New Mexico Land and Property

United States U.S. Land and Property  New Mexico  Land and Property

Spanish and Mexican Grants
The first land grants in New Mexico were given by Spain and Mexico. When the United States acquired the area in 1848, they agreed to recognize these claims relating to Spanish and Mexican grants. The claims were processed by the U.S. Surveyor General from 1855 to 1890, and by the U. S. Court of Private Land Claims from 1891 to 1903.

Bureau of Land Management New Mexico State Office Federal Building, 1474 Rodeo Road P.O. Box 27115 Santa Fe, NM 87502-0115 Telephone: 505-438-7450 Fax: 505-438-7452 Internet: http://www.blm.gov/nm/st/en.html

The Family History Library has microfilm copies of the following records:


 * Miscellaneous Archives Relating to New Mexico Land Grants, 1695-1842. These are in Spanish. (FHL ; use.)


 * Records of land titles, 1847-1852. Kept by the Secretary of the Territory. (Family History Library .)


 * Record of private land claims adjudicated by the U.S. Surveyor General, 1855-1890. These are indexed and written in English and Spanish. (Family History Library film.)


 * Letters received, 1854 to 1892 from the New Mexico Territory. (Family History Library ; an index is included.)


 * Private land claims adjudicated by the U.S. Court of Private Land Claims, 1891-1903. (Family History Library .) The first film has a list of the cases.


 * Twitchell Archives, 1685-1898. These are records compiled by Ralph E. Twitchell, including land disputes, appeals, grants, wills, mine claims, and judgments, in English and Spanish. They are records of the U.S. Bureau of Land Management. (Family History Library .)

For further information about Spanish and Mexican grants, see the Beers book listed under New Mexico Archives and Libraries.

U.S. Public Domain Grants
Various laws provided for the distribution of unclaimed land in the public domain:


 * The pre-emption law, passed by Congress in 1841, applied to New Mexico when it became a territory. Under this law, a head of a family (including a widow) could stake a claim and buy it from the government.


 * The Donation Act of 1854 granted free land to settlers. Persons claiming Spanish or Mexican land grants were not eligible.


 * The Homestead Act of 1862 gave free land to settlers who lived on the land for five years or who purchased it within six months of filing a claim for it.

Land was also available through timber-culture grants, soldiers' and sailors' homesteads, mining grants, coal grants, desert grants, railroad grants and education grants.

The land was distributed through land offices. The first general land office was established in 1858 at Santa Fe. The land entry case files, indexes to pre-1908 patents, and original tract books and township plats of the general land offices are at the National Archives. Land records of the Santa Fe office are at the National Archives—Rocky Mountain Region (Denver). The patents and copies of the tract books and township plats are the Bureau of Land Management, New Mexico State Office.

Further information on the donation, homestead, and other acts affecting land records is in Victor Westphall, The Public Domain in New Mexico, 1854-1891 (Albuquerque, New Mexico: University of New Mexico, 1965; Family History Library ).

The Bureau of Land Management has an online index to land patents in New Mexico. The patent search usually provides a digital image of the original patent.

The Bureau of Land Management has an online index and digital images of the original survey maps for New Mexico. The original survey creates land boundaries and marks them for the first time.

County Records
After land was transferred to private ownership, subsequent records, including deeds and mortgages, were recorded by the county clerk. The Family History Library does not have copies of the deeds or other property records for each county. You can obtain copies by contacting the county clerk's office.