Repositories & Records
The Edmonson County Courthouse in Brownsville is the center for many county-level records.
The Edmonson County Clerk’s Office maintains land and marriage records, while the
Office of the Circuit
Court Clerk
oversees court case files. Many historical volumes are available on microfilm through the
Kentucky Department for Libraries and Archives (KDLA).
Because Edmonson is bordered by multiple counties and includes long-established communities near county
lines, researchers should also use nearby repositories and surrounding county collections for connected
families. Regional newspapers, church minutes, cemetery readings, and local history publications for Warren,
Hart, Grayson, Butler, and Barren Counties can be especially helpful.
Notes
Research Notes:
Start with parent-county deeds and tax lists, then connect forward into Edmonson County deed books, marriage
bonds/licenses, probate, and court materials. Pay attention to witnesses, sureties, and neighbors because
the same clusters often repeat across record sets.
Migration Patterns:
Many Edmonson County families connect to older lines in Warren, Hart, and Grayson Counties.
Movement often follows the Green River corridor and the road network linking Bowling Green-area communities
with Hart and Barren County neighborhoods.
Mammoth Cave region:
The Mammoth Cave area is a major local landmark and can provide useful context for land references, travel
routes, employment, and community connections in south-central Kentucky.
Parent-county overlap:
Since Edmonson County began in 1825, you may find the same family in multiple counties within a short span.
Watch for marriages and probate handled in one county while land transactions occur in another.
Other records:Church records, cemetery transcriptions, and family Bibles are critical
sources for Edmonson County,
particularly for the 19th century.
Many residents attended churches located just across county lines, so records in Warren, Hart,
and Grayson counties should always be checked.
Newspapers from Bowling Green and other nearby towns may include notices for Edmonson County residents
even when no local paper existed.
Map is from the 1891 Appleton Map of Kentucky.
Found in the David Rumsey Map Collection.