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Report of a Committee to Establish a Land Office, [30 April 1784]

Report of a Committee to Establish a Land Office

[30 April 1784]

Be it ordained, by the United states in Congress assembled, that the territory ceded by individual states to the United states, when the same shall have been purchased of the Indian inhabitants, and laid off into states, shall be disposed of in the following manner. It shall be divided into Hundreds of ten geographical miles square, each mile containing 6086 feet and four tenths of a foot, by lines to be run and marked due North and South, and others crossing these at right angles, the first of which lines, each way, shall be at ten miles distance from one of the corners of the state within which they shall be. But if the Indian purchase shall not have included any one of the corners of the state, the lines shall then be run at the termination of integral miles, as measured from some one of the corners, but shall be extended, by actual marks, only so far as the purchase extends. These Hundreds shall be subdivided into lots of one mile square each, or 850 acres and four tenths of an acre,1 by marked lines running in like manner due North and South, and others crossing these at right angles.

For laying off the said territory, Surveyors shall be appointed by Congress, or the Committee of the states, who shall proceed forthwith, under the direction of the Register hereafter to be mentioned, to divide the same into hundreds, by lines in the directions, and at the intervals before mentioned, which lines shall be measured with a chain, shall be plainly marked by chaps or marks on the trees, and shall be exactly described on a plat, whereon shall be noted, at their proper distances, all watercourses, mountains, and other remarkeable and permanent things, over or near which such lines shall pass.

The Hundreds being laid off and marked, nine of them shall be assigned as a district to each surveyor, who shall then proceed to divide each Hundred of his district into lots as before directed, beginning with the Hundreds most in demand, and measuring, marking, and platting the said dividing lines thereof in the manner before directed for the Hundreds, save only that the lines of the lots shall be distinguished by a single mark2 on each tree, and those of the hundreds by three marks. And that the said lots may be capable of more accurate description and distinction from each other, those in every Hundred shall be designated by the numbers in their order from 1. to 100. beginning at the Northwestern lot of the Hundred and applying the numbers from 1. to 10. to the lots of the first row from West to East successively, those from 11. to 20. to the lots of the second row from West to East and so on. The Surveyors shall pay due and constant attention to the variation of the magnetic meridian, and shall run and note all lines by the true meridian, certifying with every plat what was the variation at the time of running the lines thereon noted.

A Register shall be appointed by Congress, for each of the states within which the said territory shall lie, who shall keep his office within the said state, be resident at it himself, and provide a seal for authenticating it’s acts. To him returns shall me made, by the several surveyors, on the last days of March and August in every year, of the plats of all lines, measured and marked by them in the preceding half year, to be by him collated, and reduced into a general map of the whole state for which he acts. He shall annually, to wit, on the first Monday in November of every year, deliver, or cause to be delivered, to the Secretary of Congress, a copy of such portions of the said general map as shall have been formed, or further filled up, during the preceding year, retaining one in his own office for the use thereof. He shall have power to suspend any surveyor for negligence or malversation, making report thereof to Congress, or a Committee of the states, that they may direct a proper enquiry.

Each Register shall cause to be printed, under such devices, difficult of imitation, as he shall think best, warrants, each of which shall give right to one lot of a mile square described as before directed: and other warrants for each of the said states which shall give right, each of them, to one of the Hundreds of ten mile square as before described. These warrants shall have blanks for names and dates, shall be numbered and signed by the Register, sealed with the seal of his office, and shall be cut with indentures from a book, the margin of which shall be numbered in correspondence with the warrant cut therefrom, and shall be preserved in the office as a further check. The said warrants shall be deposited in the Treasury of the United states, and the Treasurer thereon debited with them. From thence they shall be sent in such numbers as the Register issuing them shall direct, to the Commissioner of the loan office for the United states in each of the states within the Union, the Treasurer countersigning them on parting therewith, and having a credit duly entered in his own account with the United states, and a debit against the loan officer, to whom they are sent.

