Parsippany-Troy Hills Genealogy

Parsippany-Troy Hills genealogy records are managed by the township clerk and registrar's office in Morris County, New Jersey. This township is one of the largest in Morris County with a population of about 56,000. Searching for genealogy records in Parsippany-Troy Hills starts at the clerk's office on Parsippany Boulevard. The clerk also acts as the registrar of vital statistics for the township. County records in Morristown and state archives in Trenton hold older documents that can extend your family research further back in time.

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Parsippany-Troy Hills Quick Facts

56,000 Population
Morris County
1928 Incorporated
25.1 sq mi Land Area

Parsippany Clerk and Vital Records

The Parsippany-Troy Hills Township Clerk and Registrar is at 1001 Parsippany Boulevard, Parsippany-Troy Hills, NJ 07054. The clerk's phone number is 973-263-4359. For marriage license questions, call 973-263-4351. Marriage and civil union licenses are issued by appointment only. The clerk's office handles birth records, death records, and marriage records for events that occurred in the township.

When requesting vital records for genealogy, you need to provide the full name on the record and the year or date of the event. Payment for vital records must be made by cash or money order only. The clerk can search their files and provide certified copies of records they hold. These local records are the foundation of genealogy research for Parsippany-Troy Hills families.

The Parsippany-Troy Hills clerk's website has current office hours and contact details for requesting genealogy records.

Parsippany-Troy Hills Township Clerk office for genealogy records

The clerk and registrar's office at 1001 Parsippany Boulevard handles all local vital record requests.

Note: Parsippany-Troy Hills only accepts cash or money order for vital record payments, so plan ahead before your visit.

Parsippany Government Genealogy Services

The Parsippany-Troy Hills Township website links to all municipal departments that may help with genealogy research. Beyond the clerk's office, the township's planning and zoning departments hold property records and maps that can show where families lived. Building permits, tax records, and zoning files may contain names and addresses that tie families to specific properties in Parsippany-Troy Hills.

Township records are especially useful when you have already found a name in vital records and want to learn more about where that person lived and worked. Address histories, property maps, and tax assessment records can fill in details that birth and death certificates leave out. For Parsippany-Troy Hills genealogy, these records add context to the basic facts of family life.

Parsippany-Troy Hills Township government website for genealogy

The township government portal provides access to departments and services that support Parsippany genealogy research.

Morris County Records for Parsippany Genealogy

Parsippany-Troy Hills is part of Morris County, and county offices in Morristown hold records that go beyond what the township clerk keeps. The Morris County Clerk's Office at 10 Court Street in Morristown has land records, deeds, and mortgages. The clerk, Ann F. Grossi, can be reached at 973-285-6059. Property records show when families bought or sold land in Parsippany-Troy Hills and can trace ownership chains across generations.

The Morris County Surrogate's Office handles probate records, including wills and estate files. The Surrogate, Heather J. Darling, is at 10 Court Street, 5th Floor, in Morristown. The phone is 973-285-6500. Their case index is searchable by last name, first name, date of death, or issue date for records from 1804 to the present. This makes it possible to find probate records for Parsippany-Troy Hills families going back over two centuries. The Surrogate also offers electronic filing and an online search tool.

The Morris County Historical Society at 68 Morris Avenue in Morristown holds nearly 15,000 items including military uniforms from the Revolution through Vietnam, wedding gowns from 1805 to the 1980s, and archives with business records and papers from prominent families. Their collection of atlases and maps can help place Parsippany-Troy Hills families in a geographic context for genealogy research.

New Jersey Archives for Parsippany Research

The New Jersey State Archives in Trenton holds the oldest vital records for all towns, including Parsippany-Troy Hills. Birth records from 1848 to 1923, marriage records from 1848 to 1948, and death records from 1848 to 1963 are available on microfilm. The Archives is free to visit and is at 225 West State Street in Trenton. Their collection includes over 37,000 cubic feet of paper records and 32,000 reels of microfilm.

For Parsippany-Troy Hills genealogy that reaches back to the colonial period, the State Archives has land grants, colonial marriage bonds from 1666 to 1799, tax records from 1773 to 1822, and probate records from 1670. Morris County was an important area during the American Revolution, and military records from that era may include ancestors from the Parsippany-Troy Hills area. Civil War pay records and Department of Defense files are also on hand.

Online databases at the State Archives let you search marriage records from 1666 to 1900 and death records from 1848 to 1900. The Reclaim The Records project has added free indexes for early 1900s births, marriages, and deaths hosted on the Internet Archive. These tools let you search for Parsippany-Troy Hills records from home before visiting in person.

Note: For vital records more recent than what the State Archives holds, contact the New Jersey Department of Health at 877-622-7549 or visit their walk-in center at 140 East Front Street in Trenton.

Tips for Parsippany Family History

Good genealogy research takes time. Start with what you know. Write down names, dates, and places from family memory. Then work backward one generation at a time. Each record you find can lead to another. A death record from Parsippany-Troy Hills may list parents' names and birthplaces. That information leads you to their marriage record. A marriage record may point to another town or state.

  • Start at the Parsippany-Troy Hills clerk's office for local vital records
  • Check Morris County land records and probate files in Morristown
  • Search the State Archives online databases for older records
  • Use census records on FamilySearch or through your library
  • Visit the Morris County Historical Society for local history materials

Census records are one of the most powerful tools for Parsippany-Troy Hills genealogy. Federal censuses from 1790 to 1950 list everyone in a household by name, age, and birthplace. The FamilySearch website offers free access to many of these records. Church records from Parsippany-Troy Hills congregations may also hold baptism, marriage, and burial entries that predate civil vital records. These records are sometimes found at the State Archives or through local historical societies.

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Morris County Genealogy Records

Parsippany-Troy Hills is in Morris County, and the county clerk, surrogate, and historical society all hold records that support genealogy research. For a complete look at county-level resources and research guides, visit the Morris County genealogy records page.

View Morris County Genealogy Records