Colorado Land and Property

Online Resources

 * See United States Land and Property for more databases and resources.
 * 1788-1960s U.S. Land Patent Search at Bureau of Land Management, index and some records
 * 1820-1908 at FamilySearch - How to Use this Collection; images only
 * 1863-1908 U.S., Homestead Records, 1863-1908 at Ancestry - index and images ($)
 * 1861-1932 at FamilySearch — How to Use this Collection, images
 * Survey Plats and Field Notes at Bureau of Land Management - index
 * Land Owner Search at Historygeo.com ($), index to maps of original land owners

Spanish and Mexican Grants
The first land grants in Colorado were given by Spain and Mexico. When the United States acquired the area in 1848, it agreed to recognize these claims. The claims were processed by the U.S. Surveyor General from 1855 to 1890. Some claims processed in the New Mexico office before 1862 relate to land that is now in Colorado.

The FamilySearch Library has microfilm copies of the following records from the Bureau of Land Management, New Mexico State Office, Federal Building, Box 27115, Santa Fe, New Mexico 87502-0115: Telephone: 1-505-438-7450:


 * Miscellaneous Archives . . ., 1695 to 1842, indexed and written in Spanish. (FamilySearch Library .)
 * Records of Land Titles, 1847 to 1852. (FamilySearch Library ; use Donaciano Vigil's Index, 1681 to 1846, on FamilySearch Library .)
 * Record of Private Land Claims . . ., 1855 to 1890, indexed and written in English and Spanish. (FamilySearch Library 4 and .)

The following publications may help you locate early records:

Beers, Henry Putney. Spanish and Mexican Records of the American Southwest: A Bibliographic Guide to Archive and Manuscript Sources. Tucson: University of Arizona Press, 1979. (FamilySearch Library .)

Van Ness, John R. and Christine Van Ness. Spanish and Mexican Land Grants in New Mexico and Colorado. Manhattan, Kansas: AG Press, 1981. (FamilySearch Library .)

"Mexican Land Grants in Colorado" online from Colorado Encyclopedia.

Federal and State Records
When the United States acquired Colorado, most of the land was unclaimed and became part of the public domain. The federal government transferred land to private ownership through land offices in a process called land entry. The first general land office in Colorado was established in 1863 near Denver. Most of the land office records are at the National Archives Rocky Mountain Region (Denver). Land entry cases are at the National Archives. Patents and copies of tract books and township plats are at:

Bureau of Land Management Colorado State Office 2850 Youngfield Street Lakewood, CO 80215 Telephone: 1-303-239-3600 Fax: 1-303-239-3933 http://www.blm.gov/co/st/en.html

County Records
After land was transferred to private ownership, subsequent transactions have been recorded in county offices. The FamilySearch Library has not microfilmed deeds or other property records that are available in each county. You may obtain copies by writing to the county clerk at the county courthouse.