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Special: Storytelling, County GIS Maps & Land Patents » The 7 Ranges & Belmont Co., OH

Leads for this incredible Belmont Co. Ohio project, Crystal Lorimor, Jason Garczyk, and Anthony Atkins demonstrate this new way to view connections between historic land grants, people, and places.

Let me start by saying thank you to Jennifer Jones, Bill Moore, Bill Butcher, Cathy Horvath, Paul Zuros, director of the museum at Historic Fort Steuben, and so many more of you who attended today’s program. This was a very special program made possible by a suggestion from one community member and introductions from another. It’s precisely the kind of thing that, as family historians, we’re always looking for.

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Overview

Like a trio of superfriends, Crystal Lorimor, Jason Garczyk, and Anthony Atkins were civil servants working to serve the people of their county in Belmont, Ohio, when they landed on the idea of connecting historic documents to GIS data. And, as Anthony put it:

If you offer a GIS person data, they’re going to say “yes!”

Belmont County, Ohio, sits within the Seven Ranges, a region of the historic Northwest Territories. This region was the first effort by the young nation to create a means to raise funds and settle debts with the Revolutionary War veterans who helped win American independence from Britain.

The urgent business of selling the land created pressure to survey great swaths of land as quickly as possible. The result was this Seven Ranges strategy of square plots of land. As embedded into the resulting tool, the 1787 ordinance authorized the Seven Ranges land survey.

Original Ordinance dated 1787
4.24MB ∙ PDF file
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This PDF document includes both a high resolution scan of the 1787 document with marginalia and the handwritten Article 6, Anthony referenced, plus a full transcription from the LIbrary of Congress.
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While watching Anthony’s detailed demonstration of the tool, you can follow along with your own instance of the web application. You’ll find it at:

A screenshot after tapping “ok” to the details on the 1787 Ordinance and starting to explore individual patents.

Explore the web application: gis.belcogis.com/Northwest_Territory. As of this writing, access is completely free, and no login or registration is required.

Resources

Several resources useful to genealogists, family historians, and history buffs were mentioned, among them:

Today’s program shows you what can be done and the extraordinary potential when a few curious and talented people get together. You’re welcome to share this recording to introduce this idea to others in your community, GIS team, or local authorities. You can find team members either here on Substack or through their websites:

As a follow-up to today’s presentation, Crystal Lorimor will join me on Sunday, November 2nd (see the event calendar for your local time).

Live Preview @Lorimor
You’ll need a Substack account and be a follower or subscriber to Projectkin to view and participate in the livestream. It’s all free, however. The stream will be available in your browser at open.substack.com/live-stream/74083

I expect this will be an ongoing conversation, and I look forward to your feedback, suggestions, and ideas. Thank you again for your encouragement of this project. Have an idea about a local project in your area? Reach out and let me know!

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