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| Pennsylvania Court Records |
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Passenger lists for the port of Philadelphia, 1800-1945,
and indexes, 1800-1948, are available at the National
Archives-Mid Atlantic Region. The pre-1820 records are
actually baggage lists.
While not classified as immigration records, crew
and vessel lists for the port of Philadelphia, 1789-1880,
are available in indexed typescript volumes at the Historical
Society of Pennsylvania and the Free Library of Philadelphia,
Pennsylvania 19103.
Colonial Naturalizations
The Archives maintains naturalization lists of the Supreme Court and Courts of Nisi Prius (Record Group-21) for the years 1740-1773. These lists consist of names of those people who swore an oath of allegiance to the British Sovereign. Arranged chronologically, these lists were published in Pennsylvania Archives , Second Series, Volume 2 and have been reprinted as Persons Naturalized in the Province of Pennsylvania, 1740-1773 (Baltimore: Genealogical Publishing Co., 1967), with an index.
Pennsylvania Supreme Court Naturalizations
In addition, naturalization records of the Supreme Court of Pennsylvania, 1794-1868 (Record Group-33) are available for the Eastern District (Philadelphia), Southern District (Chambersburg), and Western District (Pittsburgh). An index of the records of the Eastern District in Philadelphia covering the years 1794-1868 has been published in Philadelphia Naturalization Records: An Index to Records of Alliens' Declarations of Intention and/or Oaths of Allegiance, 1789-1880, in the United States Circuit Court, United States District Court, Supreme Court of Pennsylvania, Quarter Sessions Court, Court of Common Pleas, Philadelphia (Detroit, MI: Gale Research Company, 1982)
- Naturalization Petitions for the Eastern District of Pennsylvania, 1795-1930(The National Archives): These are Naturalization Records of the US Circuit Court for the Eastern District of Pennsylvania. They include petitions for naturalization, 1795-1930; and declarations of intent, 1793-1818, and 1825-1836. There are some years missing from this publication within those time periods.
- Naturalization Petitions of the U.S. Circuit and District Courts for the Middle District of Pennsylvania, 1906-1930 (The National Archives): These petitions are arranged by court then by year. Within each year, they are listed by the date of the record and then by petitioner's name. Typing a name in the search box directly below this title may bring the best results. Additional years prior to 1906 are also included in these naturalization records for Pennsylvania's middle district.
- Naturalization Petitions of the U.S. District Court, 1820-1930, and Circuit Court, 1820-1911, for the Western District of Pennsylvania (The National Archives): These files contain declarations of intent and petitions for naturalization for the Western District of Pennsylvania, arranged by date, October 1820 through September 26, 1906. They also include records of the US Circuit Court, July 1910-1911, listed by petition number, from 1 to 1,616; and records of the US District Court, October 1, 1906 through January 27, 1931, listed by petition number, from 1 to 91,300.
- Immigration of Irish Quakers to Pennsylvania, 1682-1750: This database contains the results of a study of the immigration of the Irish Quakers to Pennsylvania between 1682 and 1750.
- Pennsylvania Foreign Oaths of Allegiance: This database lists the names of immigrants who took the oath of allegiance to the province and state of Pennsylvania from 1727-1775.
- Pennsylvania Foreign Oaths of Allegiance, Vol. 2: This database lists the names of immigrants who took the oath of allegiance to the province and state of Pennsylvania from 1777-1789.
- Pennsylvania Naturalizations, 1740-73: This database is a listing of persons naturalized in the colony between 1740 and 1773.
- Philadelphia German Immigration, 1700-75: This volume gives a history of German immigration to Philadelphia, Pennsylvania from 1700 to 1775
- Philadelphia Passenger Lists, 1800-1945: This database is an index to the passenger lists of ships arriving from foreign ports at the port of Philadelphia, Pennsylvania from 1800-1945.
- Philadelphia, 1789-1880 Naturalization Records: It includes information on more than 113,000 immigrants from nearly 100 countries who applied for citizenship through the Philadelphia courts system from 1789 to 1880.
- Philadelphia, 1800-1850 Passenger and Immigration Lists: This data set contains alphabetical listings of approximately 180,000 individuals who arrived at Philadelphia from foreign ports between 1800 and 1850.
- Philadelphia, Pennsylvania Indentures, 1771-1773: This collection of indenture records was compiled by the city mayor's office between 1771 and 1773.
- Ship Passenger Lists to Pennsylvania: Miscellaneous Ships: The database is a partial record of Ships Passenger Lists to Pennsylvania. Most of these ships carried Palatine refugees.
To conduct a naturalization search:
- Determine where the individual was naturalized. If the immigrant was naturalized in Philadelphia, consult Philadelphia Naturalization Records . This index covers records from five courts: the Court of Common Pleas (CP), Court of Quarter Sessions (QS), United States Circuit Court (CC), United States District Court (DC), and the Pennsylvania State Supreme Court (SC). If the final date of naturalization includes a notation of SC, these records will be held by the State Archives.
