Source:Connecticut, United States. Church Record Abstracts, 1630-1920

Source Church Record Abstracts, 1630-1920
Coverage
Place Connecticut, United States
Year range 1630 - 1920
Publication information
Type Government / Church records
Publisher Ancestry.com (database on-line)
Date issued 2013
Citation
Connecticut, United States. Church Record Abstracts, 1630-1920. (Ancestry.com (database on-line), 2013).
Repositories
Ancestry.comSearch databasePaid website

Original Source

Connecticut. Church Records Index. Connecticut State Library, Hartford, Connecticut.

The Connecticut State Library is home to a large collection of church records dating back to the 17th century. Alphabetized volumes of details abstracted from these records have been created and bound by town/church, then surname. This collection includes those bound compilations. They record dates of admission, baptisms, deaths, dismissions, marriages, and a variety of other details. The abstracts use the following abbreviations:
adm.ch. — admitted to church
adm.com — communicants
bp. — baptisms
d. — deaths
dism. & recom. — dismissed and recommended
m. — marriages
mem.ch. — members of church
mem.com. — member of committee
o.c. — owned the covenant (a pledge that bound one to adhere to the doctrine of the church)
recom. — recommended

Where members were dismissed and recommended to another congregation, the name and location of the new church is typically listed.

Browse to the first page of the index for each church to find additional abbreviations and the provenance of the original church registers.

Historical Background

Early Connecticut settlers established the Congregational Church as the tax-supported state church until 1818 when the state constitution was accepted, abolishing the connection between church and state. Sometimes, if one parish was getting too large, a second was formed that became a precursor to a new town with the permission of the general assembly. Other denominations followed eventually, particularly the Baptists from Rhode Island on the eastern border with Connecticut, Episcopalians, and Quakers. Information in Connecticut’s church records has often been found to be more informative, complete, or accurate than the town vital records.

Excerpt from Alice G. Eichholz, “Connecticut Family History Research.” Red Book: American State, County and Town Sources. Third edition. Provo, UT: Ancestry Publishing, 2004.