Any person, chusing to become a purchaser of lands within the said territory, and paying to the Treasurer, or Loan officer, the sum of dollars, shall receive in lieu thereof one of the said smaller warrants entitling him to a lot, or paying dollars, shall receive in lieu thereof one of the said larger warrants entitling him to a whole Hundred within the state from which the warrant issued; the Treasurer or Loan officer inserting the name of the purchaser in the proper blank, filling up the date, and attesting the warrant by his own subscription. Loan office certificates, reduced to their specie value by the scale of depreciation, or certificates of liquidated debts of the United states, shall be receivable for the said warrants in lieu of money; and evidences of military rights to lands, herein after to be described, shall be receivable instead of the price itself of so much land. These warrants shall pass as lands, by descent or devise, but not by assignment nor by survivorship.3

The owner of any warrant proceeding to locate the same, shall deliver it to the Surveyor of the district, wherein his location is to be, describing to him the particular lot on which he places it, or the Hundred, if it be a warrant for a hundred, by a designation of some point, either natural or artificial, within the said lot, or Hundred, so singular and certain as may be adapted to no other lot or Hundred; or by reference to the position of the Hundred, or number of the lot, which description the Surveyor shall immediately enter in a book well bound, with the date of the entry, describing the warrant located thereon by it’s number, date, signatures and name of the original owner, and leaving no blank space or leaf between that and the preceding entry, nor any margin by it’s side. If the location be made before the lot or hundred be yet laid off by lines actually run and marked, the Surveyor shall retain the warrant in his hands until the Hundred, if it be for a Hundred, or until all the Lots of the Hundred, if it be for a Lot, shall be actually laid off by marked lines: and then, or at the time of the entry, if the lines were marked before the entry was made, having satisfied himself by proper evidence, or by his own inspection and examination, on what particular lot, or on what Hundred, the location is, and that there has been no previous location on the same, he shall give to the party a certificate, describing the lot or Hundred so specially as that it may be known from all others, by particular marks or circumstances, natural or artificial, by stating the order or position of the Hundred relatively to the boundaries of the state, and specifying the lot by it’s number: with which certificate he shall return the warrant also to the party. These being delivered to the Register, and the warrant examined, and found genuine by him, he shall give a receipt for the same, and in due time proceed to execute a grant of the land in the following form. ‘A. B. register of the land office of the United states within the state of———to all to whom these presents shall come, greeting. Know ye that for good considerations, there is granted by the United states of America unto C. D. a certain lot [or Hundred of land as the case shall be, describing it from the certificate]4 within the said state of———to have and to hold the said lot [or Hundred]4 of land, with it’s appurtenances, to him the said C. D. and his heirs for ever. In witness whereof the said A. B. register of the land office of the said state hath hereunto set his hand, and caused the seal of his office to be affixed, this—day of——in the year——and of the independance of the United states the——’ which grant shall be entered of record, at full length, in good, well bound, books to be provided for that purpose, at the expence of the United states, and kept by the Register, and being so entered, shall be certified to have been registered, and then be delivered to the party or his order. Different lots, adjoining side by side within the same Hundred, may be included and passed by the same grant; but separate lots, and lots in different Hundreds, as also different Hundreds, shall be passed by different grants. No fractions of a lot shall be granted, unless where such fractions are occasioned by the boundary of the state, or of the Indian conveyance. Until a temporary government shall be established in any state according to the resolutions of Congress of April 1784. the lands therein shall pass, in descent and dower, according to the customs known in the common law by the name of Gavelkind: and shall be transferrable by deed or will proved by two witnesses. But so soon as a temporary government shall be so established, they shall become subject to the laws of the state, and shall never after, in any case, revert to the United states. Where a grant shall be made out to the heir or devisee of the person in whose name the warrant was originally issued, he shall be named in the said grant as heir or devisee.

