How to request a post-1908 Homestead Record?

How to request a post-1908 Homestead Record?

Post-1908 homestead records are arranged numerically by patent number, and name indexes exist for all the public domain states. To request a case file for a post-July 1908 homestead claim, the researcher must provide the National Archives with the name of the homesteader, the state in which the land is located, and the approximate date of entry.

Where are the records of the Homestead Act?

Over the course of the Act’s 123-year history, over two million individual homestead claims were made. Each and every one of these claims generated a written record known as a case file that was kept by the U.S. General Land Office. Today, these case files exist only as paper originals and are stored in the National Archives in Washington, D.C.

Is the Homestead National Monument of America digitized?

Since 1999, Homestead National Monument of America has been involved in a project that aims to eventually digitize all 30 million documents of the homestead case files collection. To view an original homestead case file and learn more about the kinds of valuable information that can be found in these records, view the Neve case file.

What did the General Land Office do during the homestead period?

Employees of the General Land Office, which supervised the distribution of public land during the Homestead period, were more interested in which tracts of public land had been claimed than in the name of the individuals who had claimed them.

Post-1908 homestead records are arranged numerically by patent number, and name indexes exist for all the public domain states. To request a case file for a post-July 1908 homestead claim, the researcher must provide the National Archives with the name of the homesteader, the state in which the land is located, and the approximate date of entry.

Over the course of the Act’s 123-year history, over two million individual homestead claims were made. Each and every one of these claims generated a written record known as a case file that was kept by the U.S. General Land Office. Today, these case files exist only as paper originals and are stored in the National Archives in Washington, D.C.

Where did people go to get a homestead?

About the Records by Roberta “Bobbi” King (via Fold3.com) When a man or woman, commonly called an entryman, wished to receive a free tract of public land as a homestead, the entryman went into the nearest district land office and completed an application for a specific tract.

Where can I find my homestead patent information?

Patent information can be found on the Bureau of Land Managment’s General Land Office Records website for all states, but does not include the detailed information found in the land-entry case files.

Related Posts