Box 1
Contains 85 Results:
Teram, Chester / Corwin, George, 1840
Selected federal land patents for Oakland County from the 1830s through the 1900s, with the majority in the 1830s, as well as a few survey plats and miscellaneous land records for Oakland County. They document the transfer of native lands to white settlers. Note that the US Bureau of Land Management hosts a website that contains some, if not all of these patents in digitized format.
Crooks, George H. / Stelson, James - Warranty deed, 1836
Selected federal land patents for Oakland County from the 1830s through the 1900s, with the majority in the 1830s, as well as a few survey plats and miscellaneous land records for Oakland County. They document the transfer of native lands to white settlers. Note that the US Bureau of Land Management hosts a website that contains some, if not all of these patents in digitized format.
State of Michigan / Ellenwod, Calvin - Deed, 1866
Selected federal land patents for Oakland County from the 1830s through the 1900s, with the majority in the 1830s, as well as a few survey plats and miscellaneous land records for Oakland County. They document the transfer of native lands to white settlers. Note that the US Bureau of Land Management hosts a website that contains some, if not all of these patents in digitized format.
Town of Troy - Deed to School District, 1828
Selected federal land patents for Oakland County from the 1830s through the 1900s, with the majority in the 1830s, as well as a few survey plats and miscellaneous land records for Oakland County. They document the transfer of native lands to white settlers. Note that the US Bureau of Land Management hosts a website that contains some, if not all of these patents in digitized format.
Stelson, James / Cronon, C. - Warranty deed, 1836
Selected federal land patents for Oakland County from the 1830s through the 1900s, with the majority in the 1830s, as well as a few survey plats and miscellaneous land records for Oakland County. They document the transfer of native lands to white settlers. Note that the US Bureau of Land Management hosts a website that contains some, if not all of these patents in digitized format.