For preventing hasty and surreptitious titles, the Register shall execute no grant for lands until the warrant and certificate delivered him for the same shall have remained in his office months: at any time within which period any person, claiming the same lands under a prior location, shall be at liberty to enter a caveat, with the Register, against the execution of any grant to the other, setting forth in the entry a copy of the location under which himself claims. The Register shall thereupon issue a Summons, reciting the entry made with him, and calling the defendant to appear, at a certain time and place, in defence of his right; which Summons being served, and the parties appearing, he shall refer the decision to three arbitrators to be chosen by them, or if they cannot agree then to three intelligent honest and indifferent persons, to be named by himself; which arbitrators being first sworn to do justice between the parties according to the best of their knowlege and abilities by the Register who is hereby authorized to administer such oath5 shall proceed thereon, at such times and places as they shall appoint, giving notice thereof to the parties, and their award being rendered, the Register shall execute a grant to the plaintiff or defendant, conformably therewith. The party whose location is annulled shall be authorized to receive again his warrant, and to locate it on other lands. If the defendant, being summoned, or the plaintiff, fails to appear by himself or another before the Register on the day appointed, the Register may give a further day, or in his discretion may proceed on the evidence before him to execute a grant to the party having the right. If the defendant fails to appear, and there be no sufficient proof that the Summons has been served, the Register shall issue a new Summons, unless it shall be proved that he hath been sought at the usual place of his dwelling, and hath not been found, in which case the Summons shall be advertised three times in some gazette of the state wherein he then resides, or last was known to reside, giving a new day of appearance, which shall not be within less than months after the date of the third publication, and on his failing to appear at that day, the Register shall proceed to decision. But in case of a decision against the defendant, where there was no actual service of the Summons, he shall be allowed at any time within one year after such decision, a rehearing before arbitrators to be appointed and qualified as directed in the case of an appearance: but on such rehearing the mere right alone shall be tried.

The Register, together with the map before directed to be delivered annually to the Secretary of Congress, shall report a Calendar of all grants executed by him, stating in different columns thereof the date, grantee, quantity, how much of that was for military service, the Hundred, and Lot.

The monies arising from the sale of warrants shall be applied to the sinking such part of the principal of the national debt as Congress shall from time to time direct, and to no other purpose whatsoever.

The Register, before he enters on the duties of his office, shall give such bond and security for the faithful discharge thereof as Congress, or the Committee of the states, shall approve, and shall be entitled to receive, for the execution of every grant dollar, for every Lot the same shall contain, or dollars if it be for a whole Hundred: which shall be paid at the time he receives the warrant and certificate, and shall be deemed satisfaction for all the services and expences of his office, except the purchase of books for registring grants and of the seal of his office.

Every Surveyor shall also, before he enters on the duties of his office, give such bond and security for the faithful discharge thereof as Congress, or the Committee of the states shall approve, and shall be entitled to receive for every Lot located with him dollars, and dollars for a whole Hundred, which shall be paid at the time of location, and shall be deemed satisfaction for all the services and expences of his office. But where he shall have admitted more locations than one on the same land, he shall restore the fees received from the party whose location shall be set aside.

A Surveyor desiring to locate lands for himself, shall make such location with the Register.

