Welcome to this
Caldwell County Missouri
Genealogy Trails Website
Our goal is to help you track
your ancestors through time by transcribing genealogical and historical
data and placing it online for the free use of all researchers
If you have a love for history, a desire to help others, and basic webpage-making skills, consider joining us!
Get the details on our Volunteer Page.
[A desire to transcribe data and knowledge of how to make a basic webpage is required.]
If hosting isn't for you, we can use your help in other ways.
More information can be found on the Volunteer Page.

We regret that we are unable to do personal research for anyone.
All data we come across will be added to this site.
We thank you for visiting and hope you'll come back again to view the updates we make to this site

Check your attics!
Dust off your family scrapbooks!
We're looking for DATA for this site!!!
If you would like to submit data for this site,
please Email Us with your submissions.
Happy Trails to you on your quest for your ancestors.

CALDWELL COUNTY HISTORY
Caldwell County is a county
located in the U.S. state of Missouri. Its county seat is Kingston. The
county was organized December 29, 1836 and named by Alexander Doniphan
to honor John Caldwell, who participated in the George Rogers Clark
Native American Campaign of 1786 and was the second Lieutenant Governor
of Kentucky.
Caldwell County was originally part of Ray County. The first white
settler was Jesse Mann, Sr., who settled one-half mile northeast of the
public square of Kingston on Shoal Creek in 1831. The early settlers
moved back south in 1832 for better protection during the Black Hawk
War uprising.
A few Mormon settlers, who had been evicted from Jackson County,
Missouri, moved into the county in 1832, and included Jacob Haun, whose
mill on Shoal Creek would become the scene of the bloodiest incident in
the Mormon War, known as the Haun's Mill Massacre.
The settlers established Salem, the first town in the county, two miles
southeast of Kingston. A larger number of Mormons moved to the county
in the fall of 1836. The Missouri General Assembly created Caldwell
County in December 1836, with the understanding that it would be
dedicated to Mormon settlers. Its county seat was Far West, Missouri.
By 1838 Far West reported a population of 4,000.
The major figures of early Mormon history, including Joseph Smith, Jr.,
Hyrum Smith, Brigham Young, John Taylor, Edward Partridge, Sidney
Rigdon, Parley P. Pratt and John D. Lee, were included in the migration.
COUNTY DATA
|