Genealogy Web Links

Missouri  70% of these miscellaneous web links have been removed because they don't work.  KD May 2025

Centennial History Centennial History of Missouri from Accessgenealogy
Jesse James Jesse James Web Site (on Rootsweb)
Look to the Past Look to the Past
Missouri Genealogy Missouri Genealogy Resources from AccessGenealogy.com
Certified Genealogists Certified Genealogists Residing or Specializing in Missouri
Cyndi's Links Cyndi's List of Genealogy Sites on the Internet U.S. - Missouri
MOGenWeb MOGenWeb Project
Vital Records Missouri Vital Records Current Information

Other Helpful Sites

General Resources General Genealogy Resources
Linkpendium Linkpendium for Carroll County, Missouri
USGenWeb United States GenWeb Project
World GenWeb World GenWeb Project
Ellis Island American Family Immigration History Center at ellisislandrecords.org

Place/County Finders

  • USGS Place Finder
    Find Cemeteries, Lakes, look for places with your surnames in the titles (might be clues as to areas where your ancestors have been), and more!

Code Generators & Date Converters

Dictionaries & Reference Guides

Internet Research Helps

Research Guides

Social Security Death Index

 

Translators

  • Google Language Tools for searching web pages in other languages

  • Babel Fish Translation from AltaVista

  • Language Dictionaries

    • yourdictionary.com - There are 6,800 known languages spoken in the 200 countries of the world. 2,261 have writing systems (the others are only spoken) and about 300 are represented by on-line dictionaries as of May 11, 2004.  New languages and dictionaries are constantly being added to yourDictionary.com; as a result, we have the widest and deepest set of dictionaries, grammars, and other language resources on the web.

    • Glossaries Arranged by Languages - Compiled by the University of Finland

    • Yahoo!Reference Language Dictionaries

Links tested to this point on the page. May 25'

Civil War

In 1818, Missouri requested admittance to the Union as a slave state. This became a national controversy due to the delicate balance between free and slave states. In 1820, the Missouri Compromise cleared the way for Missouri's entry to the union as a slave state, along with Maine, a free state, to preserve the balance. Additionally, the Missouri Compromise stated that the remaining portion of the Louisiana Territory above the 36°30′ line was to be free from slavery. This same year, the first Missouri constitution was adopted. The following year, Missouri was admitted as the 24th state, with the state capital temporarily located in Saint Charles until a permanent location could be selected. Jefferson City was chosen in 1826 as the site for the capital.

During this time, both free blacks and slaves lived in Missouri. In 1824, the Missouri State Supreme Court ruled that free blacks could not be re-enslaved, known as "once free, always free." In 1846, the Dred Scott v. Sandford case began. Dred and Harriet Scott, who were slaves, sued for freedom in state courts. This was on the premise that he had previously lived in a free state. This case continued until 1857, culminating in a landmark United States Supreme Court decision rejecting Scott's arguments and sustaining slavery.

Immediately before the Civil War began, Missourians voted overwhelmingly against seceding from the Union. However, in the 1860 presidential election, the Republican (and therefore anti-slavery) Abraham Lincoln received only a small percentage of Missouri votes, mostly from St. Louis. Northern Democrat Stephen A. Douglas won the state's 12 electoral votes — the only state he captured in his campaign. Sympathies ran for both sides, the Confederacy and the Union, and it was in Saint Louis where the first blood was spilled in the "Camp Jackson Massacre." Because of the mixed sympathies, Missouri was the only state in the Union that did not officially secede, but where the Army declared a state of war.

Secessionists formed their own unrecognized government seceded from the Union, joining the Confederacy and establishing a capital at Marshall, Texas. By the end of the war, Missouri had supplied 110,000 troops for the Union Army and 40,000 troops for the Confederate Army. In 1861, General John C. Fremont issued a proclamation that freed slaves owned by those that had taken up arms against the Union.

Because of the state's strategic location linking Northern and Southern states, many important Civil War battles occurred in Missouri. The state was the location of the largest number of engagements of any state.

In 1865, Missouri became the first slave state to abolish slavery, doing so before the adoption of the Thirteenth Amendment to the United States Constitution by an ordinance of immediate emancipation. Missouri adopted a new constitution, one that denied voting rights and had prohibitions against certain occupations for former Confederacy supporters.

Source:  Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
 

 

 Church Records - Missouri

 

  • Missouri Baptist Historical Commission
    William E. Partee Center, William Jewel College

    500 College Hill
    Liberty, MO 64068
    Phone (college): (816) 781-7700 Fax: (816) 415-5021
     
  • Smiley Memorial Library
    Central Methodist University
    411 Central Methodist Square
    Fayette, MO 65248
    The Missouri United Methodist Archives houses the collection of historical materials concerning Methodism in Missouri. This includes Minutes of the Annual Conferences, Disciplines, hymnals dating back into the 18th century, and books on Methodist history. Ancestral denominations of Methodism include: 
    Methodist Episcopal Church; Methodist Episcopal Church, South; Methodist Protestant Church; German Methodist Church; United Brethren Church; and Evangelical United Brethren. 

Newspapers Online

 

Maps

How to Use Maps:

Page last updated: 4 May 2025