Community Corner
Original Survey Maps of Royal Oak Now Available Online
The maps, like this one of Royal Oak Township in 1817, indicate bodies of water and Indian trails.
The following information was provided by theĀ Michigan Department of Natural Resources.
TheĀ Archives of MichiganĀ announced Wednesday that the original survey maps of Michiganās 1,400 individual township parcels have been scanned and are now available to search, browse and print atĀ www.seekingmichigan.org.
The maps included in the collection at Seeking Michigan document land surveys that were conducted by the federal government to lay out Michiganās township and range grid system. Some maps documenting later resurveys are also included. The maps show bodies of water and land formations throughout the state. They can be searched by township name or by coordinates.
The initial survey of the state of Michigan was conducted primarily between 1815 and 1860; thisĀ survey of Troy TownshipĀ was conducted in 1817 by Joseph Wampler (1783-1842).
The federal government contracted land surveyors who earned between $3 and $4.25 per mile, which covered payment of their crews and supplies. Crews usually conducted surveys in the winter because their line of sight was improved and they could walk across frozen lakes and ponds. It took about 20 days to survey a township with two surveyors, two axe men to trim brush, and two chain men.
This project was funded by a cooperative agreement with the Michigan Office of Land Survey and Remonumentation. The Archives of Michigan is currently working with that office to scan the land surveyorsā original field notebooks and make the images available at Seeking Michigan.
Seeking Michigan is administered by the Archives of Michigan through the support of theĀ Michigan History Foundation.
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