Georgetown Genealogy Database
Georgetown genealogy records are held at the Williamson County level, not by the city itself. Birth certificates, death records, marriage licenses, and probate files are all filed with the county. For researchers tracing family history in Georgetown, this page covers the county clerk office, local library collections, historical societies, and the main online databases for Texas genealogy.
Georgetown Overview
Williamson County Records for Georgetown Families
Georgetown is in Williamson County, and the Williamson County Clerk is where you find most genealogy records for families who lived here. The clerk holds birth and death records from 1903, marriage licenses going back further, deed records, and probate files. These records cover the entire county, including Georgetown and surrounding communities.
The Williamson County genealogy records page covers the clerk's office address, hours, phone number, and online access tools in detail. Land records and deed books are among the oldest records in the county and can trace property ownership through multiple generations. Probate files are especially rich for genealogy, often listing heirs, ages, and family relationships.
For records before 1903, the county may have earlier marriage registers, deed books, and some probate files. The exact start date depends on when Williamson County was organized. For events in the Spanish or Mexican period, check the Texas General Land Office for land grant records and the Catholic Archives of Texas for sacramental records.
Vital Records for Georgetown Genealogy
Texas vital records are maintained at two levels. The state holds the master collection at the Texas Department of State Health Services. The county clerk holds a local copy. For genealogy purposes, both sources can be useful. The state collection is more complete for modern records. The county collection may include older documents not in the state system.
Birth records are sealed for 75 years in Texas. Death records are sealed for 25 years. After those periods, the records become available to the public through the Texas State Library and Archives Commission (TSLAC). If you are researching a recent death or birth, you need to be a qualified requester such as a direct family member or their authorized representative.
Marriage records in Texas have no statewide confidentiality period. You can request marriage record verifications from the Texas Department of State Health Services. Copies of the original license are held by the county clerk. The county clerk's records often go back further than the state's marriage index, so check both sources.
Note: For records of births and deaths that occurred in Georgetown before the county or state system was established, check church records, family bibles, and cemetery transcriptions held by local historical societies.
Library Genealogy Resources in Georgetown
The Georgetown Public Library offers genealogy resources for local researchers, including access to online databases and local history collections. Many Texas public libraries provide free in-library access to Ancestry Library Edition and HeritageQuest Online. Check the library's website or call ahead to confirm current hours and available databases.
The Texas State Genealogical Society maintains a statewide network of member societies and can connect you with local genealogists familiar with Williamson County records. The TXGenWeb Project at txgenweb.org has volunteer-contributed indexes, transcriptions, and research guides for Williamson County.
FamilySearch has digitized many Texas county records and offers free access at familysearch.org. FamilySearch Centers at local LDS meetinghouses also offer in-person research assistance and access to records not yet available online.
State Resources for Georgetown Genealogy Research
Several state-level resources support genealogy research for Georgetown families. The Texas State Library and Archives Commission (TSLAC) holds the largest collection of Texas genealogy materials in the state. Their archives include county records on microfilm, city directories, newspapers, census materials, and published family histories. Texas residents can access Ancestry.com free through their local library or TSLAC account.
The Portal to Texas History from the University of North Texas has digitized historical newspapers, photographs, maps, and some county records. Searching Georgetown and Williamson County in that database often turns up obituaries, legal notices, and community announcements that supplement official records.
The National Archives at Fort Worth holds federal records relevant to Georgetown families, including census records from 1850 through 1940, military pension files, land entry records, and naturalization papers. Federal census records are especially valuable for locating families and tracking them across generations.
The Texas Historical Commission maintains a statewide database of historic cemeteries and markers. If you know where an ancestor was buried in or near Georgetown, this database can help you locate the cemetery and find additional burial records.
Williamson County Records Online
Williamson County Clerk - the primary online portal for county genealogy records serving Georgetown and surrounding communities.
The county clerk portal shown above is the starting point for most Georgetown area genealogy searches, providing access to deed indexes, marriage records, and other public document filings.
Williamson County Genealogy Resources
Georgetown is in Williamson County. The county clerk holds the primary genealogy records for all communities in the county. For detailed information on the clerk's office, courthouse address, record availability, and online tools, see the Williamson County genealogy records page.
Nearby Texas Cities
These nearby cities also have genealogy resource pages. Each page covers the county clerk and local resources for that area.