I’m trying to find records that were most likely part of the North and South Carolina records that w
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Hello Andrea,
Here is a list of the Community Groups. https://www.familysearch.org/wiki/en/FamilySearch_Genealogy_Research_Groups#Specialty_Pages_and_Groups_Related_to_Genealogy
I'm going to tag your question for @North Carolina Research and @South Carolina Genealogy
Enjoy,
Anitra
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Im confused
how can you find them - if they were burned . . . . ??
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You may want to try SC Digital Archives or NC Digital Archives - that's if the County building was burned after and if they sent records to State Level. Also, depending on what type of record you are looking for you may want to try state vital records or newspapers.
https://scdah.sc.gov/research-and-genealogy/online-research/digital-collections
https://archives.ncdcr.gov/researchers/digital-collections
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Are you researching Sampson County? The courthouse burned to the ground several times but I have found federal census, deeds and wills online.
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the precise wording of your question is a big confusing.
The fact that such records were burned means that those records dont now exist.
I assume what you mean is what OTHER types of records can be used in their absence.
I faced similar challenges in the state of Virginia
Here is a page I wrote up - of supplemental record types that one can search.
http://yanceyfamilygenealogy.org/virginia_burned_record_counties.htm
much of what applies can apply very similarly to North Carolina.
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I found that some local records that were burned were in the State Archives!
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Yes - in a few cases when records have been burned there were backups at the state archives.
But this was rare to be the case
in most cases - the records are just lost.
and in most cases - if there are replacment records at the state level - such is very well documented and has been known for quite a long time. [click expand post]
the status of BURNED RECORD counties - have been extensively researched across many years and what is and is not available and where it is located at is ususally pretty well documented.
here are some links of interest along those lines:
https://raogk.org/counties/northcarolina/
http://www.ncgenweb.us/ncstate/courthouse-status.htm
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