Hunt County was created in 1846 and formed from Fannin and Nacogdoches Counties. Hunt County was named for Memucan Hunt, a secretary of the navy under the Republic of Texas. The County Seat is Greenville. The Official County website is located at http://www.huntcounty.net. See also Extended History for more historical details.
Areas adjacent to Hunt County are Fannin County (north), Delta County (northeast), Hopkins County (east), Rains County (southeast), Van Zandt County (south), Kaufman County (south), Rockwall County (southwest), Collin County (west)
In 1846, when Hunt County was created, Greenville was chosen as the county seat. Court sessions were held under oak trees at the corner of St. John and Bourland streets until the first courthouse was built here in 1847. A log cabin, it was located on the west side of the square. It was replaced in 1853 by a 2-story frame courthouse on the northwest corner. The center of the square, which had been reserved for a more substantial building, was used in 1858 for the third courthouse. The first brick structure in the county, it was condemned in 1874. County offices were moved to a building at 2610 Lee Street, purchased from the Methodist Episcopal Church, South. The fifth courthouse, an ornate red brick building with white stone trim, was constructed here in 1883. Thirteen months later it was destroyed by a fire which heavily damaged the town's commercial district. A new courthouse, which closely resembled the 1883 structure, was built in 1885. In 1928 it was torn down to make room for construction of the present courthouse, the seventh for Hunt County. A formal dedication was held on April 11, 1929, the 83rd anniversary of the county's founding.
Researchers often overlook the importance of court records, probate records, and land records as a source of family history information.
PLEASE READ FIRST!!!! Please call the clerk's department to confirm hours, mailing address, fees and other specifics before visiting or requesting information because of sometimes changing contact information.
Hunt County Clerk has Court Records from 1851, Land Records from 1846 , Probate Records from 1847, Marriage Records from 1858 and Birth/Death Records from 1903 is located at 2500 Lee Street, 2nd Floor, Greenville, Texas 75401; (903) 408-4130.
The County Clerk's Office is the record keeper of the county. The county records include birth certificates, death certificates, marriage licenses, brand registrations, DD214s (military discharges), land / real estate / property records, probate and civil filings.
There are a few online databases for Court, Land and Probate Records which include: Texas Birth Index, 1903-1997, Texas Deaths, 1964-98, Texas Marriage Collection, 1814-1909 & 1966-2002, and Texas Divorce Index, 1968-2002. You may also search the Bureau of Land Management (BLM) which does cover Texas. Many pioneers and settelers bought land from the government instead of individuals.
Below is a list of online resources for Hunt County Court Records. Email us with websites containing Hunt County Court Records by clicking the link below:
Birth, marriage, and death records are connected with central life events. They are prime sources for genealogical information.
Texas Department of State Health Services, 1100 W. 49th Street, Austin, TX 78756; (888) 963-7111 or (512) 458-7111; Fax: (512) 458-7711. Please allow up to approximately 6-8 weeks for processing of all type of certificates when ordered through the mail, or 2-5 Days when you order through VitalChek Express Certificate Services. The Vital Records Department has the following records:
ORDERING
There are a few online marriage databases which include: Texas Birth Index, 1903-1997, Texas Deaths, 1964-98, Texas Marriage Collection, 1814-1909 & 1966-2002, and Texas Divorce Index, 1968-2002. Below is a list of online resources for Hunt County Vital Records. Email us with websites containing Hunt County Vital Records by clicking the link below:
Few, if any, records reveal as many details about individuals and families as do government census records. Substitute records can be used when the official census is unavailable
Countywide Records: Federal Population Schedules that exist for Hunt County, Texas are 1850, 1860, 1870, 1880, 1890 (fragment, see below), 1900, 1910, 1920 and 1930.
