Property ownership leaves an extensive paper trail—deeds, mortgages, tax assessments, surveys—that connects your ancestors to specific places and often to each other, especially when you track how land passed within families or was sold between neighbors. These records frequently answer questions that census data cannot.
Land and property records research uses deeds, plat maps, tax lists, and homestead files to establish where ancestors lived, what they owned, and who their neighbors were across time. Property transactions frequently name heirs, adjacent landowners, and witnesses who turn out to be relatives, making these records essential for pre-census and non-English-speaking immigrant research.
AI document analysis tools can extract grantor and grantee names from dense legal text, map property boundaries to modern coordinates, and flag land records that mention the same individual cluster across multiple transactions.
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