Wright County MOGenWeb

Exploring Wright County Lineages Across the Ozark Hills
Welcome to the Wright County Genealogy Project
                                                                                       

Neighboring counties

Webster
Laclede
Texas
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Mansfield in 1895 taken from the top of Ball Diamond Hill looking southwest across town



Wright County is available for adoption.


 If you have a local connection to Wright 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


Wright County, Missouri

Wright County lies in the south‑central Missouri Ozarks, a region long traveled by Native peoples before American settlers arrived in the early 1800s. Permanent settlement began in the 1830s and 1840s as families from Tennessee, Kentucky, Virginia, and the Carolinas moved into the rolling hills, springs, and timbered ridges that characterize the county. Small farming communities, mills, and early churches formed the backbone of local life, leaving behind valuable land, probate, and cemetery records.

The county was officially organized on January 29, 1841, and named for Silas Wright, a prominent New York statesman. Hartville was selected as the county seat, positioned near the geographic center and along early roads that connected scattered settlements. During the Civil War, Wright County saw troop movements and skirmishes, including the Battle of Hartville in January 1863, an event that shaped local families and left a distinct mark on the county’s historical record.

Through the late 19th century, Wright County remained largely rural, with agriculture, small towns, and local trade defining daily life. Churches, schools, and community cemeteries grew alongside these settlements, creating a strong documentary trail for genealogists. Today, Wright County’s combination of early land entries, Civil War‑era materials, courthouse records, and long‑standing Ozark family lines make it a rich area for Missouri ancestry research.






Contacts

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