The Texas State Library holds microfilm editions for all of Texas' federal censuses. Although the 1850, 1860, and part of the 1870 mortality schedules have been published, all the original mortality schedules are at the Texas State Library and on microfilm The 1830 territorial census of Miller County, Arkansas, enumerates an area that is in today's Texas boundaries. The remaining 1890 population schedules which exist for Texas include: Ellis County (Justice Precinct 6, Mountain Peak, and Ovilla Precinct); Hood County (Precinct 5); Rusk County (No. 6 and Justice Precinct No. 7); Trinity County (town of Trinity and Justice Precinct 2); and Kaufman County (Kaufman). Although Greer County in present-day Oklahoma functioned as part of Texas between 1886 and 1896, the 1890 census for this county was enumerated under Oklahoma Territory.
Other Federal Schedules to look at when researching your family tree in Hunt County, Texas are Industry and Agriculture Schedules availible for the years 1850, 1860, 1870 and 1880. Slave Schedules exist for 1850 & 1860. The Mortality Schedules for the years 1850, 1860, 1870 and 1880. There are free downloadable and printable Census forms to help with your research. These include U.S. Census Extraction Forms and U.K. Census Extraction Forms
Below is a list of online resources for Hunt County Census Records. Email us with websites containing Hunt County Census Records by clicking the link below:
Genealogy Atlas has images of old American atlases during the years 1795, 1814, 1822, 1823, 1836, 1838, 1845, 1856, 1866, 1879 and 1897 for Arkansas and other states.
You can view rotating animated maps for Texas showing all the county boundaries for each census year overlayed with past and present maps so you can see the changes in county boundaries. You can view a list of maps for other states at Census Maps
You can view rotating animated maps for Texas showing all the county boundary changes for each year overlayed with past and present maps so you can see the changes in county boundaries. You can view a list of maps for other states and State Department of Transportation Maps at County Maps.
Below is a list of online resources for Hunt County Maps. Email us with websites containing Hunt County Maps by clicking the link below:
Military and civil service records provide unique facts and insights into the lives of men and women who have served their country at home and abroad.
The uses and value of military records in genealogical research for ancestors who were veterans are obvious, but military records can also be important to re-searchers whose direct ancestors were not soldiers in any war. The fathers, grandfathers, brothers, and other close relatives of an ancestor may have served in a war, and their service or pension records could contain information that will assist in further identifying the family of primary interest. Due to the amount of genealogical information contained in some military pension files, they should never be overlooked during the research process. Those records not containing specific genealogical information are of historic value and should be included in any overall research design.
Below is a list of online resources for Hunt County Military Records. Email us with websites containing Hunt County Military Records by clicking the link below:
Texas tax records constitute one of the most complete sets of available records generated at the county level (by the Commissioners Court) because these documents are maintained by the state. These lists may only include approximately sixty percent of eligible males over the age of twenty-one. Persons exempted from taxes included native Americans, "idiots," "incompetents," and those exempted because of age. This final category of exemptions varied over time. Years without an older age exemption were 1840 and 1862-70. Between 1841-44 exemptions began at forty-five years; in 1845 and from 1850-61 the upward age was set at fifty years. In 1837, 1848, and 1849 the limit was established as fifty-five, and in 1846-7, and 1871 the upward limit was set at sixty years.
Texas Ad Valorem (poll, personal, and real property) tax records for 1836 through 1976 are available in microfilm at the Texas State Library from the date of respective county organization; these are arranged by county and date and are somewhat alphabetized within each division. Microfilm copies are housed in the Genealogy Section. Tax lists for the various counties from creation to 1901 may be borrowed through interlibrary loan. Tax records through 1901-1947 are readily accessible, but not on interlibrary loan. Those for 1948 through 1976 can be obtained upon request.
Below is a list of online resources for Hunt County Tax Records. Email us with websites containing Hunt County Tax Records by clicking the link below:
The Repositories in this section are Archives, Libraries, Museums, Genealogical and Historical Societies. Many County Historical and Genealogical Societies publish magazines and/or news letters on a monthly, quarterly, bi-annual or annual basis. Contacting the local societies should not be over looked. State Archives and Societies are usually much larger and better organized with much larger archived materials than their smaller county cousins but they can be more generalized and over look the smaller details that local societies tend to have. Libraries can also be a good place to look for local information. Some libraries have a genealogy section and may have some resources that are not located at archives or societies. Also, take a special look at any museums in the area. They sometimes have photos and items from years gone by as well as information of a genealogical interest. All these places are vitally important to the family genealogist and must not be passed over.
