The western public lands were technically under the control of the Federal government headquartered in the East. The belief was that you could not deal with land at a distance without an accurate definition of what you were dealing with. This led to surveying the lands into rectangle townships - each six miles square with 36 sections, each a mile square of 640 acres. The sale of these large tracts of land to those in the East with money seemed the simplest and most orderly way of settling the West. Beginning with Ohio in 1803 (the first public land state) the government kept the title to all ungranted land with the exception of that for education. Nice and orderly...
That's not how it actually happened though...the first settlers, called "squatters" were those that got there first and they didn't wait for any laws or deeds to tell them they owned the land. They cared less and knew even less what the government said. To have waited for protection by law would have been to lose all the advantages of being there first. So they made their own laws.
These settlers came without proper documentation, nor the intention of adhering to any program or surveys. They stopped here, they stopped there, according to how the land looked, how the wagon was faring, if the oxen were tired. More times than not they didn't stay put and moved on - not really knowing where their final destination was, but hoping for the best land. However orderly and neat might the Federal plan be, the settlement of the West was anything but that - nearly all westward movement in America in the 19th century was a land rush.
Next time...building a system of laws.
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Today in Pioneer History: "On June 15, 1846, the Oregon Treaty is signed between the US and Great Britain, establishing the 49th parallel from the Rocky Mountains to the Strait of Georgia as the boundary between the United States and British Canada. The United States gained control of the Oregon, Washington, Idaho and Montana while the British retained Vancouver Island and navigation rights to part of the Columbia River.
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