition signatories. However, Americans of a few generations ago also expected to attend local court proceedings when they were in session. It was a civic duty-and they could be fined if they did not attend......
There is no effective substitute for an on-site search of county courthouse records. County level records have not yet been centralized. No single county's records have been significantly abstracted or transcribed, making a courthouse visit essential. County records vary widely from county to county in both quality and quantity.
Most courts in America are courts of record, that is, they are required by law to keep a record of their proceedings; South Carolina's courts are no exception. Understanding South Carolina's court system is challenging, but a researcher needs a basic understanding of the courts because their records are useful in genealogy.
Many court records have been microfilmed and are available at the South Carolina Department of Archives and History and the FHL. Most libraries and archives with genealogical collections have some printed abstracts of court records.
Probate records include a variety of documents created to support court proceedings in the settlement of an individuals' estates. The number and type of probate records created may vary over time in different jurisdictions and due to the amount of real and personal property involved. The various documents generated in the probate process are rarely filed together......
The forerunner to the Probate Court was the Court of the Ordinary. The founding of the Colony in 1670 led to the creation of the original Probate Court. In the court´s early days, the Royal Governors or their secretaries were the only Ordinaries in the province. Beginning in 1778, the S.C. Commons House of Assembly was to appoint Ordinaries for each of the province´s seven court districts. However, appointments did not occur until 1782, due to the presence of British forces in South Carolina. When the last Royal Governor fled after the adoption of the Federal Constitution on June 21, 1788, the General Assembly appointed an Ordinary to fulfill the duties of the office. In 1787, duties of the District Ordinaries transferred to county courts. Within a year of the abolishing of County courts in 1799, the S.C. General Assembly created 24 circuit court districts and appointed Ordinaries in 1815. The S.C. Constitution of 1868 replaced the Court of the Ordinary with the Probate Court. Changes to the S.C. Constitution in 1895 required the Probate Court to be dependent on the General Assembly for funding and legal procedures.
Probate records include wills, inventories, guardianship papers, estate papers, settlements, newspaper announcements, and numerous other documents. Researchers should be familiar with four terms: testate, intestate, primogeniture, and dower —all have importance in South Carolina research.
During the colonial period, the rule of primogeniture operated in South Carolina. Under primogeniture, land automatically descended to the eldest male heir; if there were no male heirs, all female heirs shared the land equally. In South Carolina primogeniture was abolished in 1791. The division of intestate estates during the colonial period was based on an English statute of 1670, formally adopted into South Carolina law in 1712. The division of the estate after payment of all just debts and expenses was as follows: the widow, if any, received one-third of all real estate for life; the heir-at-law (eldest son) received the title to all real estate, including the widow's dower, which he inherited at her death; the widow received one-third of the personal property, and the children shared equally in the other two-thirds. If there were no widow, the children shared the personal property equally. If there were no children, the widow received one-half of the estate, and the other half was divided equally among the siblings of the deceased. Any property, real or personal, that was not bequeathed or devised in a valid will was divided according to the law.
Initially, the governor and the grand council were the only court of ordinary (probate) in the province; the secretary of the province also began functioning as a court of ordinary by 1692 (see Court Records).
In 1781, the seven circuit court districts (see Formation of Local Government) were given courts of ordinary, but the only surviving records are those of Camden, Charleston, and Ninety-Six Districts.
In 1785, the circuit court districts were subdivided into counties; courts of ordinary were established in functioning counties beginning in 1787. During the fifteen years that counties in circuit court districts existed, probate actions could be conducted in the courts of ordinary in both the county and its circuit court district. When the counties and districts were replaced by twenty-five districts (counties) in 1800, courts of ordinary were established in each district. Probate records from 1800 to the present and records of the counties and circuit court districts from 1785–1800 are found in the county's judge of probate office.
Many probate records are among the records of the equity court. Established in 1791 and mostly disbanded by 1821, the equity courts handled partitions of property, among other probate actions.
Things taxed have included carriages and watches, windows and whiskey, land and slaves. Taxes on documents and tea helped start a war. Arkansas Territory’s sudden tax on bounty lands in the 1820s was enacted and due before the news had time to reach out-of-state owners, permitting the quick seizure and sale of “delinquent” lands. As this variety suggests, name lists of such taxes must be used with a cautious understanding of who should be on the list and who should not...
With the exception of a single tax list from 1733 and occasional lists of tax collectors, no colonial tax records of South Carolina have survived. Parishes and townships functioned as tax districts until 1800; circuit court districts and their counties also functioned as tax districts from 17851800. Many of these tax lists are incomplete, the known tax lists, 178399, are as follows:
Directories for the city of Charleston date from 1782. These directories may help locate a Charleston ancestor who does not appear in other records. They are housed at the Charleston Library Society
Most districts/counties have some tax records dating from 1800 to the present, with the majority of tax records dating from 1865. A fairly complete series from 1824, mostly of the Low Country districts, is available at the South Carolina Department of Archives and History. The South Carolina Department of Archives and History has originals of most extant tax lists, and microfilmed copies of county tax records are available at the South Carolina Department of Archives and History and the FHL.
| FOR DEFINITIONS OF ALL COURT TERMS SEE THE GENEALOGY ENCYCLOPEDIA | ||
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