Washington County Church and Cemetery Records

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See Also Research In State Church & Cemetery Records - Church records rank among the most promising of genealogical records available. Indeed, for periods before the advent of civil registration of vital statistics (a very late development in many American states) , church records rank as the best available sources for information on specific vital events: birth, marriage, and death. They are also among the most under-used major records in American genealogy. Part of the reason lies in the number of denominations-there are hundreds of them. Identifying and locating the records of these various churches makes even professional genealogists hesitate......

Catholic and Protestant faiths were in Washington State from its earliest days. Other American traditions such as Mormonism and the Seventh-day Adventist churches soon followed.

The Presbyterian faith arrived in Oregon Territory in 1838. The collected history for the Presbyterian Church in the United States of America, Synod of Washington, is in History of the Synod of Washington of the Presbyterian Church in the U.S.A., 1835–1909, and Local Presbyterian Church Histories of Washington Associations that Comprise the Olympia Presbyterial, 1890–1972.

A major Presbyterian archive repository is the San Francisco Theological Seminary, 2 Kensington Rd., San Anselmo, CA 94960.

The Methodist Episcopal Church was the first Protestant group to organize a local church east of the Cascades. Methodism arrived in Vancouver in 1848 and in Olympia and Seattle in 1853. The United Methodist Church has a repository of records at the University of Puget Sound, Collins Memorial Library, 1500 North Warner, Tacoma, Washington 98416.

The Roman Catholic Church is one of the oldest denominations in the state and remains today one of its largest.

Major Catholic record repositories are at the Diocese of Spokane, 728 Washington 1023 W. Riverside Ave., P.O. Box 1453, Spokane, WA 99201- 1453; Archdiocese of Seattle, 910 Marion St., Seattle, WA 98104; and Diocese of Yakima, 5301 Tieton Dr., Yakima, WA 98908.

Missionaries from the Utah-based Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints were sent to the Pacific Northwest as early as 1850. Pockets of Mormons continued to grow although missionary efforts did not begin seriously until the 1880s and 1890s. The church has emerged today as one of the largest denominations in the state. The congregation and mission records have been microfilmed and are deposited at the FHL.

Also, missionaries from the Missouri-based Reorganized Church of Jesus Christ of Latter Day Saints (now the Community of Christ) arrived in Washington State in the nineteenth century.

The congregation records for this denomination are also on microfilm at the FHL.

Seventh-day Adventists arrived in Washington Territory in the 1860s, with a strong presence in the state today. See the Del E. Webb Memorial Library, Loma Linda University, Loma Linda, CA 92350.

The Episcopal Church arrived in Washington in 1851 at Cathlamet as a mission outreach from Portland. Its records can be found at the two Episcopal diocese covering the state: The Diocese of Olympia, 1551 Tenth Ave. East, P.O. Box 12126, Seattle, WA 98102 and the Diocese of Spokane, 245 E. 13th Ave., Spokane, WA 99202- 1114.

The Lutheran faith arrived in Washington as the result of migration by Scandinavians to the Puget Sound area. The Pacific Lutheran University, Robert A.L. Mortvedt Library, 1010 122nd St. South, Tacoma, WA 98447-0013 has many oral histories and historical research papers in their archives concerning the Lutheran faith in western Washington.

Search Washington 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....

Cemeteries - The Washington State Genealogical Society has published statewide inventories of cemeteries in Washington. Several local genealogical societies have published information on tombstones from graveyards in their areas. The USGenWeb has a growing collection of Washington graveyard inscriptions on its website under “Tombstone Transcription Project.”

Cemetery records and gravestone inscriptions are a rich source of information for family historians. Cemetery and other sources of information associated with death include:

FOR DEFINITIONS OF ALL CEMETERY TERMS SEE THE GENEALOGY ENCYCLOPEDIA
  • Biographical works
  • Burial permits
  • Church burial registers
  • Cemetery records (often several different kinds are kept)
  • Cemetery indexes (often compiled by genealogical societies)
  • Cemetery sextons’ records
  • Cemetery deed and plot registers
  • Death certificates
  • Death indexes
  • Family bibles
  • Family burial plots
  • Funeral director’s records
  • Grave opening orders
  • Gravestone (monument) inscriptions
  • Military records
  • Monuments and memorials
  • Necrologies
  • Newspaper death notices
  • Obituaries
  • Probate records
  • Published death records
  • Religious records
  • Transcriptions of cemetery inscriptions
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