Below is a list of online resources for Hunt County Genealogical Addresses. Email us with websites containing Hunt County Genealogical Addresses by clicking the link below:
Obituaries can vary in the amount of information they contain, but many of them are genealogical goldmines, including information such as names, dates, places of birth and death, marriage information, and family relationships.
There are many churches and cemeteries in Hunt County. Some transcriptions are online. A great site is the Hunt County Tombstone Transcription Project.
During Texas's colonization period Roman Catholics were the most numerous, but early citizens included those representing other religious faiths such as Baptist, Methodist, Presbyterian, and Christian or Disciples of Christ.
Many cemetery records have been collected and transcribed, including the largest of which is multi-volumes compilation by the DAR and two volumes for Peters Colonists and descendants. The DAR collection, also microfilmed, is available at the Texas State Library and through the FHL.
Some Texas county historical and genealogical societies have published local cemetery and/funeral home records. These are normally available for purchase through the respective society. Two references can help determine which cemeteries have been recorded: Kim Parsons', A Reference to Texas Cemetery Records (Humble, Tex.: by author, 1988), arranged by county; and Sharry Crofford-Gould's, Texas Cemetery Inscriptions: A Source Index
(San Antonio, Tex.: Limited Editions, 1977).
Below is a list of online resources for Hunt County Cemetery & Church Records. Email us with websites containing Hunt County Cemetery & Church Records by clicking the link below:
The use of published genealogies, electronic files containing genealogical lineage, and other compiled sources can be of tremendous value to a researcher.
When view family trees online or not, be sure to only take the info at face value and always follow up with your own sources or verify the ones they provide. Below is a list of online resources for Hunt County Family Trees, web forums and other family type information. Email us with websites containing Hunt County Family Trees, web forums and other family type information by clicking the link below:
Although the Mexican government made a few land grants in the area of Hunt County in 1835, settlement did not begin until 1839. When Anglo-American settlers first arrived, the area was inhabited by small bands of Kiowa Indians, who left shortly thereafter and posed few problems for the settlers. Settlement remained sparse during the years of the republic and early statehood. An estimated 350 people lived in the county when it was formed from Fannin and Nacogdoches counties in 1846 and named for Memucan Hunt, the first Texas minister to Washington. Greenville, established on land donated by McQuinney H. Wright and James G. Bourland, became the county seat. The original county boundaries were reduced by the establishment of Rains County in 1870, but afterward remained unchanged.
Although large portions of the county were ideally suited for the growth of cotton, a slaveholding–cotton plantation society did not develop in Hunt County during the years of antebellum Texas. The primary inhibiting factor was the lack of transportation. There were no navigable watercourses and no railroads. The nearest viable market was Jefferson, 120 miles to the east. Those supplies not produced locally were hauled in by ox cart. As a result, a self-sufficient, "yeoman-farmer" economy developed. Most of the 6,053 white residents in the county in 1860 were natives of Southern states. There were also 577 African Americans in the county, held as slaves by 142 whites. Although the numbers are small, slavery had a significant impact on the county's development, since slaveholders formed an economically elite group that dominated the county politically.
In 1861 Hunt County citizens were sharply divided over the issue of secession. Martin D. Hart and his brother Hardin were leaders of a very vocal antisecession minority. The vote in the county was close (416 to 339), but a majority supported secession. Once the war began, an overwhelming majority of residents supported the war effort, and hundreds of county men fought. During the last half of the war the number of blacks in the county rose to more than 1,200, as slaveholders from other areas of the South moved their slaves to Texas in an effort to keep them from fleeing to or being confiscated by Union forces. When defeat brought the end of slavery, although the number of blacks in the county was too small to allow them even a measure of political control, many white citizens bitterly resented both their freedom and their enfranchisement during Reconstruction. The county was plagued by violence against blacks and by feuds between small bands of Unionists and former Confederates. The worst of these, the Lee-Peacock feud, became so violent that in January 1869 United States Army troops were called in to restore order. The troops were removed in June 1870.
