Pike County MOGenWeb

Preserving Generations Along the Mississippi in Missouri’s Second‑Oldest County
Welcome to the Pike County Genealogy Project
                                                                                       

Neighboring counties

Ralls
Audrain
Montgomery
Lincoln
Pike,Ill
Calhoun,Ill



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Touring Pike County 1895


Pike County is available for adoption.


 If you have a local connection to Pike 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


Pike County, Missouri

Pike County was organized on December 14, 1818, during Missouri’s territorial period, making it one of the state’s earliest counties. The region had long been traveled by Native peoples and later by French and American hunters, traders, and river pilots who used the Mississippi River as a natural corridor. After 1800, families from Kentucky, Virginia, Tennessee, and the Carolinas began settling the upland prairies and timbered valleys that would become Pike County.

The centrally located community of Bowling Green was selected as the county seat, chosen for its position along early overland routes and its accessibility to the county’s growing rural population. Meanwhile, the river town of Louisiana developed as a major landing and commercial center, drawing merchants, craftsmen, and migrants arriving by steamboat.

Throughout the 19th century, Pike County’s economy was shaped by agriculture, river trade, and the establishment of small farming communities connected by early roads, mills, churches, and schools. Because the county’s boundaries have remained stable since its creation, Pike County offers genealogists a strong continuity of records — including early land entries, probate and court files, long‑standing cemetery and church registers, and a deep collection of family histories tied to both river settlements and inland farms.







Contacts

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