Bird
Rest in Peace
</font><font color="blue" class="small">( Some of the old deeds go from the old oak tree to the snow pile to the pile of rocks etc)</font>
Yeah, I knew about the stone walls and the measurement of a rod (but I'd forgotten how long a rod was), and lots of old records are hilarious reading. I have an original copy of The Bexar County Highway League's Official Logbook for Texas, 1914-1915 (A Touring Hand Book of the Principal Automobile Routes in the State of Texas). All directions from one town to another all over the State are written like your old deeds. They give a mileage number and then what will be found or what you do at that mileage. Just as an example, in the directions for Fort Worth to Waco, at 55.5 miles "Turn left at large barn. Residence on right, cedar trees in yard" and at 56.5 miles "Turn right at white house with three white gables". Windmills, trees, houses, barns, railroads, creeks, and power lines are the "landmarks" used in the directions throughout the book. In the directions from Galveston to Dallas, several places say "road ends, turn right (or left) through pasture".
Yeah, I knew about the stone walls and the measurement of a rod (but I'd forgotten how long a rod was), and lots of old records are hilarious reading. I have an original copy of The Bexar County Highway League's Official Logbook for Texas, 1914-1915 (A Touring Hand Book of the Principal Automobile Routes in the State of Texas). All directions from one town to another all over the State are written like your old deeds. They give a mileage number and then what will be found or what you do at that mileage. Just as an example, in the directions for Fort Worth to Waco, at 55.5 miles "Turn left at large barn. Residence on right, cedar trees in yard" and at 56.5 miles "Turn right at white house with three white gables". Windmills, trees, houses, barns, railroads, creeks, and power lines are the "landmarks" used in the directions throughout the book. In the directions from Galveston to Dallas, several places say "road ends, turn right (or left) through pasture".