The Winning of the West, Volume 3 eBook

This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 328 pages of information about The Winning of the West, Volume 3.

The Winning of the West, Volume 3 eBook

This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 328 pages of information about The Winning of the West, Volume 3.
with which the records were kept in the land office, put a premium on fraud and encouraged carelessness.  People could make and record entries in secret, and have the land surveyed in secret, if they feared a dispute over a title; no one save the particular deputy surveyor employed needed to know. [Footnote:  Draper MSS. in Wisconsin State Hist.  Ass.  Clark papers.  Walter Darrell to Col.  William Fleming, St. Asaphs, April 14, 1783.  These valuable Draper MSS, have been opened to me by Mr. Reuben Gold Thwaites, the State Librarian; I take this opportunity of thanking him for his generous courtesy, to which I am so greatly indebted.] The litigation over these confused titles dragged on with interminable tediousness.  Titles were often several deep on one “location,” as it was called; and whoever purchased land too often purchased also an expensive and uncertain lawsuit.

The two chief topics of thought and conversation, the two subjects which beyond all others engrossed and absorbed the minds of the settlers, were the land and the Indians.  We have already seen how on one occasion Clark could raise no men for an expedition against the Indians until he closed the land offices round which the settlers were thronging.  Every hunter kept a sharp lookout for some fertile bottom on which to build a cabin.  The volunteers who rode against the Indian towns also spied out the land and chose the best spots whereon to build their blockhouses and palisaded villages as soon as a truce might be made, or the foe driven for the moment farther from the border.  Sometimes settlers squatted on land already held but not occupied under a good title; sometimes a man who claimed the land under a defective title, or under pretence of original occupation, attempted to oust or to blackmail him who had cleared and tilled the soil in good faith; and these were both fruitful causes not only of lawsuits but of bloody affrays.  Among themselves, the settlers’ talk ran ever on land titles and land litigation, and schemes for securing vast tracts of rich and well watered country.  These were the subjects with which they filled their letters to one another and to their friends at home, and the subjects upon which these same friends chiefly dwelt when they sent letters in return. [Footnote:  Clay MSS. and Draper MSS., passim:  e.g., in former, J. Mercer to George Nicholas, Nov. 28, 1789; J. Ware to George Nicholas, Nov. 29, 1789; letter to Mrs. Byrd, Jan. 16, 1786, etc., etc., etc.] Often well-to-do men visited the new country by themselves first, chose good sites for their farms and plantations, surveyed and purchased them, and then returned to their old homes, whence they sent out their field hands to break the soil and put up buildings before bringing out their families.

    Lines Followed in the Western Movement.

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The Winning of the West, Volume 3 from Project Gutenberg. Public domain.