Subseries - Wills recorded at Annapolis County registry of deeds

Title and statement of responsibility area

Title proper

Wills recorded at Annapolis County registry of deeds

General material designation

  • Textual record (microform)

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Other title information

1879-1970

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Subseries

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Issuing jurisdiction and denomination (philatelic)

Dates of creation area

Date(s)

  • 1970, 1992 (Creation)
    Creator
    Annapolis County Court of Probate

Physical description area

Physical description

3 microfilm reels, positive and negative, 16 mm and 35 mm

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Archival description area

Name of creator

(1769-1925)

Administrative history

Although legislation was passed in 1758 regulating the process of probate the Governor, through his Surrogate General, retained exclusive power over the appointment of judges of probate and the creation of courts of probate as outlined in the carious instructions to governors regarding the appointment of local officers of the courts. Until additional legislation in 1842 local officers had little guidance in determining what they were to do beyond attempting to make analogies to the Ecclesiastical Courts of England. Today's Annapolis County Court of Probate originated with the appointment of Jonathan Hoar as Judge of Probate for the County in 1767. In 1810 Elkanah Morton was appointed Judge for the Western District of the County which became Digby County in 1837. With the 1897 amendments to the Probate Act uniformity in record keeping emerged as retiring Judges were replaced with full time registrars of probate and the County Court assumed the judicial function. In Annapolis County Jacob Owen was the last Judge of Probate electing in 1912 to continue in office but as Registrar. In 1900 the Revised Statute edition of the Probate Act added many forms which provided additional uniformity to the process.

Custodial history

Scope and content

Series contains records relating to the disposition of property of deceased persons in Annapolis County as administered through the Court of Probate. Series consists of two sub-series of records: Wills recorded at Annapolis County registry of deeds (1879-1979; and Estate files, 1763-1925.

Notes area

Physical condition

Immediate source of acquisition

Microfilm was presented to the Public Archives of Nova Scotia by the Genealogical Society of Utah.

Arrangement

Language of material

    Script of material

      Location of originals

      The originals are in the custody of the Annapolis County Registry of Deeds and the Annapolis County Registry of Probate.

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      Associated materials

      There is a published abstract of the wills and estate papers that indexes all genealogical relationships embedded in the probate records. The abstract however includes information from will books and probate act books at the Probate Registry which are not available in microfilm at the Public Archives of Nova Scotia. See: Abstracts from the Court of Probate records for Annapolis County, Nova Scotia (1763-1938) compiled by Wayne W. Walker. Ottawa, Ontario, 1994, 466 pages (CS83 P962 A613.)

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