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Colorado is rich in heritage. Many of the individuals who shaped the West came from Colorado, such as Barney Ford, the runaway slave and pioneer, Buffalo Bill Cody, and Kit Carson. The historical background of Colorado makes it especially interesting for family historians. While researching Colorado genealogy records presents a unique set of challenges; it also has its own unique rewards. There are many historical and genealogical records available for the state, and we know just where to find them. To get you started in tracing your ancestry, we’ll introduce you to those records, and help you to understand:
These records can be found both online and off, so we’ll introduce you to online websites, indexes and databases, as well as brick-and-mortar repositories and other institutions that will help with your research in Colorado. So that you will have a more comprehensive understanding of these records, we have provided a brief history of the “Centennial State”to illustrate what type of records may have been generated during specific time periods. That information will assist you in pinpointing times and locations on which to focus the search for your Colorado ancestors.
The Ute Indians were Colorado’s first residents, moving there from the Utah deserts. The first Europeans were Spaniards who arrived in the 16th century. In 1682 a French explorer by the name of René-Robert Cavelier claimed the area for France. The end of the French and Indian War, 1756-1763, saw the English take control until the time of the American Revolution.
The United States officially declared Colorado as its own as part of the Louisiana Purchase in 1803, and paid France 15 million dollars for the area. Additional land cessions from the Native American tribes in 1805 and 1806 saw the land open up to white settlement. Part of present day Colorado was not included in the Louisiana Purchase, but that land was eventually acquired at the end of the Mexican-American War in 1848.
When gold was discovered in 1859 more than 50,000 settlers rushed to Colorado, triggering discontent amongst the Native American peoples. Wars raged throughout the 1800’s finally ending with the last battle between the plains Indians and whites in 1869 at Summit Springs. The Native Americans were settled on reservations, and Colorado was admitted to the union as the 38th State in 1876.
As this knowledge reached mainstream America, the desire of the United States to expand westward was flamed. This led to the development of the Manifest Destiny, which was basically a declaration of the United States to annex New Mexico, Texas, and Colorado.
Most of the battles fought in Colorado were between the white settlers and Native Americans who inhabited the area. The battle accounts themselves can be very effective in uncovering the military records of your ancestor. They can tell you what regiments fought in which battles, and often include the names and ranks of many officers and enlisted men. Following are some of the most famous battles fought in Colorado and links to useful information about them.
Boundary Changes: Boundary changes are a common obstacle when researching Colorado ancestors. You could be searching for an ancestor’s record in one county when in fact it is stored in a different one due to historical county boundary changes. The Atlas of Historical County Boundaries can help you to overcome that problem. It provides a chronological listing of every boundary change that has occurred in the history of Colorado.
Name Changes: Surname changes, variations, and misspellings can complicate genealogical research. It is important to check all spelling variations. Soundex, a program that indexes names by sound, is a useful first step, but you can't rely on it completely as some name variations result in different Soundex codes. The surnames could be different, but the first name may be different too. You can also find records filed under initials, middle names, and nicknames as well, so you will need to get creative with surname variations and spellings in order to cover all the possibilities. For help with surname variations read our instructional article on How to Use Soundex.
Genealogical resources include not only records, but the organizations that house them, or can direct you to them. These institutions include: Archives, Libraries, Genealogical Societies, Family History Centers, Universities, Churches, and Museums.
Following are links to their websites, their physical addresses, and a summary of the records you can find there.
1313 Sherman, Room 1B20
Denver, CO 80203
Tel: 303-866-2358
Fax: 303-866-2229
Denver Public Library
10 W. 14th Avenue Parkway
Denver, CO 80204-2731
Tel:: 720-865-1821
Fax: 720-865-1880
1400 Illinois Street
Golden, CO 80401
Tel: 303-273-3911
Fax: 303-273-3199
2201 South University Boulevard
Denver, Colorado 80210
Tel: 303-744-1287
Fax : 303-777-0164
1100 Lawrence Street
Denver, CO 80204
Tel: 303-556-2740
University Libraries
184 UCB, 1720 Pleasant Street
University of Colorado
Boulder, CO 80309-0184
Tel: 303-492-6144, 303-492-7521
Genealogical and historical societies have access to extensive catalogues of genealogical data. They are also able to offer expert guidance for genealogical researchers. Many members are professional genealogists who are most willing to share their expertise in finding ancestors.
