Obion County Obituary Records

Obion County obituary records are supported by strong local resources in Union City and a wide network of newspapers and genealogy tools. The county was established in 1823, and the county record survival is good. That makes the search practical because you can move from the county clerk to the Tennessee Room at the public library, then to TNGenWeb or a state index if you need a clean confirmation. The county has enough depth to make the obituary search worthwhile.

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Obion County Quick Facts

1823County established
Union CityCounty seat
1824Marriage records begin
1914State death start

Obion County Obituary Sources

Obion County has one of the best obituary research setups in the region. The county clerk keeps marriage records from 1824, probate records from 1833, and court records from 1824. The Obion County Public Library Tennessee Room is a major research center, with more than 1,500 microfilm records, an expansive newspaper collection, state periodicals, city and state records, and an archive room with over 400 items. That makes it a great first stop when you are trying to identify a name or death date.

TNGenWeb for Obion County adds census transcriptions, cemetery records, marriage records, obituaries, family files, birth, death, and marriage material, and even business directories. The county historical society and museum add more local history context. The county’s obituary trail is also broad because multiple town newspapers served the area. That means a notice might appear in Union City, Troy, Obion, Kenton, or another local paper before it appears elsewhere.

Use Obion County TNGenWeb, the TN Gen Society county page, and the Obion County Public Library early. Those three sources cover the transcribed trail, the county society trail, and the Tennessee Room holdings that make obituary research move fast.

Obion County Obituary Records

Obion County obituary records often include full survivor lists, service details, and burial information. That is useful because the county has a strong newspaper record and a lot of local history support. The Union City Daily Messenger is the main local paper, but The Commercial and other town newspapers can also hold useful notices. The county’s agricultural base means many notices mention family farms, church ties, and long local residence, which can make identification easier.

The cemetery trail is good too. Union City Cemetery and TNGenWeb cemetery listings can often confirm a name that appears in a newspaper notice. The local library is especially useful for query work because it can look across newspapers, deeds, wills, family trees, maps, and yearbooks. That makes the obituary search much broader than a single index entry.

State indexes still matter. Use the Tennessee death indexes at TSLA for 1908-1912 and 1914-1933 to confirm the year and county, then move to the Tennessee Vital Records office if you need a certified copy. In Obion County, the local library and county clerk usually get you most of the way there before you have to leave town.

Start with the county genealogy page at Obion County TNGenWeb. It is a quick route to obituary, cemetery, and family-file references.

Obion County obituary records at Obion County TNGenWeb

That page is useful when a surname needs a fast county filter.

Then check the Tennessee Genealogical Society county page at Obion County TN Gen Society page. It helps narrow the family line or cemetery branch.

Obion County obituary records at Tennessee Genealogical Society county page

That second source is a solid cross-check when a surname is common in the county.

Search Obion County Obituary Records

Search Obion County obituary records by beginning at the Tennessee Room in the public library. That collection is one of the strongest in the area and includes microfilm, newspapers, state records, deeds, wills, maps, and genealogy material. If you are looking for an obituary, this is the place to gather the first solid clue. The library’s query service can also help if you need a short lookup and already know the person’s name.

Use TSLA death records 1908-1912 and TSLA death records 1914-1933 to confirm the death year. If the record is later, the Tennessee Vital Records office can handle the certificate request. In Obion County, this is usually the fastest way to move from a local newspaper notice to a dependable record copy.

Note: Obion County obituary searches often go fastest when the library Tennessee Room is checked before the state death index.

Obion County Help

The Obion County Historical Society, museum, and public library are the best local help for obituary research. They can point you toward newspapers, yearbooks, city records, and family files. Because the county has a broad paper trail, a short and specific request is usually enough. Full name, rough year, and a town or cemetery clue will get you farther than a broad search.

Obion County is a good county for obituary work because the local holdings are deep and the newspaper trail is broad. That means you can often finish the search with local material instead of having to chase multiple outside sources.

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Obion County Access

Obion County obituary records are public-facing through county offices, the Tennessee Room, TNGenWeb, and state indexes. Because the county has strong survival and extensive local library holdings, you can often stay local longer than in many counties. That makes the search efficient and practical.

If the obituary is tied to a funeral home or cemetery, the county sources may be enough. If you need a formal date anchor, the state death indexes and Vital Records office give you the verification path. That combination is what makes Obion County especially useful for obituary research.