Virginia Pioneers
Members Library

Wills, Inventories, Deeds, Accounts 1746-1762 No. 1

Index pp 1-50 pp 51-100 pp 101-111
pp 112-150 pp 151-200 pp 201-250 pp 251-300
pp 301-350

Wills, Inventories, Deeds, Accounts 1762-1778 No. 2

Index pp 1-50 pp 51-100 pp 101-150
pp 151-200 pp 201-250 pp 251-300 pp 301-350
pp 351-400 pp 401-450 pp 451-500

Wills, Inventories, Deeds, Accounts 1778-1791, No. 3

-Incomplete because pages were damaged and blurred--
pp 1-50 pp 51-100

Wills, Inventories, Deeds, Accounts 1791-1799, No. 4

Index pp 1-50 pp 51-100 pp 101-125
pp 126-150 pp 151-175 pp 176-200 pp 201-225
pp 226-250 pp 251-end

Wills, Inventories, Deeds, Accounts 1801-1802, No. 5

Index pp 1-50 pp 51-end

Wills, Inventories, Deeds, Accounts 1802-1809, No. 6

Index pp 1-25 pp 26-50 pp 51-100
pp 101-150 pp 151-200 pp 201-250 pp 251-300

Indexes to Probate Records

Books

Lunenburg County Probate Records

Virginia Map

Lunenburg County was established on May 1, 1746 from Brunswick County and was is named for the former Duchy of Brunswick-Lunenburg in Germany, because one of the titles also carried by Hanoverian kings of Great Britain was Duke of Brunswick-Lunenburg. A familiar reference to genealogists is "The Old Free State" and this is because as the War Between the States was approaching reality, Lunenburg County informed the Commonwealth of Virginia that it would break off and join North Carolina if they did not join The Confederacy. Some of the first settlers were: Ziner Gregory, William Taylor, William Ragsdale, William Johnson, William Hood Jr., William Ambrose, Edmund Bacon, George Hatchell, George Clarke, Henry Gill, Green Smithson, Henry Freeman, Edward Jordan, Archibald Hatchell, Bass Fowlke, Baxter Jordan and James Hazlewood.

Maps

Miscellaneous

Images of Wills and Estates




Images of Lunenburg County Wills 1810-1818

Images of Lunenburg County Wills 1818-1826