Hunt County was returned to white control in January 1870 and remained loyal to the Democratic party for many years after Reconstruction; the county supported the Democratic candidate in every presidential election through 1948. After 1952, when Dwight D. Eisenhower carried the area easily, the area began to trend more Republican. Though the Democrats won majorities in the county in 1960 and 1964, Hubert Humphrey won only a plurality of the county's votes in 1968, and the Republicans took the county in 1972, 1980, 1984, and 1988. Democrat Bill Clinton won a plurality of the county's voters in 1992, at least partly because independent candidate Ross Perot polled strongly in the area during that election. But Republican Bob Dole won a plurality in 1996, and George W. Bush carried the county by large margins in 2000 and 2004.
In the decades after the Civil War dramatic changes took place in Hunt County. By the mid-1870s railroad connections could be reached by traveling thirty miles in any direction from the county seat. In October 1880 the first train pulled into Greenville on tracks laid by the East Line and Red River Railroad. The next year the Missouri, Kansas and Texas Railroad extended its line from Mineola to Greenville. By 1904 seven rail lines crossed some part of the county, and eleven railroad towns of varying sizes were providing farmers facilities for shipping their crops. The county remained primarily rural, with an economy that depended heavily on agriculture, but Hunt County was no longer a small, isolated, yeoman-farmer society. From a population of 6,630, with 412 farms and a cotton crop of twenty-two bales in 1860, Hunt County had grown to a population of 47,295, with 5,946 farms and a cotton crop in excess of 50,000 bales in 1900. Cotton provided the county with its principal cash crop through the first half of the twentieth century, as cotton production remained above 50,000 bales a year. It did not bring prosperity for most of the county's residents, however. In 1880, 31 percent of the county's farmers were either tenants or sharecroppers, and by 1900 more than 58 percent fell into one of these two categories. The trend continued until 1930, when almost 72 percent of the farmers tilled land they did not own.
Other changes were also taking place during this period. In 1887 a privately owned electricity-generating plant was opened in Greenville. When the town purchased the plant shortly thereafter, Greenville became the first community in Texas with municipally owned public utilities. During the early years of the twentieth century, Greenville extended its lines to farmers who lived in the central part of the county.
Following the explosive growth in population during the last forty years of the nineteenth century, the population of the county remained relatively stable during the first forty years of the twentieth century. It rose slightly between 1900 and 1920, when the census reported a population of 50,350, then fell slightly over the next twenty years to a figure of 48,793 in 1940. During this forty-year period the county's black population increased slightly in both real numbers and proportionally. In 1900 there were 4,300 blacks in the county (9 percent of the population). By 1940 the number had risen to 6,288 (12.9 percent of the population).
Like most areas of the country, Hunt County was hit hard by the Great Depression. The value of the county's farms plummeted to about half of the 1920 total. By 1935 some 2,259 heads of families were on government relief. As late as 1940 the unemployment rate stood at 16.7 percent, and the number of farms in the county had dropped by almost 1,500. The bulk of this drop represented tenant farmers and sharecroppers who had been forced to leave the land. Still, cotton production remained high in 1940, with 53,444 bales reported, and those who farmed land they did not own constituted 62 percent of all farmers.
During the 1940s and 1950s the economy of the county began to change perceptibly. Cotton continued to be vital. In fact, the 66,117 bales reported in 1950 was the highest total ever recorded in a census year. But increasing mechanization led to larger farms, and tenants and sharecroppers continued to leave the land. The total number of farms in 1950 had dropped by more than 1,000 from the 1940 census figure. For the first time in the twentieth century, a majority of the farmers in the county owned their farms. Farmers also began to diversify their operations, as livestock, particularly cattle, became a major component in the economy. During the 1950s the number of farms in the county continued to fall, and cotton production began to decline also. By 1959 there were 1,200 fewer farms in the county, and the cotton crop was reported at 31,819 bales.
