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Ancestrally Challenged Forum > How to's, Wherefore's and Aforementioned's > Birth/Marriage/Land/Death Records
Gerrie
QUOTE
The land records that are generally of most interest to genealogists are the land entry case files. These are records that document the transfer of public lands from the U.S. Government to private ownership.

There are over ten million such individual land transactions in the custody of the National Archives. These case files cover land entries in all 30 public land states.

The case files were filed as either military bounty land warrants, pre-1908 general land entry files, or as post-1908 land entry files. The information required to access and order copies of the records will differ depending on which of these 3 categories the transaction falls into. Read more.

For land records in the remaining 20 states that were never part of the original public domain, check the State Archives for that particular state. This includes the original 13 colonies, plus Hawaii, Kentucky, Maine, Tennessee, Texas, Vermont, and West Virginia.

Related Land Records
Tract Books:
There are also tract books available relating to the land entry case files. These are arranged by the legal description of the land: by township, range, section, etc. Tract books are divided into two geographical areas, Eastern States and Western States

For the Western States, the tract books are located in the National Archives Building in Washington, DC. This includes the states of: Alaska, Arizona, California, Colorado, Idaho, Kansas, Montana, Nebraska, Nevada, New Mexico, North Dakota, Oklahoma, Oregon, South Dakota, Utah, Washington, and Wyoming.

For the Eastern States, the Bureau of Land Management (BLM) has the tract books and patents. This includes the states of: Alabama, Arkansas, Florida, Illinois, Indiana, Iowa, Louisiana, Michigan, Minnesota, Mississippi, Missouri, Ohio, and Wisconsin.

For these Eastern State tract books, contact:

Eastern States Office, Bureau of Land Management,
Department of the Interior (BLM-ESO)
7450 Boston Boulevard
Springfield, VA 22153
Land Patents:
Land patents are the legal documents that transferred land ownership from the U.S. Government to individuals. Now you can search for land patent records online, for both Eastern and Western states. See the Bureau of Land Management's Land Patent Search page.
Please note that this includes only patented or completed land entries. Those case files that were cancelled or relinquished will not be there, and may contain just as much useful information for the researcher. For this information, researchers will need to access the tract books.

How Land Records Can Help You:
Land case entry files can contain a wealth of genealogical and legal information. Depending upon the type and time period of the land entry, the case file may yield only a few facts already known to the researcher or it may present new insights about ancestors, family history, title, and land use issues. For example, the records may attest to the one's age, place of birth, citizenship, military service, literacy, and economic status, and may even include similar information about family members. But even the smallest case files can establish locations of land ownership or settlement and dates essential to utilize other resources at NARA, such as census, court, and military service and pension records.

http://www.archives.gov/genealogy/land/

Cindy
Ok I posted this question Thursday evening, then I was not able to get on here to see if anyone answered all day and night last night. Now today I was able to get on here again but my message has disappeared. So Here it is again and hopefully if you answered me before you will again. THANKS!

I havent messed around in the land records too much yet so I dont know alot about what it all means when I find transcriptions and stuff. So can anyone tell me kinda what the following example would mean.

EXAMPLE: STRIPLING WILEY 4 14S 11W 0 1852/08/19
MARRIT MCLENDEN HENRY G WADE AND HUGH MCLEAN
ASSIGNEES OF A-O-TO-NA REP OF AH-CHAH-PA-TUBBEE
or sometimes it may say just a single name under the first name or it might say also
EXAMPLE: STRIPLING WILEY 4 14S 11W 0 1852/08/19
MARRIT MCLENDEN
I assume they are like notes: I have seem some say cancaled, or widow of, no signiture on document. these are easily fighued out, but just wasnt sure what all the assignee stuff was about.
Thanks for the help.
Cindy
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