Presented by Henrietta M. Christmas
Land Grants – Why do they exist?
Land grants were handed out to
individuals and communities during different parts of governmental control
prior to lands becoming part of the United States. This lecture will focus on records for the
Southwest US and primarily New Mexico.
Getting Started:
- Start with the original document and forget
everything else you know.
- When was the document written and remember in
1700 they didn't know about the Surveryor General and the Private Land Claims
cases.
- Make sure the translations are good.
- Use the Spanish Archives of New Mexico calendar
first. Or specific indexes by state.
- Use J. J. Bowden material, a 6 volume set.
- Catron Collection at University of New Mexico
will have a file.
- Look at Indian Agent records.
- Census.
- Family Records.
- Attorney Papers mostly at the State Archives,
whom would have handled the cases.
- Organizational Powers of how land grants were
granted.
- Find a good map that can show you where it was
located.
Process-
- Land grantee, their process for obtaining land.
- Types:
Individual versus Community Land Grants.
- Adjudication process post US takeover.
What you can find in a Land Grant?
- Maps.
- Testimonies.
- Timelines.
- Neighbors.
- Genealogies of families for several generations.
Bibliography
Web based searches, subject headings
Land Grants – New Mexico or (state)
Land Grants - New Mexio – History
Land Tenure – (state)
Indians of North America – Land Tenure
Texas General Land Office:
http://www.glo.texas.gov/what-we-do/history-and-archives/genealogy-at-glo/index.html
Center for Land Grant Studies: http://www.southwestbooks.org/
Arizona State Finding Aids:
http://www.statemuseum.arizona.edu/oer/drswtool.shtml
Spanish Archives of New Mexico,
Calendar, Series I
New
Mexico State Records Center and Archives, Santa Fe, NM
Albert James Diaz. A
Guide to the Microfilm of Papers Relating to New Mexico Land Grants,
Alb. 1960,
UNM Press. Out of print.
Ralph Emerson Twitchell. Spanish
Archives of New Mexico, Volume I.
Out of Print but reprinted by
Sunstone Press. Similar to the Calendar,
but has more explanations.
White, Kock, Kelley and McCarthy. Land
Title Study, Attorneys at Law and The New Mexico State Planning Office. Out of Print, 1981.
Jocylyn Jean Bowden. Private
Land Claims of the Southwest, Master’s Thesis completed, 1969, Southern Methodist University, Dallas, TX. Film
at the NM State Archives and
book form at UNM Zimmerman
Library. Also at UTEP for records pertaining
to El Paso.
Malcolm Ebright. Land Grants and Lawsuits in Northern New
Mexico. Albuquerque, NM University of New Mexico Press, 1994.
Journals
New Mexico Historical Review
Arizona Historical Review
Texas Historical Commission
State Archives
Colorado State Archives
New Mexico State Records Center and Archives
Texas General Land Office
Arizona State Library and Archives
Collections to review
· Vertical Files
at libraries.
· Some
small articles and thesis have been published on land grants.
Ⓒ 2012 Henrietta M. Christmas