Find Middle Valley Phone Directory
Middle Valley Phone Directory searches work best when you treat the area as a Hamilton County search, not a town hall search. Middle Valley is an unincorporated community in Hamilton County, so the records path runs through county offices in Chattanooga, the county clerk desk, and the courts that serve the whole county. That makes the Middle Valley phone directory a local map into county government. This page keeps the search tied to the right Hamilton County office so you can move from a place name to the desk that actually keeps the record.
Middle Valley Phone Directory Facts
Middle Valley Phone Directory Contacts
The Hamilton County directory at hamiltontn.gov/Directory.aspx is the most useful starting point for Middle Valley because it lists the county government office stack at the courthouse, 625 Georgia Avenue, Chattanooga, TN 37402. The county mayor, commission, clerk, assessor, trustee, and register of deeds all live in that same county system, so the directory gives a much cleaner path than a generic search. Middle Valley does not need its own city hall trail here. The county directory already points to the office that owns the file.
The Hamilton County Clerk contact page at countyclerkanytime.com/contact.aspx adds another useful layer. The downtown courthouse office sits at 625 Georgia Avenue, Chattanooga, TN 37402, and the Bonny Oaks satellite office serves the east side of the county. That matters in Middle Valley because many calls start with a simple number search but end with tags, titles, marriage licenses, or driver license questions. The county clerk page keeps those contacts in one place.
Middle Valley also sits close enough to Chattanooga that the county court and city court lines can blur if you do not ask the right question first. The county directory helps pull those threads apart. If the record is county held, the office is in the Hamilton County stack. If it is city held, the caller can still move on to a Chattanooga contact without starting over.
Middle Valley Phone Directory Image
The Tennessee Administrative Office of the Courts public case history page is a strong fallback for Middle Valley because county searches often turn into court questions once the caller knows which file matters.
That image works well for Middle Valley because the local search often moves from a county number to a case file or court record.
The court image also gives the Middle Valley Phone Directory a visual cue that county records and state court tools can sit on the same path. That is exactly how a real Hamilton County search tends to go.
Middle Valley Phone Directory Records
Hamilton County keeps a clear record trail for Middle Valley callers. The county's public records policy points requesters to the designated public records request coordinator, and the policy lives in county documents instead of a loose web of side pages. That means the first question is not just who answers the phone. It is which Hamilton County office holds the file. The county directory, clerk page, and public records policy all help answer that fast.
The county court tools are especially useful. Hamilton County's TNCaseFinder portal gives access to circuit court and general sessions civil court records, and the Hamilton County Sheriff's booking report is the right live tool when the question is about recent bookings or custody status. Those are not the same thing, but both matter in a county-side phone search. The directory should show the difference, not hide it.
The county courts page at Hamilton County Courts helps with the bigger court map. Chancery, Circuit, Criminal, General Sessions, and Juvenile all sit in different offices, and that matters when a caller only has a case topic. The court page keeps the next stop clear. If the record is older, the county clerk or archives may still be the better answer. If it is current, the court office usually solves it first. Research also names County Clerk Bill Knowles, Circuit Court Clerk Larry Henry, and Clerk and Master Robin Miller, which is useful when a caller needs a desk name instead of a building name.
Note: Middle Valley searches usually move through Hamilton County offices, so a case name, date, or office type is often enough to make the first call useful.
Middle Valley and Hamilton County Phone Directory
Middle Valley sits in the north end of the Chattanooga area, so Hamilton County is the main contact zone. That gives the caller a useful county chain: directory, clerk, court, sheriff, and records policy. The county clerk handles a lot of the everyday work, while the register of deeds and courts take over when the record belongs to land, title, or a court file. It is a simple system once the right office is named, but it can feel messy if the caller starts with only a street name.
If the search shifts to a city service instead of a county file, Chattanooga can help with the municipal side. That is not the normal Middle Valley start, but it is a good reminder that local records are not all stored in one place. The county line is the first thing to check, then the city line if the file turns municipal. A good phone directory should make that split easy to see.
Hamilton County's open records policy also matters because it gives the request a clear route when the local office is not the final stop. In practice that means the county directory gets the caller to the right desk first, and the policy tells the caller how to keep moving if the file belongs to another office.
If a Middle Valley request leaves the county stack, the Tennessee Comptroller's Public Records Exceptions Database, the TBI background checks page, and the state case history tool can all help. Those state pages are the backup layer when the local office is not the final custodian.
Use the Middle Valley Phone Directory
The best Middle Valley Phone Directory searches start with Hamilton County. Use the county directory for general office names. Use the county clerk for day-to-day contact work. Use TNCaseFinder for court lookups. Use the sheriff booking report for recent booking questions. Use the courts page when you need the office map before you call.
That order keeps the search from drifting. Middle Valley is not a standalone city government, so the county stack is the real answer path. Once you know that, the phone directory becomes much easier to use and much less likely to send you in circles.
The most useful Middle Valley Phone Directory routes are:
- Hamilton County Directory for office names and numbers
- County Clerk for routine county contact work
- TNCaseFinder for court lookups
- Sheriff booking report for recent booking status
- State backup tools for custodian and history checks