Where Did the Farm Go?



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Where Did the Farm Go?

Tracking how your ancestor disposed of real property is just as important as determining how it was obtained. 
In some cases, how it left his (or her) hands provides a number of genealogical details. 

The records discussed today are local land records and were created at the county level. Consult Ancestry's 
Red Book for more details on specific localities. Wade Hone's book Land & Property Research in the United 
States is an excellent guide for those who utilize land records. 

Record keeping agencies generally have indexes that list buyer (grantee) and seller (grantor). Each deed 
usually appears in each index once regardless of how many buyers or sellers there are. These indexes 
should be referenced for several years after your ancestor died or left the area, as properties were sometimes 
transferred after a move or a death or were not recorded promptly. Deeds are recorded in the order they are 
brought to the office, not the order in which they were created. The index reflects this recording order. 

I also look for what is termed a lot, parcel, or tract index. Not all counties have these indexes (and sometimes 
they are not microfilmed either). These indexes are more likely to appear in those areas that were originally 
federal land states. Transactions are indexed by the location of the property, not buyer or seller names. The 
exact location of the property must be known. Not all locations have this type of index. The use of such an 
index when searching for the purchase and disposition of a specific lot in Davenport, Iowa was facilitated by 
such an index. 

Here are the main ways your ancestor's property could have been transferred. There are, of course, 
exceptions. 

1) Sold for Back Taxes

It's possible your ancestor got so behind on his taxes that he was unable to pay the final amount. In this 
case, his farm might have been sold for back taxes. In this case, your ancestor will not be listed as the 
seller, instead it will most likely be listed under County Sheriff (possibly under just "sheriff"). Determining 
if it's your ancestor's deed requires comparing the property description on the Sheriff's deed to the known 
description of the property. 

2) Foreclosed? 

Was you ancestor behind on his payments? If so, he might have "lost the farm" due to a foreclosure. Court 
records should be referenced for foreclosures. I had one ancestor whom I was told "couldn't keep a farm." It 
was implied that he couldn't please a landlord. A search of court records revealed it was multiple foreclosures 
the relative was referring to. 

3) Sold Before Moving 

Your ancestor might have sold the property to raise capital for a move. These transfers generally offer few 
clues about new residences. 

4) Sold After Moving 

Perhaps your ancestor left before selling. In this case, the deed might list your ancestor's new residence. In 
some cases, a person remaining in the area might have been given power-of-attorney to complete the 
transaction. My ancestor left Maryland for Ohio in 1817, still owning property there. He gave his brother 
power-of-attorney to sell the farm. This document is recorded directly before the deed transferring the 
property. 

5) Sold Before Death 

Your ancestor might never have left the area and sold the property before his death. The transfer might have 
been to a child. "$1 and love and consideration" or something similar might be the payment if this is the case. 
My ancestor who owned several hundred acres had no probate. A search of land records determined he had 
transferred most of it to his children before his death (frequently for $1). Of course your ancestor might have 
sold to complete strangers and used the funds to support his retirement. 

6) Sold After Death 

The property might have been sold by the heirs after the owner's death. There might not have been a probate 
or the probate might not mention land. If you suspect your dead ancestor had a farm, look for deeds where 
any of the ancestor's children are grantors. They might not be indexed under your ancestor's name. 

7) Transferred by Will 

The property might have been bequeathed in your ancestor's will and not mentioned in land records. One 
ancestral homestead still owned by a family member has changed ownership four times since 1869. Only 
one transfer resulted in a deed. The other transfers resulted from wills written in 1877, 1924, and 1968. 

8) Transferred by Court Action 

If the heirs could not agree on how to split the farm, they might have gone to court. If a deed resulted, the 
judge might be listed as grantor. In some areas these deeds are called Master's deeds (titles can vary) and 
these deeds might even be recorded in a separate set of records from other deeds. 

9) It Never Got Recorded 

Your ancestor might never have bothered to record the deed. It didn't happen often, but maybe your ancestor 
never went to the trouble of taking his deed to the county office. 

10) It Never Got Indexed 

This is the worse case scenario. It's there, but not in the index. The only recourse is a page-by-page search. 
In this case "Good Luck" is extremely appropriate. 

Always document the disposition of your ancestor's property. Would you track all your family's births and 
ignore all the deaths? 

Good Luck.



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