Rectangular Surveys

United States Land and Property  Rectangular surveys

It will be easier to find and understand the land records of ancestors if you learn something about the Public Lands Survey System and its records. In the United States, depending on the state, one of two main survey systems have been used to determine the borders of property:


 * the older metes and bounds primarily used in state land states
 * the newer rectangular surveys (also known as Congressional township rectangular surveys) primarily used in federal land states

The Land Ordinance of 1785  established the Public Land Survey System. Land was systematically surveyed into square "Congressional" townships, six miles (9.656 km) on a side. Each of these townships were sub-divided into thirty-six sections of one square mile (2.59 km²) or 640 acres. These sections could then be further subdivided for re-sale by settlers and land speculators.

Principal Meridians and Base Lines
The rectangular survey system is based on principal meridians  and base lines  determined by precise scientific measurements. As each territory or state opened new public lands, the government identified a meridian (running north and south) and a base line (running east and west) to guide all future land surveys in that area. Each color-block in the following map shows the states, or part of a state, surveyed using that area's principal meridian and base line.



For a larger version of this map, click here, and then click again to further enlarge it.

Numbered Townships and Ranges
Numbered townships were laid out in tiers north and south of the baseline; numbered ranges were laid out east and west of the meridians. The intersecting strips of townships and ranges formed a checkerboard or grid of townships.

With careful examination for grid markers, the federal-land-state townships and ranges usually can be identified in a Rand McNally Commercial Atlas and Marketing Guide found at most large libraries. Each township has a range strip and a township strip. Together they create an address for that township within the boundaries of their principle meridian  and baseline. Begin counting where the principal meridian and baseline intersect. If the township address is T2N R3E, it means that the township is two units north of the baseline, and three units east of the principal meridian. Similarlly, a township address of T3S R1W would be three units south of the baseline, and one unit west of the principal meridian.



Numbered Sections
The basic unit of the rectangular survey system is the section. A section contains one square mile (640 acres). Thirty-six sections in a square pattern, (6 miles by 6 miles), makes up a township. The following diagram shows how standard sections are numbered starting in the northeast corner of a township:

6          5           4            3           2           1 7           8           9           10         11          12 18         17         16          15         14          13 19         20         21          22         23          24 30         29         28          27         26          25 31         32         33          34         35          36

Secton Subdivisions
Each section is usually divided into subdivisions of varying size, usually with rectangular (square) shapes.

Rectangular Survey Land Records
Access. The National Archives and Records Administration (NARA) is the repository for records documenting the transfer of public lands to private ownership. They preserve the case files of over 10 million individual land transactions called land entries. They also house tract books and various name indexes to help access the case files. NARA has the land entry files for all 30 of the federal land states. NARA has the successful land entries that received patents (original titles) before 1908. For the same period they also have the unsuccessful entries that did not finish the process, cancelled, or relinquished their claims and did not receive a patent.

Content. Land records, depending on the time period, may show an applicant settler's (entryman's) age, birthplace, citizenship, military service, economic status, and family members. They could also show land title, land use, rights of way, land surveys, crops, improvements, and conflicting claims.

Arrangement. The National Archives keeps land entry files arranged by:


 * military bounty land warrants  by year of the act authorizing them
 * pre-1908 land entry files  by state, land office, type of entry (credit, cash, homestead, timber, or mineral), and final certificate number
 * post-1908 land entry files  by serial patent number

Indexes
Seven states index. Seven states (Alabama, Alaska, Arizona, Florida, Louisiana, Nevada and Utah) have an entryman name index for pre-1908 case files both patented and unpatented.

Online index. An important computerized index of patented land entries 1820-1908 for all federal land states (except  Montana, Nebraska, and Oklahoma) is available on the Internet at the BLM Land Patent Search site.

Only about 40 percent of entrymen completed the filing process and received their patent from 1820 to 1908. Tract books may help find the case file information needed to retrieve records of the 60 percent of entrymen who never completed the process.

For Further Reading

 * www.rootsweb.com/~ilmage/landmaps/range_map.html or


 * www.outfitters.com/genealogy/land/twprangemap.html


 * See Land &amp; Property Research in the United States, by E. Wade Hone, FHL US/CAN 973 R27h, chapter 8.