Perry County MOGenWeb

Perry County: Deep Roots on the Mississippi
Welcome to the Perry County Genealogy Project
                                                                                       

Neighboring counties

Ste. Genevieve
St Francois
Madison
Bollinger
Cape Girardeau
Randolph Ill



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John & Louis P. Hooss purchased the J. F. Bey general store in 1886


Perry County is available for adoption.


 If you have a local connection to Perry County or an interest in Missouri in general,
 Please consider joining the MOGenWeb as a County Coordinator.

 Requirements are simple, peruse them here.
 https://mogenweb.org/moccguide.htm

 MOGenWeb Policies and Procedures
 https://www.mogenweb.org/pol-pro.htm

 Contact
the State Coordinator if you are interested.

 In addition:,  we would appreciate any contribution that you would like to make  to this
 site:  biographies, obituaries, birth, marriage, death info,  grave info, photographs....etc


Perry County, Missouri

Perry County occupies a long stretch of the Mississippi River in southeast Missouri, an area first inhabited by Native peoples and later visited by French traders and missionaries in the 1700s. Permanent settlement began with small French colonial communities, followed by American pioneers after 1800. Beginning in the 1830s, large numbers of German Catholic immigrants established parishes, farms, and towns that shaped the county’s cultural identity and produced some of Missouri’s most detailed church records.

The county was officially organized on November 16, 1820, during Missouri’s first year of statehood. After debate among early settlers, Perryville was chosen as the county seat for its central location and its growing role as a crossroads for commerce, courts, and county administration. Through the 19th century, Perry County developed around agriculture, river trade, skilled crafts, and strong parish‑based communities that maintained extensive civil and ecclesiastical records.

For genealogists, Perry County offers rich research opportunities: early French and territorial documents, long‑standing Catholic parish registers, German immigrant settlements, and stable county boundaries that have remained largely unchanged since the 1820s.







Contacts

State Coordinator
Bob Jenkins
Asst. State Coordinator
Tim Stowell
Asst. State Coordinator
Lynda Peach