When.com Web Search

Search results

  1. Results From The WOW.Com Content Network
  2. Checkerboarding (land) - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Checkerboarding_(land)

    Railroad land grants split the land surrounding the area where train tracks were to be laid into a checkerboard pattern. The land was already divided into 640-acre numbered sections (260 ha) according to the Public Land Survey System; odd-numbered plots were given to private railroad companies, and the federal government kept even-numbered plots.

  3. Public Land Survey System - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Public_Land_Survey_System

    The Public Land Survey System (PLSS) is the surveying method developed and used in the United States to plat, or divide, real property for sale and settling. Also known as the Rectangular Survey System, it was created by the Land Ordinance of 1785 to survey land ceded to the United States by the Treaty of Paris in 1783, following the end of the ...

  4. How Land Reshuffling Made the American West’s Racial Divide

    www.aol.com/news/land-reshuffling-made-american...

    A view of Palm Canyon from the West Fork Trail, located in the Agua Caliente Indian Reservation in California. Credit - Getty Images Today the city of Palm Springs is the Las Vegas of California ...

  5. Native American reservation politics - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Native_American...

    Native American politics remain divided over different issues such as assimilation, education, healthcare, and economic factors that affect reservations. As a multitude of nations living within the United States, the Native American peoples face conflicting opinions within their tribes, essentially those living on federally approved reservations.

  6. Land Ordinance of 1785 - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Land_Ordinance_of_1785

    The system did not protect people from competing claims or set up an orderly chain of title. The process was called 'indiscriminate location". This system encouraged individuals to amass large plantations instead of settling into dense communal development. This system was supported by the use of slave labor. [29]

  7. Dawes Act - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Dawes_Act

    The new policy intended to concentrate Native Americans in areas away from the new settlers. During the later nineteenth century, Native American tribes resisted the imposition of the reservation system and engaged with the United States Army (in what were called the Indian Wars in the West) for decades.

  8. Dawes Rolls - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Dawes_Rolls

    With the establishment of the Dawes Commission, the ruling was made by the colonial agents to divide the land into parcels and institute a system of individual ownership in accordance with US laws, overriding the treaty and tribal laws of the region. [2]

  9. Classification of the Indigenous peoples of the Americas

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Classification_of_the...

    The Americas, Western Hemisphere Cultural regions of North American people at the time of contact Early Indigenous languages in the US. Historically, classification of the Indigenous peoples of the Americas is based upon cultural regions, geography, and linguistics.