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Randolph County, Missouri

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Profiles

  • Alvey Bertram "Bert" Brooks, Twin (1883 - 1966)
    Son of James Moore Brooks and Mary Elizabeth Rose. He married Cecil Mae Snell and was the father of eleven children: Ethel, Arthur, Lester, Russell, Mildred, Leo, James, Vernon, Raymond, Kenneth and Im...
  • Beulah McWilliams (1878 - d.)
    Residence 1900: Spring, Woods, Oklahoma Territory Residence 1910: Wharton, Texas Residence 1920: El Campo, Wharton, Texas
  • Elisabeth Ann Walden (1793 - 1873)
  • John Query (c.1792 - c.1857)
    Name John Quary Arrival Year 1845 Arrival Place Ohio Primary Immigrant Quary, John Source Publication Code 5819 Source Bibliography MORGAN COUNTY GENEALOGICAL SOCIETY, OHIO, compiler. Genealogical Extr...

Please add profiles of those who were born, lived or died in Randolph County, Missouri.

The county was organized January 22, 1829 and named for U.S. Representative and U.S. Senator John Randolph of Roanoke, Virginia.

Randolph County was home to Omar Bradley, the last of nine 5-star generals of the American military.

Adjacent Counties

Cities, Villages & Communities

Cairo | Clark | Clifton Hill | Darksville | Fort Henry | Harkes | Higby | Hubbard | Huntsville (County Seat) | Jacksonville | Kimberly | Levick Mill | Milton | Moberly | Mount Airy | Randolph Springs | Renick | Roanoke | Ryder | Thomas Hill | Yates

Cemeteries

Cemeteries of Missouri

Wikipedia

Genealogy Village

MO Gen Web

Genealogy Trails

SHSMO - Randolph County Collection

Roots Web

Randolph County Historical Society

Hearthstone Legacy

RAOGK



upload.wikimedia.org/wikipedia/commons/thumb/5/56/Map_of_Missouri_highlighting_Randolph_County.svg/250px-Map_of_Missouri_highlighting_Randolph_County.svg.png