Research Highlights

Because Robertson County was formed in 1867, earlier families almost always appear in parent-county records. Start with Bracken, Harrison, Mason, and Nicholas County deeds, tax lists, probate, and court orders, then follow residents into Robertson County once the county began keeping its own books.

Local geography also matters: the county sits near the Licking River corridor and the Blue Licks area. Land descriptions, road orders, and community networks often cluster by neighborhood and along key routes. Cemetery transcriptions, church records, newspapers from surrounding counties, and manuscript collections can help bridge gaps and connect families across county lines.

County at a Glance

  • County seat: Mount Olivet
  • Established: 11 Feb 1867
  • Parent county: Bracken, Harrison, Mason, and Nicholas Counties
  • Counties formed from Robertson: None
  • Early communities: Mount Olivet, Kentontown, Piqua, Sardis
  • Key waterways: Licking River corridor, Blue Licks area
  • Early industries: agriculture, milling, small-town commerce
  • Nearby landmarks: Blue Licks Battlefield State Resort Park


Record Loss:

  • Courthouse disaster (1867). Robertson County is listed with a courthouse disaster in 1867; verify which volumes exist for the earliest years and look for substitutes.
  • Use parent-county records for pre-1867 research. Bracken, Harrison, Mason, and Nicholas are essential for earlier land, tax, probate, and court references.
  • Follow boundary lines closely. Families often appear across the Bracken, Mason, Fleming, Nicholas, and Harrison lines due to proximity and marriage networks.

Adjacent Counties

Map showing adjacent counties

Repositories & Records

The Robertson County Courthouse in Mount Olivet is the center for many county-level records. The Robertson 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 Robertson is a later-formed county, researchers should also use nearby repositories and surrounding county collections for earlier decades. Regional newspapers, church minutes, cemetery readings, and local history publications for Bracken, Mason, Harrison, Nicholas, and Fleming Counties can be especially helpful.

Notes

Research Notes: Start with parent-county deeds and tax lists, then connect forward into Robertson 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 Robertson County families are extensions of older lines in Bracken, Mason, Harrison, and Nicholas Counties. Later movement often tracks toward Mason County river towns, into Fleming County, or along regional trade and church networks.

Blue Licks area: The Blue Licks region is a major local landmark and can provide helpful context for land references, travel routes, and community connections in northeast central Kentucky.

Parent-county overlap: Since Robertson County began in 1867, 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.


Map is from the 1891 Appleton Map of Kentucky. Found in the David Rumsey Map Collection.