Early Kentucky Tax Records

Early Kentucky Tax Records PDF

Author:

Publisher: Genealogical Publishing Com

Published: 1984

Total Pages: 328

ISBN-13: 0806310677

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Among the many historic documents that were lost when the British burned the Capitol in Washington during the War of 1812 were the first two censuses of Kentucky, the earliest one compiled while Kentucky was still a part of Virginia. Owing to the destruction of these census records, genealogists doing research in Kentucky have been obliged to reconstruct the lost data from a number of related records, particularly tax records. Those printed here represent all the tax lists ever published in "The Register of the Kentucky Historical Society" and are among the earliest Kentucky tax records in existence. In a few cases these tax records date from a period either immediately before or after the 1790 and 1800 enumerations, and show, by comparison with the reconstructed census records for 1790 and 1800, published by Charles B. Heinemann and G. Glenn Clift respectively, the movement of early Kentuckians from one county to another. In other cases the records serve both as an adjunct and a corrective to the Heinemann and Clift works, though the vast majority of these tax lists--giving the names of about 12,000 taxpayers, their counties of residence, and the number of persons and chattels attached to their households--do not appear in either work.

Early Kentucky Householders, 1787-1811

Early Kentucky Householders, 1787-1811 PDF

Author:

Publisher: Genealogical Publishing Com

Published: 2009-06

Total Pages: 241

ISBN-13: 0806311592

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This is a consolidated list of approximately 34,000 names that appeared in the annual tax lists for Lincoln County, Kentucky, between 1787 and 1811. Forty-six of the fifty-four Kentucky counties that existed in the year 1811 are mentioned in the descriptions of landholdings claimed by Lincoln County householders during this period; in fact, nearly half of the counties were created out of the original Lincoln County boundaries. Thus a Lincoln County tax list can essentially be viewed as a statewide tax list. This is an important consideration because a tax list of this magnitude can actually stand as a substitute for the missing 1790 and 1800 Kentucky censuses. Mr. Sutherland's "householders" are heads of household who do not necessarily own the land on which they and their families lived. Taxpayers (i.e., householders) recorded in the annual tax lists between 1787 and 1811 are listed here in alphabetical order along with the date of the tax list, the number of the tax book and the page number of the original entry, and an enumeration of all other persons living in the household. As an aid to research the compiler has drawn up a complete "Surname Directory," which groups the phonetic variations of each name under a common spelling so that the researcher has only to search for the "common" spelling rather than the variants. This is a superb research tool

Nicholas County, Kentucky Property Tax Lists, 1800-1811

Nicholas County, Kentucky Property Tax Lists, 1800-1811 PDF

Author: Carrie Eldridge

Publisher:

Published: 2004

Total Pages: 169

ISBN-13: 9781585499380

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This book divides into 4 sections. The first section shows information gathered for four different tax years and lists where the properties were located, who first claimed the property, which type of land was taxed and how much the property was worth. The second section compares the tax records for eleven years. The third section shows an expanded census for 1810 while the fourth section offers the deed book indexes of the period for name comparison -- Introd.

Internal Revenue Assessment Lists for Kentucky, 1862-1866

Internal Revenue Assessment Lists for Kentucky, 1862-1866 PDF

Author: United States. Internal Revenue Service

Publisher:

Published: 1972

Total Pages: 24

ISBN-13:

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"On the 24 rolls of this microfilm publication are reproduced bound volumes of tax assessment lists for the collection districts established for the State of Kentucky. The number of collection districts was set at four by an Executive order dated August 8, 1862; this number was later changed to six and then to nine by Executive orders dated September 10, 1864, and January 25, 1866, respectively. The lists were created in the offices of assessors and assistant assessors of Internal Revenue during the period 1862-66. ... These records are among Records of the Internal Revenue Service, Record Group 58, in the National Archives. ... The records ... were prepared for filming by Clarence F. Lyons, who also wrote these introductory remark ..."--Page 1, 3.