Industrial development was slow immediately after the Civil War, but by 1904 Hunt County had numerous industrial operations, including sawmills, cotton-spinning mills, cotton compresses, a cottonseed-oil refinery, and a shoe factory. Industries such as these employed a small minority of the county's work force (only 685 wage earners in 1940) before World War II. During the war an Air Corps training facility, Majors Field, was opened just outside Greenville. After it closed in 1945 it was converted to an industrial site, and a successful effort was made to attract industry. By 1953 more than 2,100 of the county's citizens were employed in manufacturing.
Changes in agriculture and economy were reflected in population shifts. In 1940, 38 percent of county residents lived in Greenville and Commerce, the two largest towns. By 1960 the figure had risen to 63 percent. Despite diversification, the economy was not strong enough to offset advantages offered elsewhere. County population declined from 48,793 in 1940 to 39,399 in 1960. The drop was due to diminution of the county's white population, which declined from 42,503 in 1940 to 32,934 in 1960. During this same period the number of blacks in the county rose slightly, from 6,288 to 6,408.
The trends in agriculture that began after World War II continued between 1959 and the 1980s. The rate of decrease in the number of farms had slowed noticeably. The county had 2,245 farms in 1959 and 1,864 in 1982. By 1982 almost all farms (91 percent) were owner-operated. The production of cotton fell to 4,409 bales in 1982. Farming operations were much more diversified, as the county's farmers produced 1,346,284 bushels of wheat and 602,193 bushels of sorghum. Livestock, primarily beef cattle and dairy products, accounted for more than half of the $20,070,000 worth of agricultural products sold.
Though agriculture continued to be a significant aspect of the county's economy, by 1982 its role was a small one compared to that of industry. Between 1960 and 1980 the earlier efforts to attract industry to the county began to bear fruit. In 1965 manufacturing establishments provided more than 4,500 jobs. By 1980, with clothing and aeronautics manufacturers leading the way, sixty-two manufacturing firms employed 6,575 people (47.5 percent of all workers) with an annual payroll of more than $95 million. During the 1960s the population of the county began to grow again, rising to 47,948 by 1970 and to 55,248 (its highest point to that time) by 1980. Much of this growth is attributable to an influx of whites. Between 1960 and 1980 the white population rose by 43 percent, reaching 47,105. During the same period the black population increased by only 9 percent, to 7,006. This growth continued in the 1980s; the population of Hunt County was 64,343 in 1990. In the nineteenth and early twentieth centuries the county's population was largely rural, and mere literacy was the measure of educational achievement. By 1980 the population was largely urban, and, for the first time in the county's history, a majority (56.5 percent) of its citizens over the age of twenty-five had graduated from high school. By the late twentieth century the county was crisscrossed by highways, and some of its citizens commuted to jobs in the Dallas-Fort Worth area.
In 2000 the census counted 76,596 people living in Hunt County. About 81 percent were Anglo, about 10 percent were black, and 8 percent were Hispanic. More than 69 percent were high school graduates, and almost 16 percent had college degrees. In the early twenty-first century education, manufacturing, and agribusiness were the key elements of the area's economy. In 2002 the county had 2,784 farms and ranches covering 400,272 acres, 56 percent of which were devoted to crops, 35 percent to pasture, and 6 percent to woodlands. In that year local farmers and ranchers earned $28,066,000; livestock sales accounted for $16,351,000 of the total. Cattle, forage, and greenhouse crops were the chief agricultural products. Hunt County has several notable recreational facilities, including Lake Tawakoni, and educational facilities, including Texas A&M University–Commerce. Major communities include Greenville (2000 population 23,960), Commerce (7,669), Caddo Mills (1,149), Quinlan (1,370), and Wolfe City (1,566). The Audie Murphy/American Cotton Museum is in Greenville.