Search Fentress County Unclaimed Money

Fentress County residents who want to find unclaimed money usually start in Jamestown, where the trustee and county clerk can help confirm old names, tax trails, and basic record details. The Tennessee Treasury handles the actual claim, but local records still matter when the match is thin or the address has changed. A county file, a commission minute, or a tax bill can be the piece that makes a state hit easier to prove. Start with the free state search, then compare it with Fentress County records before you file.

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Fentress County Quick Facts

Jamestown County Seat
Barbara Crosby County Trustee
Sally Cravens County Clerk
Feb. 28 Tax Due Date

Fentress County Unclaimed Money Search

The quickest place to begin is ClaimItTN.gov. Tennessee says the search is free, and the portal is built for simple name lookups by last name or business name. If you know a property ID, that can narrow the results further. The direct search interface at the Tennessee unclaimed property search portal uses the same state claim system, so you can move from a broad search to a tighter match without paying a fee.

Fentress County offices do not pay the claim, but they can help you prove who should get it. Old tax files, clerk records, and county reports can show a name, a spouse, an heir, or a former address. That paper trail matters when the state result is close but not final. A county record can be the piece that turns a possible match into a real claim.

Keep the search list short and specific. Use the same spelling across each record set. Then add old addresses and any business names that fit the owner.

  • Search the state database first.
  • Check old names and former addresses.
  • Keep the claim number with each copy.
  • Use county records for proof.

The Fentress County government site is the county starting point for tax work and local office contact. Barbara Crosby serves as trustee, the county says tax due date is February 28, and the office uses multiple payment methods. That split matters when a claim needs a quick local check before you file.

The county government page is the cleanest local path when your search starts with property tax history or a county account trail.

The county government page image below comes from Fentress County Government and shows the office path used for local tax and record work.

Fentress County unclaimed money county government page

That county page keeps the trustee and clerk path visible before the claim moves to the state portal.

Fentress County Unclaimed Money Records

The county trustee is Barbara Crosby. The office phone number is 931-879-9915, and the office handles property tax collection, county fund management, and the annual tax sale for delinquent properties. That office is the right place to think about when a search trail points to delinquent taxes or county funds. It helps when a claim starts with a tax balance instead of a bank record.

The county clerk is Sally T. Cravens. The office phone number is 931-879-8815, and the clerk handles vehicle registration, marriage licenses, business licenses, notary applications, and county commission minutes. That makes the clerk office useful when a search touches a filing, a license, or a record that shows a former name or address. It is a practical place to confirm the kind of detail that makes a claim easier to prove.

Trustee Barbara Crosby
Fentress County Courthouse, Jamestown, TN
Phone: 931-879-9915
Tax due date: February 28 each year
County Clerk Sally T. Cravens
Fentress County Courthouse, Jamestown, TN
Phone: 931-879-8815
Vehicle registration, marriage licenses, business licenses, and notary applications

Fentress County office work is simple, but it is still worth lining up the facts before you file. A clean address, a current office phone, and the right spellings can save time if the claim needs follow-up.

When the county page and the state result say the same thing, the claim packet gets stronger fast.

The trustee page is the better first stop when the record starts as a tax bill. The clerk page is the better first stop when the record starts with a license or filing. That split helps you avoid the wrong office.

For local context, the trustee and clerk pages are the two office pages most likely to help first. Keep them together with the state search result so the claim file stays tight.

The county clerk source page is part of the official county directory. See fentresscountytn.gov for the office details used here.

Fentress County Unclaimed Money Rules

The legal side is handled by Tennessee law and the Treasury process. The notice rule in T.C.A. § 66-29-130 requires the state to keep a public searchable database and send notice to apparent owners. That is why the search starts at the state portal, not at a local window. It also explains why Fentress County residents can search without paying a fee.

The reporting rules matter too. The Tennessee Department of Treasury Unclaimed Property Division explains that holders report property on an annual cycle. The state treats the money as custodial property, so the owner or heirs can still claim it later. If the first claim is denied, Tennessee law gives a one-year path to court review in Davidson County Chancery Court, so the file should stay clean from the start.

The MTAS reporting guide also helps here because it shows the reporting timing, due diligence, and electronic filing rules that sit behind the state database. Fentress County tax money can move on only after the holder follows those rules, which is why older balances sometimes surface later in the state system.

That means a Fentress County search has two jobs. First, find the money. Second, keep the documents that prove who should receive it. If the state asks for more proof, the county record is often what fills the gap.

Search Fentress County Unclaimed Money

If you are ready to file, start with ClaimItTN and then compare the result with Fentress County records in Jamestown. The trustee, county clerk, and county government site each give you a different piece of the same search. That is the cleanest way to handle Fentress County unclaimed money when an old account, refund, or estate trail runs back through the county.

If the first search does not hit, search again later. New property is added over time, and the state system is built for repeat searches. A clean file and a steady search often solve the problem faster than a long dig through the wrong office.

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