Colorado Genealogical Society
P.O. Box 9218
Denver, CO 80209-0218
Email: info@cogensoc.us
History Colorado
1200 Broadway
Denver, CO 80203
Tel: 303-447-8679
The Family History Centers run by the LDS Church offer free access to billions of genealogical records for free to the general public. They also provide classes on genealogy and one-on-one assistance to inexperienced family historians. Here you will find a Complete Listing of Colorado Family History Centers.
Mailing lists are internet based facilities that use email to distribute a single message to all who subscribe to it. When information on a particular surname, new records, or any other important genealogy information related to the mailing list topic becomes available, the subscribers are alerted to it. Joining a mailing list is an excellent way to stay up to date on Colorado genealogy research topics. Rootsweb have an extensive listing of Colorado Mailing Lists on a variety of topics.
A message board is another internet based facility where people can post questions about a specific genealogy topic and have it answered by other genealogists. If you have questions about a surname, record type, or research topic, you can post your question and other researchers and genealogists will help you with the answer. Be sure to check back regularly, as the answers are not emailed to you. The message boards at the Colorado Genealogy Forum are completely free to use.
Many genealogy periodicals and historical newspapers contain reprinted copies of family genealogies, transcripts of family Bible records, information about local records and archives, census indexes, church records, queries, land records, obituaries, court records, cemetery records, and wills.
Tutt Library
1021 North Cascade Avenue
Colorado Springs, CO 80903-3252
Tel: 719 389-6662
Maps are an integral part of genealogical research. They help us to locate landmarks, towns, cities, parishes, states, provinces, waterways and roads and streets. They also help us to determine when and where boundary changes might have taken place, and give us a visualization of the area we’re researching in. For locating place names, a gazetteer is the best possible resource for any genealogist. Gazetteers are also sometimes called “place name dictionaries”, and can help you to locate the area in which you need to conduct research.
Birth, Death, Marriage and Divorce Records – Birth, death, and marriage records are the most basic, yet most important records attached to your ancestor. They are generally referred to as vital records as they record vital life events. The reason for their importance is that they not only place your ancestor in a specific place at a definite time, but potentially connect the individual to other relatives
Colorado Department of Public Health and Environment
Vital Records Section
4300 Cherry Creek Drive South
HSVRD-VR-A1
Denver, CO 80246-1530
Tel: (303) 692-2200
Email: vital.records@state.co.us
Census records are among the most important genealogical documents for placing your ancestor in a particular place at a specific time. Like BDM records, they can also lead you to other ancestors, particularly those who were living under the authority of the head of household.
Colorado census records exist from 1850 -1940 and many images and indexes can be viewed online.
Church and synagogue records are a valuable resource, especially for baptisms, marriages, and burials that took place before 1900. You will need to at least have an idea of your ancestor’s religious denomination, and in most cases you will have to visit a brick and mortar establishment to view them.
Most church records are kept by the individual church, although in some denominations, records are placed in a regional archive or maintained at the diocesan level. Local Historical Societies are sometimes the repository for the state’s older church records. Below are links archives that maintain church records, as well as a few databases that can be viewed online.
The Family History Library contains many church records from a variety of denominations on microfilm. and microfiche.
Diocese of Colorado
1300 Washington St
Denver, CO 80203-2008
Tel: (303) 837-1173
Ira J. Taylor Library (Iliff School of Technology)
2201 South University Boulevard
Denver, Colorado 80210
Tel: 303-744-1287
Fax : 303-777-0164
Presbyterian Historical Society
425 Lombard Street
Philadelphia, PA 19147
Tel: (215) 627-1852
Fax: (215) 627-0509
refdesk@history.pcusa.org
Archives of the Diocese of Colorado Springs
228 North Cascade Ave.
Colorado Springs, CO 80903
Tel: (719) 636-2345
More than 40 million Americans have participated in some time of war service since America was colonized. The chance of finding your ancestor amongst those records is exceptionally high. Military records can even reveal individuals who never actually served, such as those who registered for the two World Wars but were never called to duty.
As convenient as it is to search cemetery records online, keep in mind that there are a few disadvantages over visiting a cemetery in person. They are:
With that information in mind, the following websites have databases that can be searched online for Colorado Cemetery records.
Obituaries can reveal a wealth about our ancestor and other relatives. You can search our Colorado Newspaper Obituaries Listings from hundreds of Colorado newspapers online for free.
The documents found in a probate packet may include a complete inventory of a person’s estate, newspaper entries, witness testimony, a copy of a will, list of debtors and creditors, names of executors or trustees, names of heirs. They can not only tell you about the ancestor you’re currently researching, but lead to other ancestors. Most of these records must be accessed at a county court or clerk’s office, but some can be found online as well. You can obtain copies of the original probate records by writing to the county clerk.
