Tennessee Land and Property

United States   U.S. Land and Property   Tennessee    Land and Property

The availability of land attracted many immigrants to America and encouraged westward expansion. Land ownership was generally recorded in an area as soon as settlers began to arrive. You can locate ancestral deeds using the Tennessee Property Records Online. An online index is also available for ancestral and modern deeds specific to Shelby County. You can use land records primarily to learn where an individual lived and when. They often reveal family information, such as the name of a spouse, heir, other relatives, or neighbors. You may learn where a person lived previously, his occupation, if he had served in the military, if he was a naturalized citizen, and other clues. Sale of the land may show when he left, and may mention where he was moving.

Tennessee was a “state-land” state, meaning the state government appropriated all land within its borders. Land was surveyed in odd-sized lots in much of the state, but west of the Tennessee River, it was surveyed in townships. Warrants authorizing surveys of the desired land were issued to persons qualified to receive grants for military service (military warrants) or cash payments (treasury warrants).

See "The Land of our Ancestors" for multiple articles and maps on pre-1900 Tennessee land topics.

The ultimate resource guide for Tennessee land up to 1891 is Henry Whitney's Land Laws of Tennessee. It's about 20MB, but it's downloadable from Google Books. This book is also located at the Family History Library.

Land Grants
From the "Foreword" to Tennessee Land: Its Early History and Laws:


 * "'Tennessee is considered a 'metes and bounds' state. However, a large portion of it was also set apart in townships and ranges as in public-land states. Tennessee litigated its boundaries with neighboring states until the mid-19th Century. North Carolina and Virginia both claimed portions of Tennessee prior to its statehood. Its eastern lands made up the largest part of the short-lived State of Franklin. Tennessee had to honor North Carolina's unresolved land grants for many years following statehood, and Tennessee was unable to grant its own lands for the first ten years of its existence. Tennessee land (primarily grants) was the basis of the worst land fraud scheme in the history of the United States.'""(McNamara, Billie R. (1996). Book is available from the author. Also available at the Family History Library,"

From "Early North Carolina/Tennessee Land Grants @ the Tennessee State Library and Archives":
 * "In 1806, when Tennessee received the right to issue land grants, they discovered they had no records. A large North Carolina land fraud had caused the original records to be subpoenaed to North Carolina. Tennessee agents had to go to North Carolina and copy Tennessee records from the North Carolina books, which included both North Carolina and Tennessee grants. They also had to copy the entry and survey books. These records are in the Tennessee State Library & Archives, called Record Group 50, and are microfilmed."

Another good article and map to view is Frederick Smoot's "Tennessee's Early Surveyors' Districts and District Boundary Documentation 1806-1836".

Original warrants, surveys, grants, and North Carolina land records are at the Tennessee State Library and Archives. Additional land records are at the Tennessee Historical Society and the local county courthouses.

The following collections are at the Tennessee State Library and Archives and on microfilm at the Family History Library. Indexes are generally located at the beginning of each set. Some are available online.


 * North Carolina land entries in what is now the State of Tennessee (beginning 1777) are held at the North Carolina State Archives. North Carolina continued issuing land entries in Tennessee even after it became a independent state, well into the 1820s. The following table presents MARS IDs for that facility, which will enable users to view free online abstracts of these records, using the instructions provided below the table:

Instructions:


 * 1) Follow this link to conduct a "Call Number Search" using the MARS Catalog on their site.
 * 2) Using the pull down window, change "Call Numbers starting" to "A MarsID matching."
 * 3) For example, type 12.14.2 (Windows Vista users may need to include a period after the last digit, for example 12.14.2.) and click Search. This is the specific MarsID for Davidson County.
 * 4) Click on the entry that is returned: "Tennessee, Davidson County."
 * 5) In the window that pops up, click Show List of Child Records and a list of Davidson County land entries will be produced. Browse to find abstracts of the original records. The same steps may be followed for other counties and districts.

N.B. You can also search by name through the Basic Search, but it lacks soundex capabilities.


 * Tennessee General grants (beginning 1806)
 * Watauga Purchase (beginning 1775)
 * Hiwassee District grants (beginning 1820)
 * Middle Tennessee District grants (beginning 1806)
 * Mountain District grants (beginning 1806)
 * Ocoee District grants (beginning 1836)
 * West Tennessee District grants (beginning 1820)
 * Eastern District grants (beginning 1806)
 * Walker’s Line (1825–1923)

All except the Walker’s Line series of land grant records are in:

Tennessee. Governor. Land Grants, 1775–1905, 1911. Nashville, Tennessee: Tennessee State Library and Archives, 1976. . Indexes are included in some volumes and many years are mixed. Some volumes are missing. The land grants are completely indexed in:

Sistler, Byron. Tennessee Land Grants, Surnames. 17 Volumes. Nashville, Tennessee: Byron Sistler, 1997. . This work provides an alphabetical listing of surnames listing the year of the grant, acreage, district, where the grant is located, book and page number, the grant number, and any additional grantees.

The Walker’s Line series of land grant records are in:

Kentucky. Governor. Grants South of Walker’s Line. Salt Lake City, Utah: Genealogical Society of Utah, 1962. . This record contains land grants given by the state of Kentucky for land in the state of Tennessee.