- If your ancestor was naturalized in a court other than the Supreme Court, such as the Court of Common Pleas (CP), Court of Quarter Sessions (QS), United States Circuit Court (CC), or United States District Court (DC), contact the following:
- * For City/County Court records (CP, QS) write: Philadelphia City Archives , 3101 Market Street, Philadelphia, PA 19103 The City Archives has naturalization records for the City and County of Philadelphia for 1794-1903 and 1914-1930. There are no records of the 1904-1913 period available from the City.
* For Federal Court records (CC, DC) write: National Archives Mid-Atlantic Region, 9th & Market Streets, Room 1350, Philadelphia, PA 19107. The researcher is required to provide the following information: person's full name, date of declaration, court in which declaration was made, and the petition number.
- Persons who wish information about citizenship granted elsewhere before 1906 should send their inquiries to the clerk of the federal, state, county or municipal court that issued the naturalization certificate. The Immigration and Naturalization service, Washington, D.C. 20536, has duplicate records of all naturalizations that occurred after September 26, 1906.
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The prothonotary has been the clerk of court of common pleas since 1707. Court records here include divorces, naturalizations, peddlers' licenses, registration of attorneys, oaths of county officers, equity, sheriff's sales, juror lists, some tax records, and some civil court records. Other court records are with the clerk of courts.
Courts of Common Pleas are Pennsylvania's courts of general trial jurisdiction. They have existed in Pennsylvania at least since the Constitution of 1776, under which they were given constitutional status.
Prior to the Commonwealth's Constitution of 1968 there existed in addition to Courts of Common Pleas -- Courts of Oyer and Terminer and General Jail Delivery, Quarter Sessions of the Peace and Orphans' Courts. The new constitution abolished these latter separate courts and incorporated them into existing Common Pleas Courts.
The register of wills and clerk of orphans' court (for estate records) are often the same person, sometimes sharing the responsibility of the recorder of deeds and clerk of courts as well. Counties are classed by population, which determines the number of hats worn by one or more clerks.
Other courts exist in Pennsylvania, although their jurisdictions are less likely to have genealogical impact. These include supreme court (1722–present), superior court (1895–present), and commonwealth court (1970–present), with mostly appellate but some original jurisdiction.
Courts In Pennsylvania
| Date |
Name of Court |
Description |
| 1682 - 1722 |
County Courts |
Original three counties - later called the provincial court. Dealt with equity and estate issues, civil and criminal matters - no capital crimes. The justices of the court also oversaw the orphan's court procedings. |
| 1682 to Present |
Justice of the Peace courts |
Justice of the peace courts were established for each township. They nolonger exist in some counties. Types of records: Marriage |
| 1682 to Present |
Orphan's Courts |
Dealt with orphan, guardianship and estate issues. |
| 1684-1722 |
Provincial Court |
Dealt with appeals from inferior courts, civil matters and criminal issues. |
| 1697-1789 |
Admiralty Court |
Dealt with issues of navigation and trade. In 1789 was turned over to federal courts. |
| 1700 - 1780 |
Court for Trial of Negroes |
Established in each county. Tried cases dealing with Negroes accused of committing crimes. Court was abolished in 1780. |
| 1720 - 1735 |
Court of Chancery/Equity |
Short lived court - little records exist. |
| 1722 - Present |
Court of Quarter Sessions of the Peace |
Criminal case entries, roads, appointment of civil officials, and tavern and peddler license issues. |
| 1722 - Present |
Court of Common Pleas |
Countywide jurisdiction over criminal and civil cases including real estate, bankruptcy, tax collection, naturalization, and divorce. |
| 1722 - Present |
Supreme Court |
Replaced the provincial court. Divided into districts for eastern, middle, northern, and western areas. |
| 1811 - 1873 |
District Court |
Essentially a court of the common pleas. Abolished in 1873. |
| 1895 - Present |
Superior Court |
Intermediate Appelate court. |
| 1903 - Present |
Juvenile Court |
Established in 1903 to administer offenses committed by children under the age of 16. |
History of Pennsylvania's Courts
Pennsylvania's judiciary began as a disparate collection of courts, some inherited from the reign of the Duke of York and some established by William Penn. They were mostly local, mostly part time, and mostly under control of the governor. All of them were run by non-lawyers. And although the Provincial Appellate Court was established in 1684, no court could be called the court of final appeal. Final appeals had to be taken to England.
Several attempts were made in the early years of the eighteenth century to establish a court of final appeal in Pennsylvania and to further improve and unify the colony's judicial system, but because the crown had final veto power over all colonial legislation, these attempts proved futile. Finally, in 1727 the crown sanctioned a bill that had been passed five years earlier.
