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Mapping Tennessees 2nd Surveyors District
~ 1807 ~
© Frederick Smoot, 1998
With special thanks to Norman T. McGee, mentor.
And Dr. Wayne C. Moore, Archivist, TSLA, Nashville
- There is no extant original 2nd District map, therefore the
placement of the townships is based on the entry of over 2,000 early
original 2nd District survey descriptions into a database and then
sorting them by Range and Section numbers and then matching those
numbers to the common physical landmarks in the various
townships.
- Additionally, certain proof is offered by some Survey Notes,
1807, (TSLA Microfilm roll AC-1511). This microfilm shows some
original, single, range and section line surveys done in 1807 when the
2nd District was first surveyed.
- In 1805 and early 1806, two treaty cessions, one by the Chickasaw
and the other by the Cherokee, opened for white settlement, much of
southern Middle Tennessee.
Soon after, the United States Congress passed legislation allowing
Tennessee control over lands within its bounds. ... the United
States, in Congress assembled, on the eighteenth day of April, in the
year of our Lord one thousand eight hundred and six, passed an act
entitled An act to authorize the State of Tennessee to issue grants and
perfect titles to certain lands therein described, and to settle claims
to the vacant and unappropriated lands within the same . . .
- Then that very year, the Tennessee State Assembly established the
first seven of her Surveyor's Districts. A Registers Office was
established in Nashville. The office had jurisdiction over three West
(now called Middle) Tennessee Surveyors Districts, the 1st, 2nd,
and 3rd. The surveyors office for the second District was
established in Jefferson, in Rutherford County. Jefferson was located in
the 1st District, and was presumably chosen because there was no
practical inhabited place within the bounds of the then new 2nd District
to locate the office. William P. Anderson was appointed Surveyor General
for the 2nd District.
- The bounds of the 2nd District were established as ...to
begin eighteen miles west of the south-east corner of the last mentioned
district [1st] to run south to the true meridian, to the southern
boundary of the State, for its eastern boundary, and to be bounded on
the west and south, by the Congressional Reservation, and on the north
and south, by the first district and the boundary of the State, and
shall be known and distinguished by the name of the Second
District.
- Perhaps this will be a clearer: the 2nd District was bounded to the
east by the 3rd District, to the south by the southern Tennessee state
line, to the west by the U. S. Congressional Reservation, and to the
north by the 1st District.
- Examination of the earliest individual tract surveys and the few
remaining range and section line surveys prove the southern Tennessee
state line and the Congressional line were in fact erroneously
placed.
The Southern Tennessee State Line
and
U. S. Congressional Reservation Line
- In 1806, the Congress of the United States created U. S.
Congressional Reservation as Indian land. Non-Indian settlement on the
reservation was forbidden.Beginning at the place where the
eastern or main branch of Elk River shall intersect the [southern]
boundary line of the State of Tennessee; from thence running due north,
until said line shall intersect the northern or main branch of Duck
River; thence down the waters of Duck River, to the military boundary
line, as established by the seventh section of an act of the State of
North Carolina...thence with the military boundary line, west, to a place
where it intersects the Tennessee River . . .
- We find references to surveying of the Congressional line in old
individual tract surveys. The surveying of this line is attributed to
James Bright, a Deputy Surveyor in the 2nd District. (Survey #158,
....the forty
mile measure on Congressional line run by Bright from the State line.
10
September 1807; Survey #499, ...on Congressional Line run by
Bright. 9
June 1808.)
- Because the state line was located too far north, it intersected
with the Elk River too far east. Therefore, the Congressional line was
placed too far east. The improper surveying of the state line is also
attributed to James Bright. (Survey #503, ...on the State line run
by James Bright. 10 May 1808; Survey #1141, ...on State line run
by James Bright. 12 August 1808)
- Soon after the establishment of the state line and the Congressional
line, the error was discovered (see dates above). According to noted Tennessee
historian, Timothy
R. Marsh, the Tennessee Assembly rejected Brights surveys. We find
the lines were re-surveyed and corrected by Thomas Freeman and others.
The state line was moved
to the south, the Congressional line was moved to the west. We see
references to two state lines. (Survey #1383, ...on the true State
line. 30
February 1809; Survey #1389. This tract is south side of State the line run by
James Bright. 22 January 1809).
- Mr. Marsh stated that from his research, he found that James Bright claimed that
he had been influenced (perhaps intimidated?) by an earlier survey that had established
the state line too far to the north. In defense of James Bright, we need to point out that it
is the custom of surveyors to start from predetermined and accepted
surveys. James
Bright was a well respected surveyor in the 2nd District.
Survey Notes, 1807
Tennessee State Library & Archives Microfilm Roll AC-1511
- In the spring of 1807, soon after the original state line and the
Congressional line surveys were completed, a team of surveyors were sent
out to survey the internal Range and Section lines in the 2nd District.
As is the custom of surveyors, they created field notes as
they went about their business, and later plats of their surveys were
created from those notes.
- Some of those notes and plats survived and are in the hands of TSLA.
They are scant indeed, not complete, do not cover that part of the 2nd
District that is north of the Duck River and west of the Congressional
Line, yet they show us what that early surveyors did as they worked
their way through that new country.
- Sometime past, a TSLA Archivist connected the tattered remnants
into usable pieces. In 1996, Dr Wayne Moore caused the microfilm to be produced
from the various survey plats. The graphic representations presented
here were made using the microfilm as the basis.
This page was first posted
on:
9 May
1999