Search Daggett County Genealogy

Daggett County Genealogy work is compact, but it is not shallow. Daggett County is Utah's smallest county by population, and its paper trail begins with the county's creation from Uintah County in 1919. Manila is the county seat, so the local clerk and recorder are the best starting points for marriage, land, probate, and later family record questions. Because the county is small, the office trail is easier to map than in larger Utah counties. That said, the best results still come from pairing the county books with state archives, newspapers, and vital records when a family line crosses into a later era.

Search Public Records

Sponsored Results

Daggett County Genealogy Offices

The Daggett County Clerk handles the core civil records for Daggett County Genealogy. The office keeps marriage licenses from 1919 to the present, birth and death records from 1898 to 1905, and probate and land records from 1919 forward. The mailing address is PO Box 219, Manila, UT 84046, the phone number is 435-784-3214, and the office is open Monday through Friday from 8:00 AM to 5:00 PM. For a county with a small population, those records often provide a very direct line from one generation to the next.

The Daggett County Recorder keeps land records from the county's organization in 1919 and maintains property records and documents for real property transactions. That makes the recorder a good second stop when a marriage file points to a home site, a ranch, or a transfer of family land. The recorder also uses the same Manila mailing address, and the phone number is 435-784-3154. Regular weekday hours make it practical to call first and confirm what kind of copy or search the office can provide.

Daggett County was organized after the oldest Utah county records had already been underway for decades, but the county still preserved a clean and readable record run from its start. That can save time when you are trying to separate one Daggett family from another with the same surname.

Daggett County Genealogy Records

Daggett County Genealogy records are best read in layers. A marriage license can identify a spouse and a date. A probate file can identify heirs. A land entry can show where the family lived or what property moved at a death or marriage. Because the clerk's office starts at 1919 for marriage, probate, and land while also preserving earlier birth and death entries from 1898 to 1905, the county file set can bridge the gap between territorial-era family work and early twentieth-century household history.

The county home page below gives a useful visual anchor for Daggett County Genealogy because it shows the local government setting that ties the clerk, recorder, and county seat together. The source link is the county itself, which is the right place to begin when you need the official office path rather than a secondary summary.

Lead-in source: Daggett County.

Daggett County Genealogy county records

That page is simple, but it matters. In a county as small as Daggett, the county site often reflects the same direct structure you will meet when you call the office or request a record.

Daggett County Genealogy and Archives

When the county books are not enough, the Utah State Archives becomes the natural backup for Daggett County Genealogy. The archives preserve government records across Utah, including county and court material, and the digital archive tools can help you confirm whether a record series exists before you travel or request copies. That is especially useful for a county like Daggett, where the record base is smaller but the family questions can still be complex.

The archives image below is a good fit for Daggett County Genealogy because it points to the state repository that can support county research with broader access tools. If a marriage, probate packet, or land reference needs a second look, the archives can help you identify the right series and the right date range.

Lead-in source: Utah State Archives and Records Service.

Daggett County Genealogy at the Utah State Archives

That state-level support matters more than it might seem at first. A small county file often makes more sense when it is checked against a larger archival context.

Daggett County Genealogy and Newspapers

For Daggett County Genealogy, newspapers are often the quickest way to flesh out a bare county record. The Utah Digital Newspapers project can surface obituaries, marriage notices, community items, and property references that never reached the county books. That is especially useful in a county where the population is small and a single article can identify a spouse, a farm, or a move that would otherwise be hard to place.

The newspaper image below comes from the statewide collection and works well for Daggett County Genealogy because it reflects the kind of local notice that can confirm a date or tie a family to a place. Even when the newspaper item is short, it can answer the question that the clerk index leaves open.

Lead-in source: Utah Digital Newspapers.

Daggett County Genealogy and Utah Digital Newspapers

That type of notice is often enough to move a Daggett County line from a name in a book to a family in a town.

Daggett County Genealogy and Vital Records

Later Daggett County Genealogy questions often move from the county clerk into state vital records. The Utah Office of Vital Records handles modern birth, death, marriage, and divorce certificate requests, while the CDC Utah vital records page gives a quick national overview of where those requests go. That becomes important when a family event falls outside the county's early birth and death range.

Utah Code Title 26 helps explain the access rules behind modern certificate requests. It is not the place to start a simple search, but it does clarify why older county books, later state certificates, and requester eligibility are treated differently. For Daggett County Genealogy, that distinction can save time if you are trying to decide whether a record should be in the county office or at the state level.

Lead-in source: Utah Office of Vital Records and Statistics.

Daggett County Genealogy and Utah vital records

If a family line seems to stop in the county books, the state certificate system is often the next place to look.

Daggett County Genealogy Research Tips

Daggett County Genealogy works best when you prepare before you contact the office. Bring full names, a likely year, and any spouse or land clue you already have. Because the county is small, a short conversation with the clerk or recorder can often tell you whether the record exists and which office should handle the request. That makes the search more efficient and keeps you from sending the same question to the wrong office twice.

Once you have the county record, widen the search. A marriage entry can be matched to a newspaper notice. A probate record can be checked against a land transfer. A state archive search can add context when the county file is thin. Daggett County Genealogy may be compact, but the connections between record groups still matter, and the best answers usually appear when those pieces are read together.

Note: Daggett County's small population makes it easier to follow one family, but it also makes it easier to overlook a second branch with the same surname, so compare every clue before you settle on a match.

Search Records Now

Sponsored Results