Research by Subject: Genealogy

  
  
Land Records: Warrants, Surveys, Patents
  for Public Domain/Federal Land States

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Land Records:  General Resources - Land Warrants & Patents in State Land States

        Land Warrants & Patents in Public Domain States - Deeds

 

After America achieved independence the new government did not get around to selling any lands until the opening of the Public Domain in 1803. 

This means those states who had existed prior to this distributed their lands within the colony/state and did not have federal lands as well as a couple of other states that would have special provisions.

States that distributed their own lands: Connecticut, Delaware, Georgia, Hawaii, Kentucky, Maine, Maryland, Massachusetts, New Hampshire, New Jersey, New York, North Carolina, Pennsylvania, Rhode Island, South Carolina, Tennessee, Texas, Vermont, Virginia, West Virginia - but the table below shows that some (like Georgia) had a mix of state lands and Public Domain.



The Public Domain -
Alabama, Alaska, Arizona, Arkansas, California, Colorado, Florida, Idaho, Illinois, Indiana, Iowa, Kansas, Louisiana, Michigan, Minnesota, Mississippi, Missouri, Montana, Nebraska, Nevada, New Mexico, North Dakota, Ohio, Oklahoma, Oregon, South Dakota, Utah, Washington, Wisconsin, and Wyoming.

1803 the Government organized its new land policy  (Ohio was the "test run").  The plan was to:

1. Dispose of all western lands and make lots of money (it didn't happen quite that way because there was just too much land to make it that valuable at the time).

2. Before grants could be made Native titles had to be negotiated and removed (as in resettle the native population in many cases) and land surveyed into rectangular townships.  Each township would be 6 miles square and have 36 sections, each a mile square.

3. Land would be dispersed through the land office

4. Pre-Civil war service usually brought bounty rights of some sort to free land

5. Valid land titles that had previously been gotten from the British, French or Spanish would be honored


Over a billion acres was disposed of

Google Books has a copy of "The Public Domain: Its History With Statistics published 1881 which is very helpful particularly if your ancestor had some special kind of claim like a railroad grant or timber grant

in 1862 Bounty Land Warrants were replaced by the Homestead Act which allowed people to settle up to 160 acres of public land if they lived on it for five years, grew crops & made improvements.  You didn't pay for the land itself but you did have to pay a filing fee.

Claimants had to show U.S. citizenship OR had to have filed declaration of intent.  The Case Files went to Washington D.C. They are now in the National Archives.  In some cases they contained certified copies of naturalization and the final file usually had name, age, address, description of the tract, date they established residence, number and relationship of members in the family and what they grew.

1877 came the Desert Land Act which tried to entice people to places very dry places by offering them 640 acres.  In 1904 a similar act tried to get people to settle in western Nebraska.

Homesteading ended in the 1930s

The place to begin for Public Domain Patents is the Bureau of Land Management Site 

Guides to the Township & Range System:

For an overview of the Township & Range System check out Wikipedias Public Land Survey System which has really good illustrations and content

To FIND the place described in the patent try:

GeoCommunicator - If you know the nearest town this is easiest to use
 On the menu to the left choose:
 MAP VIEWER and a new window will open showing a map of the us
 Choose the PLACE NAME button on the top menu - enter your town, state

a similar tool is EarthPoint and Google Earth.  You have to purchase software for some fancier options but it will locate a place & its township & range for free on Google Earth.  (Make sure you have downloaded Google Earth before you try it!)


Form for mapping a township
Form for mapping a section

 

Ohio 1802/03 Numerous tracts set off for bounty lands & special groups:
Connecticut Western Reserve
Donation Tract
Moravian Tract
Symmes Purchase (New Jersey)
U.S. Military District
Virginia Military District  
There is a great overview of Ohio lands
here and the FamilySearch Wiki for Ohio also has an excellent overview including notes on what has been filmed

Helpful Maps:
Ohio County Formation Map
Ohio Territory Grant Map is excellent for showing where those special districts were
Alabama 1806 The Federal Government began to sell land in Alabama in 1806 when it was still a part of Mississippi Territory.

Alabama was first settled by the French (till 1763), parts had been settled by the Spanish (who didn't leave till 1795),  had been part of South Carolina for a few years, part of Georgia for several years, part of Mississippi Territory and FINALLY was made Alabama Territory in 1817.  This confusing history is laid out well at the Alabama Land & Property page at FamilySearch Wiki

Helpful maps:
Alabama County Formation Map
Indiana abt. 1807 first land office was at Vincennes which had been settled first in 1733 and saw a steady stream of new settlers after the close of the American Revolution onward.
1750-1784 land claims are part of the British Land Grants at Fort Vincennes records
first public domain entries were in southern Indiana
Illinois 1814 1678-1763 under French jurisdiction
1763-1778 under British jurisdiction
1778-1784 under the jurisdiction of Virginia (Illinois Grants)
1784-1814 new government not ready yet
1814 Federal land sales begin

the Raymond H. Hammes Collection at the Illinois State Archives which covers land records in the 1678-1814 period. A good overview of Illinois Land Records is at FamilySearch Wiki which shows that the Hammes Collection has been filmed by Salt Lake and gives the film numbers needed for access.

IRAD is the Illinois local government database online - choose a county and it will tell you what records are held at the county level (all records, not just land).  Check the land records against what has been filmed by Salt Lake to see if there are some things that exist that can only be gotten by mail.

Bounty Lands
Article on the Illinois Military Tract of 1812

Helpful Maps:
Illinois County Formation Map
     
     
     
     
     
     
     
     
     
     
     
     
     
     
     
     


 
 


                                                 Anne Livingston   @WVC Library