Colorado State Archives – probate records from many Colorado counties dating from 1870-1964, wills, tax inheritance records
Denver Probate Court – probate records for Denver County only
The naturalization process generated many types of records, including petitions, declarations of intention, and oaths of allegiance. These records can provide family historians with information such as a person's birth date and place of birth, immigration year, marital status, spouse information, occupation, witnesses' names and addresses, and more.
The Colorado State Archives has naturalization records for the majority of counties in Colorado. The records include final documents, petitions, certificates of naturalization stub books, repatriations, and declarations of intent.
The Colorado Genealogical Society possesses abstracts of some naturalization records and they have been published in their periodical The Colorado Genealogist
The Foothills Genealogical Society has Naturalization indexes for Clear Creek County and a Declaration of intents index for the Denver area.
The Denver Public Library has a Denver and Pueblo Naturalization index in its digital collection for the years 1877-1952 and a naturalization records index for Park County
Archive Aspen possesses a Naturalization records index for Pitkin County for the years 1888-1908
Railroads played an important role in the settlement of Colorado, bringing in many settlers from the east and as far away as Mexico. The records of railway employees can be a valuable genealogical source, especially if your ancestor was a railway employee. Following are places both online and off where you can search railway records for Colorado ancestors.
Denver Public Library – Railway employee records, maps, manuscripts, periodicals, pension records and more from a large number of railway companies serving Colorado
Colorado Railroad MuseumM – employee records and historical accounts of many railway companies including Union Pacific, Atchison, Topeka and Santa Fe Railroad, Colorado & Southern Railway Co., Denver, Leadville & Gunnison Railway Co., Denver and Rio Grande Western Railroad Company, and the Chicago Burlington and Quincy Railroad.
17155 W. 44th Avenue,
Golden, CO 80403
Tel: 303-279-4591, 800-365-6263
Email: via online contact form
City directories are similar to telephone directories in that they list the residents of a particular area. The difference though is what is important to genealogists, and that is they pre-date telephone directories. You can find an ancestor’s information such as their street address, place of employment, occupation, or the name of their spouse. A one-stop-shop for finding city directories in Colorado is the Colorado Online Historical Directories which contains a listing of every available city and historical directory related to Colorado.
Access Genealogy – Native American census records, tribal histories, and much more
Midwest Genealogy Center – a wide variety of records from the vast majority of Native American tribes in the United States on microfilm
Midwest Genealogy Center
3440 S. Lee’s Summit Road
Independence, Missouri
The National Archives - information about American Indians who maintained their ties to Federally-recognized Tribes (1830-1970).
Looking for female ancestors requires an adjustment of how we view traditional records sources. A woman’s identity was often under that of her husband, and often individual records for them can be difficult to locate. The following resources are effective in locating female ancestors in Colorado where traditional records may not reveal them.
Marriage records have been recorded by the county clerk and recorders offices since 1861. Divorces were overseen by the County district courts since the creation of counties. The Family History Library has a few county records for Colorado on microfilm such as:
The Boulder Genealogical Society has Boulder County marriage records from 1860-1900 that can be viewed online.
Colorado Coalition for Women’s History
PO Box 673
1200 Madison
Denver, CO 80206
Women of the West Museum
4001 Discovery Drive
Boulder, CO 80303-7816
Western Historical Collection
University of Colorado
Boulder, CO 80309
The following surnames are among the most common in Colorado. The list is by no means exhaustive. If your surname doesn’t appear in the list it doesn’t mean that you have no Colorado connections, only that your surname may be less common.
Abrams, Anghern, Barlow, Black, Bogue, Booco, Buchholz, Bureman, Burns, Caddy, Case, Chipperfield, Clark, Cody, Cowden, Curry, DoBois, DaLee, DeSousa, Doll, Doyle, Eldred, Elliot, Fahey, Ferguson, Flannery, Forster, French, Gilmer, Gomez, Greenleaf, Greiner, Griffith, Hall, Hammer, Harlan, Herwick, Hohstadt, Hooper, Horn, Hunter, Jones, Kinney, Kramer, Lane, Lemon, Love, Mather, McGlochlin, McPhee, Moore, Neal, Noble, Pallister, Pando, Phillips, Rabedew, Ray, Reynolds, Rochford, Rogers, Ruder, Rule, Rundell, Savage, Schulz, Scott, Sheward, Shippee, Shute, Sifers, Sloss, Smith, Strobridge, Terrell, Thoborg, Tourville, Wilds, Willison, Yost, Young, Zalar, Zimmerman