And whereas Congress by their resolutions of Sep. 16. 1776. and Aug. 12. 1780. stipulated grants of land to the officers and souldiers who should engage in the service of the United states, and continue therein to the close of the war, or until discharged by Congress, and to the representatives of such officers and souldiers as should be slain by the enemy, in the following proportions, to wit to a Major General 1100 acres, to a Brigadier 850. to a Colonel 500. to a Lt. Colonel 450. to a Major 400. to a Captain 300. to a Lieutenant 200. to an Ensign 150. and to a noncommissioned officer or souldier 100. for complying therefore with such stipulation, and for ascertaining the evidence of rights accruing under the same which shall be receivable instead of money, it is ordained that the evidence to be required from commissioned officers shall be a certificate from the War office of their rank and continuance in service to the end of the war; from non-commissioned officers and souldiers, a certificate from the captain of their company, countersigned by the officer who commanded their regiment at the time of their discharge, that they were enlisted into the service of the United states, during the war, and continued therein to the close of it, to wit, to the day of 1783. and from the representatives of such officers and souldiers as were slain by the enemy, a certificate, from the same authority, of the rank or term of enlistment of the deceased, and that he was slain by the enemy, together with satisfactory affidavits that they are his representatives: which evidences shall be receivable by the Loan officer of the United states in the state to the line of which he belonged, or by the Treasurer if he belonged to the line of no state: and on the warrant issued shall be an endorsement, signed by the treasurer or Loan officer declaring the proportion thereof which was satisfied by military service; and in the same proportion shall all fees be abated to which that warrant would otherwise be subject. The proceedings on it in all other respects shall be the same as on a warrant issued wholly for money.

Saving and confirming always to all Officers and Souldiers entitled to lands on the Northern side of the Ohio, by donation or bounty from the Commonwealth of Virginia, and to all persons claiming under them all rights to which they are so entitled by the laws of the said state and the acts of Congress accepting the cession of Western territory from the said state.

MS (DNA: PCC, No. 30, p. 59–66); eight pages entirely in TJ’s hand; endorsed by him: “An Ordinance establishing a Land office for the United states”; and by Thomson: “Report of Mr. Jefferson Mr Williamson Mr Howell Mr Gerry Mr Read An Ordinance for ascertaining the mode of locating and disposing of lands in the Western Territory. Entd. Read April 30. 1784. Friday May 7 assigned.” Broadside (DNA); stitched into MS Journal of Congress 28 May 1784 (JCC description begins Worthington C. Ford and others, eds., Journals of the Continental Congress, 1774–1789, Washington, D.C., 1904–37, 34 vols. description ends , xxvii, 722, No. 438) and bearing the title “An Ordinance for ascertaining the mode of locating and disposing of Lands in the Western Territory” (JCC description begins Worthington C. Ford and others, eds., Journals of the Continental Congress, 1774–1789, Washington, D.C., 1904–37, 34 vols. description ends , xxvii, 446–53). There is evidence in the MS itself that TJ copied it from some other MS, perhaps a rough draft, but no fragment of it has been found.

