Fiji Land and Property: Difference between revisions

→‎Getting Started: eliminated the references to land records IN THE UNITED STATES! Nothing to do with Fiji!
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(→‎Getting Started: eliminated the references to land records IN THE UNITED STATES! Nothing to do with Fiji!)
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Determine the time and place your family might have owned property.  
Determine the time and place your family might have owned property.  


Research should begin at the smallest jurisdictional level - usually the county (except in Connecticut, Rhode Island, and Vermont, where town clerks have kept the records). These records are found in the local town or county office, or many times on microfilm at state archives or the Family History Library.  
Research should begin at the smallest jurisdictional level - usually this is the county . These records are found in the local town or county office, or many times on microfilm at state archives or the Family History Library.
 
There is a high likelihood that your ancestor can be found in land records. “It is estimated that by the mid-1800s, as many as ninety percent of all adult white males owned land in the United States.”<ref name="Hone">William Dollarhide, forward to E. Wade Hone, ''Land and Property Research in the United States,'' (Salt Lake City, Utah: Ancestry Inc., 1997), xi.</ref>


== What’s the Next Step?  ==
== What’s the Next Step?  ==
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