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Personal Axioms. “Knowledge is of two kinds. We know a subject ourselves, or we know where we can find information upon it” ( Samuel Johnson ) “Intelligence is not the ability to store information but the ability to find it” ( Albert Einstein )
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Personal Axioms • “Knowledge is of two kinds. We know a subject ourselves, or we know where we can find information upon it” (Samuel Johnson) • “Intelligence is not the ability to store information but the ability to find it” (Albert Einstein) • “If you can't explain something simply, you don't know enough about it” (Albert Einstein)
The Nature of Landscape Organization of Space Organization of Behavior Law Public Policy Landscape Evaluation
The nature of landscape • (A)ny landscape is an artifact - an object made by man. Its condition, rightly seen, reveals a society's culture as directly as does a novel or a newspaper or a Fourth of July oration because today's environment, the "natural part included, is synthetic • (Roderick Nash The American Environment: Readings in the History of Conservation, 1968 ix) • Our human landscape is our unwitting autobiography, reflecting our tastes, or aspirations, and even our fears, in tangible, visible form.... All our cultural warts and blemishes are there, and our glories too; but above all, our ordinary day-to-day qualities are exhibited for anybody who wants to find them and knows how to look for them • (Peirce Lewis "Axioms for reading the landscape, some Guides to the American Scene" in Donald Meinig (ed) Interpretations of Ordinary Landscapes (New York, Oxford University Press, 1979 23)
The Data Stream • Acquiring and/or accessing data • Managing data • Making sense of the data – turning the data into information • “Publishing” the data and information Your Research Other Research Data Data Information Information Publication Publication Library - database
Lines were HistoricallyImportant Necessary before the United States could convey ownership of land Established boundaries of tracts Established location of tracts
Lines were HistoricallyImportant Start of an abstract that depicts the chain of title linking the current owner to all previous owners
These lines remain Important • Land Act of February 11, 1805 (2 Stat. 313; 43 USC 752) • “All the corners marked in the surveys, returned by the surveyor-general …shall be established as the proper corners, of the sections, or subdivisions of sections, which they were intended to designate ….” (Sec. 2) • “The boundary lines, actually run and marked in the surveys returned by the surveyor-general …shall be established as the proper boundary lines of the sections, or subdivisions, for which they were intended ….” (Sec 2) • County Surveyors in Minnesota
Federal Policy In the eighteenth & nineteenth centuries individuals migrated into the continental interior
Federal Policy In the eighteenth & nineteenth centuries individuals migrated into the continental interior Promoted by a policy that rested on two features
Federal Policy In the eighteenth & nineteenth centuries individuals migrated into the continental interior Promoted by a policy that rested on two features • A land alienation process in which the federal government created landowners – conveying titles to individuals, corporations, and states
Federal Policy In the eighteenth & nineteenth centuries individuals migrated into the continental interior Promoted by a policy that rested on two features • A land alienation process in which the federal government created landowners – conveying titles to individuals, corporations, and states • Spread of law that created the conditions for landownership to exist
The Land Ordinance, 1785 Established two general principles
The Land Ordinance, 1785 Established two general principles • Lands north and west of the River Ohio ceded by Native Americans would be subdivided in an orderly manner
The Land Ordinance, 1785 Established two general principles • Lands north and west of the River Ohio ceded by Native Americans would be subdivided in an orderly manner • The United States would convey title to these lands to individuals, corporations and states
Land System Native American Land Cessions Public Land Surveys Public Land Conveyances A Context for the Rectangular Public Land Surveys Landowners Landowners
Land System Native American Land Cessions Public Land Surveys Public Land Conveyances Legal System Northwest Territory Michigan Territory Wisconsin Territory A Context for the Rectangular Public Land Surveys Landowners Minnesota Territory Landowners in Minnesota
Land System Native American Land Cessions Public Land Surveys Public Land Conveyances Legal System Northwest Territory Michigan Territory Wisconsin Territory A Context for the Rectangular Public Land Surveys Landowners Minnesota Territory Landowners in Minnesota
They still define the boundaries of parcels of land owned by individuals, corporations, and governments – federal, state and local – throughout the United States
Data Sources (Published) • U.S. Congressional Serial Set - Digital Edition • Annual Report of the surveyors general A Century of Lawmaking for a New Nation • Statutes at Large • American State Papers • Congressional Globe HeinOnline • Territorial Papers of the United States 28 v 1787-1848 Territorial Papers of the United States 28 v 1787-1848 (Hathitrust) Original Public Land Survey Plats (Minnesota Geospatial Information Office)
Data Sources (Unpublished) Minnesota Historical Society. United States. Office of the Surveyor General of Minnesota Letters received and sent, 1854-1908 Miscellaneous maps and lists Land survey field notes, 1848-1907 Minnesota Historical Society. Minnesota. Secretary of State Land survey plats Land survey field notes Land survey miscellaneous records National Archives M27. Letters Sent by the General Land Office to the Surveyor General, 1796-1901. 31 microfilm rolls
They may have motors and be capable of creating digital images but they are still a pain in the ass
The Rectangular Public Land Surveys How can the gaps be explained? How can the spread be described?
The Spread of the Rectangular Public Land Survey Lines Throughout the United States
The Rectangular Public Land Surveys in the United States1866
1847 The Spread of the Rectangular Public Land Survey Lines in Minnesota 1866
The Public Land Surveys Carried out by a cadre of deputy surveyors under contract with the federal government
The Public Land Surveys Purpose to establish the boundaries of a parcel of land that would be conveyed
The Public Land Surveys Purpose to establish the location of a parcel of land that would be conveyed Principal Meridians and Baselines
The Public Land Surveys As the land surface was subdivided, and boundaries and location established, an inventory was made of the surface, describing the features that were thought to be relevant to prospective landowners
The Public Land Surveys and maps were made
The Township Plat - the first large scale maps The public lands surveys were first and foremost a mapping exercise
The Township Plat - the first large scale maps • the location of the township in the United States with reference to the 4th Principal Meridian (28x6N 24x6W) The public lands surveys were first and foremost a mapping exercise
The Township Plat - the first large scale maps • the location of the township in the United States with reference to the 4th Principal Meridian (28x6N 24x6W) • the location of the boundaries to parcels of land in the township The public lands surveys were first and foremost a mapping exercise
The Township Plat - the first large scale maps • the location of the township in the United States with reference to the 4th Principal Meridian (28x6N 24x6W) • the location of the boundaries to parcels of land in the township • the general nature of the land surface in the township • specific topographic features in the township The public lands surveys were first and foremost a mapping exercise
Electronic Databases • Bureau of Land Management General Land Office Records • Minnesota Geospatial Office GLO Historic Plat Retrieval System
Summary • I started with no hypothesis but a desire to describe a pattern of lines
Summary • I started with no hypothesis but a desire to describe a pattern of lines • I have no conclusion but a description of the evolution of that pattern
Summary • I started with no hypothesis but a desire to describe a pattern of lines • I have no conclusion but a description of the evolution of that pattern • And a knowledge of the nature of the first large-scale maps of Minnesota