On 2 Mch. 1784, the day following the acceptance by Congress of the Virginia Deed of Cession and the reading of the report of a plan for establishing temporary government in the Western Territory, Charles Thomson recorded that a committee as named above had been appointed “To devise and report the most eligible means of disposing of such part of the Western lands as may be obtained of the Indians by the proposed treaty of peace and for opening a land office—and motion of Mr Montgomery” (DNA: PCC, No. 186). The Journal contains no mention of the appointment of such a committee or of Montgomery’s motion on 2 Mch. (JCC description begins Worthington C. Ford and others, eds., Journals of the Continental Congress, 1774–1789, Washington, D.C., 1904–37, 34 vols. description ends , xxvi, 122; Howell evidently made the motion: see Howell to Jabez Bowen, 12 Mch. 1784, Burnett, Letters of Members description begins Edmund C. Burnett, ed., Letters of Members of the Continental Congress description ends , vii, No. 537). By the middle of March it was reported that as soon as the Indian purchase had been completed a land office would “be opened and that State in the Report calld Washington … disposed of” (Samuel Dick to Thomas Sinnickson, 18 Mch. 1784, same, vii, No. 544). On 20 Apr. there was offered in Congress a “Motion of Mr Williamson for empowering Congress to establish rules and Laws of descent in Western Country during temporary government.” The Journal contains no mention of this motion, but it was made during the debates in Congress on that part of the plan for the government of the Western Territory respecting hereditary titles and was referred to the committee previously appointed to draw up a plan for a land office (DNA: PCC, No. 186). It may be, therefore, that the provision that lands should pass according to … Gavelkind was inserted in the report between 20 Apr. and 30 Apr. when the committee reported; it is not known whether Williamson’s motion included a proviso in these terms, but it should be noted that TJ’s draft of a Constitution for Virginia in 1776 provided that “Descents shall go according to the laws of Gavelkind, save only that females shall have equal rights with males” (Vol. 1: 363). The report was finished by 25 Apr. but not reported until 30 Apr. (TJ to Madison, 25 Apr. 1784; JCC description begins Worthington C. Ford and others, eds., Journals of the Continental Congress, 1774–1789, Washington, D.C., 1904–37, 34 vols. description ends , xxvi, 324–30). It was read the first time on 7 May when “Monday next” (10 May and the day before TJ left Annapolis) was assigned for a second reading. It was not brought up again, however, until 28 May and on the question as to whether it should be considered only Howell of Rhode Island, Mercer of Virginia, and Williamson and Spaight of North Carolina voted affirmatively (same, xxvii, 453). There the matter rested until 4 Mch. 1785. After being postponed various times, the ordinance was adopted finally on 20 May 1785. TJ’s geographical mile of 6086.4 feet, which he evidently hoped would be incorporated in a decimalized system of weights and measures (see his Notes on Coinage at end of Apr. 1784, Document iii), had been eliminated in favor of the statute mile; hundreds had become townships six miles square; a geographer had been added and the register eliminated; lots had been reduced to one square mile (640 acres); and most of TJ’s measures for preventing hasty and surreptitious titles had been thrown out (he had inserted them no doubt because of recent revelations of fraud in obtaining soldiers’ warrants; Harrison to Speaker of House of Delegates, 3 May 1784, Executive Letter Book, Vi); and the proviso concerning descent was eliminated. Some features not in TJ’s plan were added: lots 8, 11, 26, and 29 of the 36 lots in each township were reserved by Congress for future sale; lot 16 was set aside for public schools; and one-third of all gold, silver, lead, and copper mines was reserved for disposal by Congress (JCC description begins Worthington C. Ford and others, eds., Journals of the Continental Congress, 1774–1789, Washington, D.C., 1904–37, 34 vols. description ends , xxviii, 114, 264, 298–302, 375–81). For the various broadside printings of the report of the committee in 1785 and of the Ordinance as finally adopted, see JCC description begins Worthington C. Ford and others, eds., Journals of the Continental Congress, 1774–1789, Washington, D.C., 1904–37, 34 vols. description ends , xxviii, 917, 918, 920, 923, Nos. 454, 459, 468, 477–8). But even as drafted in 1784 the report did not reflect TJ’s long-cherished hope of giving western lands away to actual settlers—a hope not formulated as public-land policy until the middle of the 19th century and made unrealistic in 1784 in the face of an overriding financial need. The emphatic words in the stipulation that revenues from land sales should be applied to the National debt … and to no other purpose whatsoever indicate TJ’s reluctance to accept this on any other ground than inescapable necessity. Thomas Hutchins, who was appointed geographer to the United States, immediately began surveys and by 1787 had completed four ranges of townships. But, as Jensen has pointed out, “the land Ordinance of 1785 was soon forgotten. New speculative interests swept down upon Congress and grabbed for enormous chunks of the public domain. The drive was spearheaded by New Englanders and by others who had few if any ties with the pre-revolutionary land companies” (Jensen, The New Nation, p. 355). The Northwest Ordinance of 1787, a product of these and other economic and political forces, combined the dual purpose of establishing government and regulating land policy for the territories that had been embraced by TJ’s two separate reports of 1784 and with the differences noted above (see Vol. 6: 581ff.).

1Preceding six words interlined and “850” written above a deleted figure which appears to be “908.0.”

2Here and elsewhere TJ deleted the word chap and substituted mark.

3This sentence is interlined in substitution for: “These warrants shall pass by descent or devise as real property.”

4Brackets are in MS.

5Preceding 29 words interlined.

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