Search Stewart County Divorce Decree

Stewart County divorce decree records run through the court offices in Dover, and the Tennessee courts directory gives the cleanest official local path when the county portal is weak or missing. The county court page shows the Circuit, Criminal & Chancery Courts at 225 Donelson Parkway in Dover, and the clerk listings identify the people who handle the record side. That means Stewart County searches can stay local even when the state tools do most of the heavy lifting. If you know the spouse names, the approximate year, or the court office, you can move from a broad lead to the right record request without much guesswork.

Search Divorce Decree Records

Sponsored Results

Stewart County Divorce Decree Records

The official Stewart County court page at Stewart County shows the courthouse address as 225 Donelson Parkway, Dover, TN 37058 and lists the court type as Circuit, Criminal & Chancery Courts. That is the best first local reference for a Stewart County divorce decree search. When a county has a shared courthouse court structure like this, the room and office matter just as much as the county name. You want the office that actually holds the decree, not just a county page with a name on it.

The Tennessee courts clerks directory also gives the names you need. It lists Ethan Gray as Stewart County Circuit Court Clerk, and April Turner as Clerk and Master. Those are the office contacts tied to trial court records, which is what divorce decrees are. The public clerk directory is important here because the county does not have a strong, easy county portal in the manifest. In Stewart County, the state court system is the local record system.

That is why Stewart County searches should begin with the court office and not a third-party records page. The court page and clerk directory are official. They tell you where to go, who to ask, and which office is the right one for a decree search. Once you have those details, the rest of the search becomes much easier.

Search Stewart County Divorce Decree

A Stewart County divorce decree search usually starts with the Dover courthouse and then widens to state tools if the file is old or if you only need proof that the divorce was recorded. That is a good order because the decree and the state certificate are not the same thing. The decree is the full court order. The certificate is the state record summary. If you need the signed court file, stay with the court office first.

The official Stewart County clerk listings on the Tennessee courts site help keep the search specific. The circuit clerk entry and the clerk and master entry both point to Dover, which is the right anchor when the record is in county court storage. If the file is old enough to have moved out of active use, the Tennessee State Library and Archives may be the better next stop. That makes Stewart County a very normal Tennessee search: county court first, state archive second, state vital records if you only need the certificate.

The first Stewart image points to the court page at Stewart County court information.

Stewart County Divorce Decree court records information

That image works well for Stewart County because the county court page is the main local entry point when the portal is thin.

The second Stewart image points to the archives path at TSLA divorce record guidance.

Stewart County Divorce Decree TSLA help page

That follow-up matters when the decree is old enough to be better served by a historical record search.

Get Stewart County Divorce Decree Copies

If you need the full Stewart County divorce decree, the county court office is the right first request. If you only need a proof-of-divorce record, Tennessee Vital Records is the better backup. The state office keeps divorce certificates from 1949 forward, and online ordering goes through VitalChek. That gives you two different document types with two different uses, which is why it helps to know the goal before you call.

Use Tennessee Vital Records for the certificate route and VitalChek for the vendor order path. Certified copies cost $15 each. That copy path can be useful if you need a quick legal proof of divorce date or need a document for a name change. If you need the actual Stewart County court language, the county office in Dover is still the office that matters most.

The Tennessee courts self-help center and approved forms page are also useful if the search is really a filing question. Use Self-Help Center for process guidance and Court Approved Divorce Forms when you need to understand the forms that lead to a decree. Those pages do not replace the county office, but they do help you avoid asking for the wrong document.

Stewart County Divorce Decree Help

Stewart County is one of those counties where the state tools carry a lot of the visible load, but the actual record still belongs to the court. That means the best search plan is simple. Start with Dover. Use the official Tennessee courts page for the county. Check the clerk directory if you need the names. Then move to the state archive or state vital records only if the county file is not the right fit.

The clerk directory entry for Stewart County is especially useful because it names the two offices that matter most in a divorce search. Ethan Gray handles the circuit clerk side, and April Turner handles the clerk and master side. Both sit inside the same county court system. That is enough to get a record request moving, even when there is no county website with a clean records page.

If the divorce is recent, stay local. If the divorce is old, shift to TSLA. If you only need a certificate, go state first. That keeps the request focused and helps you avoid a long back-and-forth with offices that handle different parts of the same record trail.

Stewart County Divorce Decree Records and Next Steps

Once you know the courthouse address and the clerk names, a Stewart County divorce decree search is mostly about matching the right person and year. The county name alone is not enough if the file is older, but it is a solid start. Add the spouse names and any docket clue you have, then call or write the correct office. That is the cleanest path in a county that leans on the official court system rather than a big county portal.

For historical work, TSLA is the right backup. For recent proof, Vital Records is the right backup. For the decree itself, the county court is still the source. That three-part map is the safest way to work a Stewart County divorce decree search without mixing up the record type you actually need.

Search Divorce Decree Records

Sponsored Results