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Caselaw Access Project - North Carolina
The Caselaw Access Project (“CAP”) expands public access to U.S. law. The goal is to make all published U.S. court decisions freely available to the public online, in a consistent format, digitized from the collection of the Harvard Law School Library.
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Google Books - North Carolina Statutes
Search results for digitized books on historical statutes for the state. For each book, view the book within your web browser or hover over "EBOOK - FREE" and choose the ebook option you wish to download.
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Hathi Trust Digital Library - North Carolina Statutes
Catalog search results for digitized books on historical statutes for the state.
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Internet Archive Texts - American Libraries - North Carolina Statutes
Catalog search results for digitized books on historical statutes for the state.
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Law Library of Congress - Guide to Law Online - North Carolina
A directory of law resources for the state: Constitution, Executive, Judicial, Legislative, Legal Guides, General Sources.
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North Carolina General Statutes
The current state statutory law.
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Session Laws of North Carolina
Laws of the State of North Carolina, 1777-2019 as passed by the General Assembly.
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The Federal and State Constitutions, 7 vols. | Online Library of Liberty
Francis Newton Thorpe was commissioned by the U.S. Congress to edit a 7 volume collection of Colonial, Federal and State constitutions in 1906. The volumes are in alphabetical order, with Volume 1 dealing with United States-Alabama-District of Columbia; Vol. 2 Florida-Kansas; Vol. 3 Kentucky-Massachusetts; Vol. 4 Michigan-New Hampshire; Vol. 5 New Jersey-Philippine Islands; Vol. 6 Porto Rico-Vermont; Vol. 7 Virginia-Wyoming.
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Series by Francis Newton Thorpe. Various options for a full view of each volume.
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U.S. Colonial Laws: North Carolina - LibGuides - Bowling Green State University
This guide lists sources of laws of the original thirteen colonies.
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United States » North Carolina » Laws & Statutes
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"To understand the records, we have to understand the laws of the time and the place where the records were created. The laws dictated what records were kept, what information was recorded in the records and the legal purpose of the records helps determine what information is reliable as evidence."
--Judy Russell, The Legal Genealogist