A list of preemptions can be found in:


 * Griffey, Irene, compiler. The Preemptors: Middle Tennessee's First Settlers. Clarksville: P.p., 1989. . Notes if grants were made to the resident (at the time that the commissioners visited in 1782-3) or to an assignee.

A source for finding families and communities that were relocated during the Tennessee Valley Authority (TVA) project is:

Tennessee Valley Authority (Tennessee). Tennessee Population Relocation Files, 1934–1954, Tennessee Valley Authority. Salt Lake City, Utah: Genealogical Society of Utah, 1996. Originals are at the National Archives Record Office, East Point, Georgia. . The record contains the name of the head of family, wife, address, marital status, birthplace of parents, number and ages of children, occupation, brief description of the real estate, and religion.

The laws of North Carolina (and, subsequently, Tennessee) permitted land instruments to be recorded in any Register's Office in the state. Record books at the Register's Office for Hawkins County, for example, contain scores of North Carolina grants for land all over the state. For a discussion and abstract of those grants, see


 * McNamara, Billie R. Hawkins County, Tennessee Land Grant Books 1 and 2, 1787-1819. Knoxville, Tenn.: B.R. McNamara, 1996. . Available from the author.

North Carolina Revolutionary War Warrants
The records from 1783 to 1837 of North Carolina military bounty warrants to land in Tennessee are at the Tennessee State Library and Archives and the Family History Library. Some warrants no longer exist, although the names are mentioned in various indexes. Sources for North Carolina Revolutionary War warrants are:

Pruit, Albert Bruce. Tennessee Land Entries Military Bounty Lands. Seven Volumes. Whitakers, North Carolina, 1997. . Contents include abstracts of location books, warrants, military bounty land warrants, and indexes by name, location, and number. They include the MARS number that ties them to the land warrants and surveys in the North Carolina State Archives. See the North Carolina Land and Property for information on the MARS index.

North Carolina. Secretary of State. North Carolina and Tennessee; Revolutionary Warrants, 1783–1837. Nashville, Tennessee: Tennessee State Library and Archives, 1978. . This contains handwritten warrants, a description of the land, names, and some hand-drawn maps. The folders are in alphabetical order.

Rice, Shirley Hollis. The Hidden Revolutionary War Land Grants in the Tennessee Military Reservation. Lawrenceburg, Tennessee: Family Tree Press, 1992. . The record lists the warrant number, grantee, county, book and page number where the deed is entered, and who the land was assigned to. It is indexed.

For information about the Glasgow land fraud, see:

Pruitt, Albert Bruce. Glasgow Land Fraud Papers, 1783–1800: North Carolina Revolutionary War Bounty Land in Tennessee. N.p.: A.B. Pruitt, 1988, 1993. . This work contains letters, reports, and warrants found to be suspect or fraudulent. The introduction explains the history of the Glasgow land fraud and how to obtain original warrants. The record contains an index.

County Records
Once a parcel of land was transferred from the government to private ownership, it may have stayed in the family for generations or for only a few months. It may have been subdivided, sold, and resold, with each transaction creating new records.

These person-to-person transactions are important to the genealogist. The potential for an ancestor to be recorded is high. These records may offer genealogical clues, such as the given name of the wife, a previous residence, names of children, or death information. Land records also offer clues to maiden names if a father deeded property to his daughter. Witnesses and neighbors may be in-laws or relatives. It is important to trace the purchase and sale (or the acquisition and disposition) of each parcel of land an ancestor owned.

The original records are filed in the county clerks’ or recorders’ offices. As new counties were formed and boundaries changed, transactions were then recorded in the new county, while the parent county retained the records previously created. Most of the county deeds, town lot certificates, and other important land records from many counties are on microfilm at the Family History Library.

Websites
Tennessee State Archives

Tennessee Land Records and Deeds Directory, by Online Searches, LLC, accessed 11/16/2010

"Connect Your Tennessee Ancestor to Origins in North Carolina", Arlene Eakle's Tennessee Genelogy Blog, accessed 11/16/2010.

"Early North Carolina/Tennessee Land Grants @ the Tennessee State Library and Archives", available at the Tennessee Department of State, accessed 11/16/2010.

"This Land is Our Land! Tennessee's Disputes with North Carolina", by Gale Williams Bamman, available at TNGenWeb, accessed 11/16/2010.

Research Guides
A resource for understanding the land and property records in Tennessee is:


 * Whitney, Henry D. The Land Laws of Tennessee : Being a Compilation of the Various Statutes of North Carolina, the United States, and Tennessee, Relative to Titles to Lands Within the State of Tennessee from the Second Royal Charter to the Present Time; the Constitutional and Statutory Provisions Concerning the Establishment and Change of the Boundary of the State, and of Each County; Tables Showing the Date of Each Hiatus, Editorial Notes, etc., to Which is Added a Digest of the Leading Decisions on the Land Laws. Washington, D.C.: Library of Congress, 1990..

United States Land and Property describes government land grants, grants from states, and major resources, many of which include Tennessee.

Other land and property resources can be located in the Locality Search of the Family History Library Catalog under:

TENNESSEE - LAND AND PROPERTY

TENNESSEE, [COUNTY] - LAND AND PROPERTY

Reels of microfilm can be borrowed on interlibrary loan from the Tennessee State Library and Archives. The records include early county Land and Property.