Southeast Missouri / Lead Belt / Mississippi Corridor
Recorder records start in 1805, but staff do not do title research
Cape Girardeau County's Recorder says its records start in 1805 and include land and marriage records, but title work belongs with a title company or legal counsel.
Cape Girardeau County’s Recorder reaches back to 1805, so the office matters for both old and current records. Land records and marriage records both sit in that record world.
The boundary is just as important as the starting year. Staff can help people use equipment, but they cannot perform research for you. A title question belongs with an abstract and title company or legal counsel.
For a buyer, heir, family researcher, or local-history reader, use the Recorder as the official record source. Do not treat the office as a title opinion or a research service. The record may be there, but the interpretation is a separate job.
Bring names, dates, or book-and-page clues if you have them; broad research questions can take more than a counter visit.
References
Where this fits: this note belongs to Cape Girardeau County. See every local note for the county on its page.