The Judiciary Act of 1722 was the colony's first judicial bill with far-reaching impact. It established the Pennsylvania Supreme Court, providing for a chief justice and two justices who would sit twice yearly in Philadelphia and ride the circuit at other times; and it created the Court of Common Pleas in Philadelphia, Bucks and Chester counties.
The court system in Pennsylvania did not change again until the Pennsylvania Constitution of 1776. By establishing the Courts of Sessions, Courts of Common Pleas and Orphans' Courts in each county, the constitution allowed Pennsylvania to see the beginning of a statewide framework for the development of its judicial system.
A new constitution in 1790 encouraged further development in the Commonwealth's judicial system by grouping counties into judicial districts and placing president judges at the heads of the districts' Common Pleas Courts. This was meant to ease the Supreme Court's rapidly increasing workload. Constitutional changes in 1838 and 1874 and a constitutional amendment in 1850 made changes in the jurisdiction, tenure, and election or appointment of members of the judiciary. In 1895 the General Assembly created the Superior Court to further ease the work of the Supreme Court, giving each appellate court separate jurisdictions.
The Constitution of 1968 initiated the most sweeping changes in Pennsylvania's judiciary in nearly a century, creating the Commonwealth Court to reduce the workload of the Superior and Supreme courts by hearing cases brought against and by the Commonwealth; substantially altering the minor court system; and reorganizing the judiciary into the Unified Judicial System, consisting of the Supreme, Superior and Commonwealth courts; Common Pleas Courts; Philadelphia Municipal Court; Pittsburgh Magistrates Court; Philadelphia Traffic Court; and district justice courts, with provisions for any future courts the law might establish.
Both judicially and administratively, the Supreme Court is, by constitutional definition, Pennsylvania's highest court. In matters of law, it is the Commonwealth's court of last resort. In matters of administration, the Supreme Court is responsible for maintaining a single, integrated judicial system and thus has supervisory authority over all other state courts.
In 1980, the legislature approved a decrease in the Supreme Court's mandated jurisdiction by expanding that of the Superior Court. Consequently, the Pennsylvania Supreme Court, like the United States Supreme Court, can now exercise discretion in accepting or rejecting most appeals, allowing it to devote greater attention to cases of far-reaching impact, as well as to its constitutional obligation to administer the entire judicial system.
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The Pennsylvania General Assembly passed an act in 1682 which required the recording of wills and letters of administration. The first place to seek a will or other type of estate record in the Keystone State is with the county register of wills. Here there will be files of original papers pertaining to an estate as well as the record books in which were copied wills, letters of administration, inventories, accounts, and so forth. In some counties the original papers may be arranged by type of document—will, bond, or account—and thereunder by date of filing. Most filming of estate records has concentrated on will books, but the files must not be passed up even where there is a will. The clerk of the orphans' court in each county (who is often the register of wills and in smaller counties the recorder of deeds as well) is responsible for keeping such records that concern the division of estates, guardians of minor children, and so forth. matters. Indexes to records in both the register of wills and clerk of the orphans' court offices should both be checked, as often there will be action on an estate in both places. Most county indexes will lead to a docket book which in turn will summarize the existing documents and record book entries.
Besides the availability of many Pennsylvania estate records on microfilm and some in abstract form in periodicals such as Publications of the Genealogical Society of Pennsylvania, Your Family Tree, and the Western Pennsylvania Genealogical Society Quarterly, or in separate publications, published indexes for many counties are widely available, usually up to about 1900. Some of these indexes cover both wills and letters of administration and provide the year of the first action on the estate, the volume and page for the will or letters of administration, and the file number of the original papers, if a number has been assigned.
In counties with large German populations, such as Berks, Lancaster, and York, it is common to find original wills written in German, with English translations.
- Philadelphia County, Pennsylvania Wills, 1682-1819: This database includes abstracts from probated wills for the years 1682-1819.
- Berks County, Pennsylvania Estate Records, 1752-1914: The nearly 37,000 estate files indexed in this database contain original papers including wills, inventories, accounts, guardianship appointments, orphans' court real estate sales, etc.
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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 Genealogy
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.
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:
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- Admiralty courts (concerning events that took place at sea, on lakes, etc.)
- Adoptions
- Affidavits
- Apprenticeships
- Bankruptcies
- Bonds
- Chancery
- Civil cases
- Civil War claims
- Claims
- Complaints
- Court opinions
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- Criminal
- Decrees
- Declarations
- Defendant
- Depositions
- Divorce
- Dockets
- Guardianship
- Judgments
- Jury records
- Land disputes
- Marshals’ records
- Military
- Minutes
- Naturalization records
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- Notices
- Orders
- Orphan records
- Petitions
- Plaintiff
- Printed court records
- Probate
- Receipts
- Slave and Slave owners
- Subpoenas
- Summons
- Testimony
- Transcripts
- Witnesses
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