Cross City Family History Records

Dixie County lies on the Gulf Coast. Cross City serves as the seat. The land holds tales of old Florida. You can find roots that stretch back. Records wait in the courthouse. Staff help those who seek kin.

The county formed in nineteen twenty-one from Lafayette County. It took its name from the common term for the South. The land is rich with rivers and springs. The Suwannee forms its eastern line. Fanning Springs draws visitors still. Early folk came for the timber and fish. They built homes near the water. Life moved slow in these parts. Roads were few and bad. The railroad came late. Steamers ran the rivers instead. They carried freight and folk to town. The county grew from the pine woods. Turpentine camps dotted the land. Workers came and went with the seasons. Some stayed to build lives. Their kin remain today. You can trace them through the files.

Search Public Records

Sponsored Results

Dixie County Quick Facts

1921 Founded
Cross City County Seat
352 Area Code
3rd Judicial Circuit

Dixie County Clerk of Court Records

The Clerk holds kin files in Cross City. Marriage logs and court records date to the county's start. Staff assist with searches. Books hold names from the past.

Wedding records from nineteen twenty-one through nineteen twenty-six stay in the courthouse. The state does not hold these years. You must visit Cross City to view them. Each license names the bride and groom. Ages and birth places may appear. Witnesses signed the books. Bonds show who pledged for the pair. These may be kin to find. Probate files list heirs and assets. They show who got what when a life ended. Children appear in order. Spouses claim their shares. Debts link to other kin. All this builds your tree. Court cases add more clues. Land suits name kin on both sides. Criminal files list kin as victims or accused. The clerk's office sits at two one four Northeast Highway three five one. Call three five two four nine eight three six one zero for help. Staff know what they hold.

Dixie County genealogy clerk of court homepage

You may search online at the clerk's web site. Newer files appear there. Old ones wait in books. Chapter one one nine of Florida law grants access. Some files need time to retrieve. Ask at the desk.

Dixie County genealogy website

Florida State Archives Dixie County Resources

The State Archives hold much for Dixie County kin. Spanish land grants predate the county. Voter rolls from eighteen sixty-seven list those who signed. Confederate pensions track war veterans.

Land grants show claims from Spanish rule. These passed through kin groups. Names on deeds link to today. You can trace from Spain to statehood. Voter rolls marked race and birth state. This helps find Black kin from Reconstruction. Men signed to vote then. Their names prove where they lived. Confederate pensions served old soldiers. Files list units and service. Widows filed with proof of marriage. Children named show kin links. The archives hold microfilm of county records. Tax lists show land owners. School logs list pupils. The depth rewards those who dig. Call eight five zero two four five six seven zero zero before you go. Staff will help. Use the online catalog to plan. Order storage items ahead.

Vital Records for Dixie County

The Bureau of Vital Statistics keeps birth and death files. Births start from nineteen seventeen. Deaths go back further. Order copies for your search.

Florida seals birth files for one hundred twenty-five years. Only close kin may view them. Parents and those they name have rights. Send ID with requests. Death files differ. All facts but cause are public. Cause stays sealed for fifty years. Marriage files from June sixth, nineteen twenty-seven go to the state. Earlier records stay in Cross City. Know your years. Order through VitalChek online. Or write to one two one seven North Pearl Street, Jacksonville. Call eight seven seven five five zero seven three three zero.

Dixie County Genealogy Research Tips

Start by noting Dixie grew from Lafayette County. Check Lafayette files for pre-nineteen twenty-one events. Kin may have stayed. Lines shifted round them.

Census records help track kin. This area was part of Lafayette before. Look there for early years. Name spellings change. Check sound alike names. The Suwannee River shaped this county. Early folk settled near it. Look for kin along its banks. Turpentine camps brought workers. They came from far and near. Their records may show birth states. This helps trace movements.

Florida's State Library offers tools. Visit their genealogy page for links. Ancestry and HeritageQuest help with census scans. Build your tree with care. Check each fact. Kin groups share names. Proof tells them apart.

Search Records Now

Sponsored Results

Nearby Counties for Genealogy Research

These lands touch Dixie County. Kin may have lived here.