Holdings of the Grainger County Archives
Original County Records
Most of the oldest existing Grainger County records are held at the
Grainger County Archives, including hundreds of bound record volumes and
thousands of loose papers. Additionally, the Archives holds:
Books
The Grainger County Archives holds a small collection of history and
genealogy books and materials, generously donated in 2005 by the Rutledge Public
Library. Since that time, our collection has been increased by the
generous donations of several authors and compilers of family
genealogies.
Through the generous donation of the Rutledge Public Library, the
Archives acquired the library's extensive collection of microfilm of
Grainger County records. This microfilm collection includes all
the county's bound record volumes which still existed in the 1970s when
the Tennessee State Library and Archives began microfilming the county
records to ensure their preservation.
See the
Tennessee State Library and Archives Web site for the inventory of
Grainger County records on microfilm. The Grainger County Archives
holds all the microfilms listed in the TSLA inventory for Grainger
County.
Other microfilms held include:
- Birth records, 1908-1912
- Buffalo Springs Bird Farm & C.C.C. Camp Scrapbook, 1937-1938
- Chris Livesay Papers
- Death records, 1908-1912, 1914-1925
- Early Tennessee Tax Lists - 1797, 1799, 1805, 1810, 1826, 1836
- East Tennessee Land Grants and Index
- Federal Census, 1830-1920
- Grainger County News, 1911-1938, 1966-1968, 2006-2007
- Grainger Today newspaper, 2004-2008
- Military Discharges, 1943-1982
- Paul Grohse Papers
- Shields Ferry Logbook, 1908-1909
- Smith Funeral Home records, Rutledge, 1933-1988
The volunteers of the Grainger County Archives have created indexes of
the following loose records collections:
Indexes of Loose Records
| Records Group |
Years Covered |
| Marriage records (bonds & licenses) |
1796 - 1950 |
| Estate and guardianship settlements |
1796 - 1915 |
| Circuit Court cases (mostly criminal
cases) |
1810 - 1915 |
| County Court files and cases |
1796 - 1915 |
| Chancery Court cases (mostly civil
cases) |
Not yet completed |
Loose vs. Bound Records

Most people have seen those large, dusty volumes, like those pictured
here, kept in various clerks' offices in county courthouses all over
the country. These are "bound records" -- minute books, docket
books, marriage books, deed books, etc., in which the clerks recorded
the county's business. But many county records are loose papers,
or "loose records," such as the papers (original bills, petitions,
orders, subpoenas, exhibits, depositions, decrees, etc.) filed in a court case, or the marriage
license the clerk gives the couple to have signed by the minister or
justice of the peace when the ceremony has been performed. These
"loose records" are often the original documents from which the clerk
recopied the information into the record book. An example is a
person's will, which is usually written on a piece of paper before
the person's death; then upon death, the loose will is taken to the
courthouse where it is recopied into the bound Will Book. Therefore, often there exists both a
loose record and a bound record for the same event, but sometimes only
one or the other still exists. But both are equally valid and
valuable.