Search Davis County Genealogy

Davis County Genealogy research is anchored by one of Utah's original five counties. Davis County was created in 1850, and Farmington became the county seat, so the record trail is both old and well organized. That makes the county especially useful for researchers who want marriages, land transfers, probate files, court material, and later vital records without having to bounce between unrelated offices. The county clerk, recorder, marriage lookup, and health department each cover a different part of the record set, and the best family story usually emerges when those parts are read together rather than one at a time.

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Davis County Genealogy Offices

The Davis County Clerk/Auditor is the starting point for many Davis County Genealogy searches. The office keeps marriage records from 1887, birth and death records from 1898 to 1905, and probate, court, and land records from 1850 to the present. The office is at 61 S Main St in Farmington, UT 84025, the phone number is 801-451-3580, and the office is open Monday through Friday from 8:00 AM to 5:00 PM. Those dates make the clerk a strong source for both late nineteenth-century and twentieth-century family work.

The county clerk image below comes directly from the office page and is a practical visual cue for Davis County Genealogy. It shows the official place where marriage records and many other county-level questions begin.

Lead-in source: Davis County Clerk/Auditor.

Davis County Genealogy clerk records

That office is especially useful when a marriage is the first solid clue in a larger family line.

The Davis County Recorder works from the same Farmington address and keeps land records from 1850 forward. The recorder handles plats, surveys, deeds, and other real property documents, and the office provides online document search through the county records system. The phone number is 801-451-3213, and the hours are the same weekday schedule as the clerk.

Davis County Genealogy Marriage Search

For marriage work, the Davis County marriage lookup is one of the fastest tools in the county. It is free to use and lets you search by name or date, which is helpful when you only know a rough marriage year or a spouse surname. Because the county has marriage records from 1887, the lookup can quickly narrow the field before you request a certified copy or move into probate and land records.

That kind of search is valuable in a county where families often stayed close to one another for generations. A marriage hit can lead to a second surname, a residence, or a date that matches a later census and helps separate one Davis County couple from another. The database is simple, but it can save a lot of time when a family line has repeated given names.

Once you have the marriage, compare it with county land and vital records. Davis County Genealogy often becomes much clearer when a marriage date is matched against a later property transfer or a birth registration for the next generation.

Davis County Genealogy Land Records

The Davis County Recorder preserves the land side of Davis County Genealogy. Land records begin in 1850, and the office provides online access to recorded documents through its property system. That means deeds, surveys, plats, and other real property papers can be checked without guessing which family stayed in one place and which moved on. In a county with a long settlement history, the property trail can be just as revealing as a marriage or death record.

The recorder image below comes from the office page and helps show where Davis County Genealogy land work lives. It is useful when a property transfer points to an heir, a widow, or a land sale that is not obvious in the marriage record alone.

Lead-in source: Davis County Recorder.

Davis County Genealogy recorder records

That record trail often explains residence, inheritance, and family movement more clearly than a census line can.

The recorder work also pairs well with state resources. The Utah State Archives can help when a county land run needs a broader archival context, and the Utah State History site can help place Farmington and the surrounding settlements in a wider county story.

Davis County Genealogy Vital Records

Later Davis County Genealogy questions often move to the health department. The Davis County Health Department provides certified copies of birth certificates from 1931 to the present and death certificates from 1946 to the present. The office is at 22 S State St in Clearfield, UT 84015, the phone number is 801-525-5100, and same-day service is available for in-person requests with proper identification.

For a statewide framework, Utah Vital Records and the CDC Utah vital records page explain how newer Utah certificates are handled. That matters because the county and state systems do not cover the same years. If a family event is not in the county clerk's early register, the later state or local health route may be the right path.

Utah Code Title 26 is also useful here because it explains how historical and modern vital records fit into the state's access rules. You do not need the statute to ask for a copy, but it helps make sense of why some records are local and others are statewide.

Davis County Genealogy and County History

Davis County Genealogy becomes easier to read when you remember that the county was one of the original five Utah counties. That long record span means the same family name may appear in early probate, a later marriage, and then a modern health department certificate. The county seat in Farmington sits at the center of that history, and the county's long settlement pattern explains why land and court files often matter as much as birth and death entries.

For broader context, the FamilySearch Utah Genealogy page and the Library of Congress Utah local history guide are useful companions. They do not replace Davis County records, but they help you understand what kinds of sources should exist and where they may have been preserved. The Utah Digital Newspapers collection can add obituaries, marriage notices, and local items that fill the gaps between county books.

A county as old as Davis often rewards a layered approach. The older the line, the more likely you are to need court, land, newspaper, and burial clues to complete the family picture.

Davis County Genealogy Research Tips

Davis County Genealogy research goes faster when you start with the record that fits the date. Use the clerk for marriages and early vital records, the recorder for land and property, and the health department for later certificates. If a date is off by a year or two, the free marriage lookup can still narrow the search and keep you from ordering the wrong copy. That simple order often saves a lot of time in a county with a broad record span.

Once the basic facts are in place, add newspapers and state resources. A marriage notice in the paper can confirm a bride or groom, a land transfer can identify an heir, and a burial record can resolve a death date when a certificate is hard to get. Davis County Genealogy works best when every office and every source is used for the detail it is best at giving.

Note: The county's long record run means small clues matter, so compare the marriage, land, and vital record dates before deciding two entries belong to the same person.

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