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County · Southwest Missouri

Newton County

A Tri-State mining and Route 66 county on the Oklahoma-Kansas corner of Missouri: Neosho is the seat and home to the Neosho National Fish Hatchery, Joplin spills south across the Jasper-Newton line, George Washington Carver National Monument sits nearby in Diamond, and the lead-zinc mining legacy and Shoal Creek shape land and water questions.

Use this as a checklist, not a final ruling

These notes explain what's worth a second look in Newton County — local quirks, taxes, paperwork, and places. Always confirm exact parcel, license, tax, or permit details with the office that controls the record.

Practical guides

Common county next steps in Newton County

Use these when the local office, parcel, vehicle, or deadline matters.

Local notes

What's worth knowing in Newton County

Short, source-checked notes tied to this county. Each links to the official sources behind it.

Newton County Emergency Management is not at the default office address Newton County's office directory lists most county offices at 101 South Wood Street, but Emergency Management is listed separately at 202 West Brook Street in Neosho. Fort Crowder Conservation Area carries Newton County's base story MDC says Fort Crowder Conservation Area in southern Newton County was once part of the World War II Camp Crowder Army Base. Neosho's Lampo Building turns an old garage into a city venue The City of Neosho says the Lampo Building at 500 E. Spring Street began as Lampo Garage and Lampo Salvage in 1938 and is now a reservable city facility. Neosho building permits now start with an online account The City of Neosho says building permit applicants need an account in the city permit portal before applying or checking permit progress. Neosho's council mixes ward seats and at-large seats Neosho's official council page lists Ward 1 through Ward 4 seats alongside at-large council seats, giving the county seat its own city representation layer. Crowder College makes Neosho a regional campus town Crowder College's main campus is in Neosho, giving Newton County a community-college anchor that serves a wider southwest Missouri region. Newton County's flag is a map of its communities Newton County's official flag uses stars to represent its cities and villages, including a northwest cluster for the Joplin-area suburbs inside the county. Newton County personal property turns on January 1 Newton County's assessor explains that personal property tax is based on vehicles and other taxable property owned on January 1 of the tax year. Newton County land records start with the recorder Newton County's Recorder of Deeds keeps the permanent record of deeds, plats, releases, surveys, and other real estate documents. Newton County tax receipts can be a plate-renewal step Newton County's collector provides personal property tax search and receipt tools, which drivers may need when renewing Missouri license plates. George Washington Carver National Monument sits in Newton County, near Diamond The George Washington Carver National Monument near Diamond, in Newton County, is a National Park Service site that preserves the farm where Carver was born and grew up. A Joplin address can sit in Newton County, not Jasper Joplin straddles the Jasper-Newton line, so a Joplin parcel may be in Newton County, which changes which assessor, collector, and recorder you use. Karst country means wells, septic, and sinkhole awareness Newton County's Ozark-edge karst geology affects private wells, septic suitability, and sinkhole or spring behavior, all of which matter when buying rural property. Old Tri-State mining areas are worth checking, calmly Newton County sits in the historic Tri-State lead-zinc mining district, which left mine waste and documented cleanup records that are worth checking calmly rather than fearing. Neosho National Fish Hatchery is the oldest federal hatchery still operating The Neosho National Fish Hatchery is a long-running federal facility in the county seat that raises trout and endangered species and is open to visitors, anchoring Newton County's water and conservation story Shoal Creek runs through the county's water story Shoal Creek is a defining Ozark-edge stream through Newton County used for fishing and paddling, and it ties into both recreation and flood awareness.

Official sources

Where to confirm it

The official county and agency pages cited by this county's notes.

Nearby counties

More of Southwest Missouri

Neighboring counties with their own local notes.

Barry County Barry County, seated at Cassville in southwest Missouri's western Ozark plateau, is rich in durable place-specific topics: Roaring River State Park, one of Missouri's small set of trout parks built around a large karst spring; the south end of Table Rock Lake managed by the U.S. Barton County Barton County, seated at Lamar in southwest Missouri, is a small, lower-source-density rural county whose strongest place-specific topics are durable rather than volatile: the Harry S Truman Birthplace State Historic Site in Lamar; Prairie State Park, Missouri's largest remaining tallgrass prairie with a managed bison herd; a legacy of coal mining on the Cherokee/cherty plains; a row-crop and cattle farm economy; and the long-running Lamar Free Fair. Cedar County Cedar County is organized around Stockton, the county seat, and Stockton Lake, a U.S. Army Corps of Engineers reservoir behind Stockton Dam that is known regionally as a sailing lake and wrapped by Stockton State Park. Christian County One of Missouri's fastest-growing counties: Springfield bedroom communities (Nixa, Ozark) drive school-district growth and reassessment, karst shapes water and land, septic-to-sewer transitions matter as subdivisions spread, and Bald Knobber vigilante history anchors the county's past. Dade County Dade County, seated at Greenfield in southwest Missouri's western Ozark-border country, is a small, agriculture-centered, comparatively low-source-density county with a handful of durable place-specific topics: the north end of Stockton Lake, a U.S. Dallas County Dallas County is a rural Ozark-plateau county seated at Buffalo, defined by water and karst: the Niangua River and the Bennett Spring area along its eastern edge, the headwaters reach of the Pomme de Terre River, and limestone/dolomite terrain with springs, caves, and sinkholes that shape wells and septic.

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