The Bullitt County History Museum

Researching Deeds and Tax Lists
by Betty R. Darnell

This is one in a series of researching tips taken from presentations by Betty R. Darnell, a noted local historian and genealogist. These notes are copyrighted by her.


Researching Deeds

Who
The Grantor, the party of the first part, is selling the land to the Grantee, the party of the second part. Occasionally, there is a party of the third part, someone representing one of the other parties; for example, a guardian or trustee.

What
A deed is a writing signed by the grantor, conveying property. Real property is land; personal property is anything else, as slaves, furniture, farming equipment. A Deed of Release releases property that had been mortgaged. A Deed of Trust serves as a mortgage.

When
A deed, especially one conveying property within the family, may not have been recorded until as late as twenty years after the deed was written. In an abstract of a deed, the date of recording is as important as the date the deed was written.

Where
A land deed is recorded in the county where the land lies. Deeds frequently give the place of residence of the grantor and the grantee. Some counties have a collection of "Unrecorded Deeds," deeds that were not recorded, either at the request of the parties involved, or because the parties did not pay the filing fee.

Keep in mind the date your county was formed. What are the parent counties? Do you need to check those records.

Why
Deeds are frequently the earliest available record for a county. Landowners paid the majority of the county taxes.

Frequently, when a county was formed, early deeds for land in the new county were copied from the records of the parent county; sometimes in a separate book, sometimes filed with later deeds.

How
A deed was filed with the county clerk, who hand-copied the deed into the deed books, and added information:

  • Acknowledgment: formal declaration before the official that the instrument is the free act and deed of the grantor. If the deed does not state the county of residence of the grantor, the acknowledgment is proof that the grantor was in the county at least at the time of the acknowledgment.
  • Separate Acknowledgment: made by a married woman, on her examination by the official separate and apart from her husband. The separate acknowledgment was sometimes made much later, and is recorded later in the deed books. Lack of a separate acknowledgment does not mean that the grantor was single.
  • Date of Recording: Deeds were recorded after the deed was written and filed with the county clerk, sometimes the same day, sometimes days or weeks later. The clerk may have been waiting for acknowledgments, especially if the grantor was in another county, or the clerk may have been busy with other duties.

Where to find the Deed Books

Original books, at the county courthouse, in the county clerk's office. Don't expect the clerk to do your work, or to listen to your family history. Ask the clerk where the indexes are, where the old deed books are. What are the copy costs? Do you need changes, or can you run up a tab and pay when you leave? The books are heavy; you might want to bring a helper. Put the books away when you're finished.

On microfilm, at the Archives Room, Kentucky Department of Libraries and Archives, Coffee Tree Road, Frankfort (Kentucky county records). On microfilm, ordered by your local Family History Center (Latter-day Saints of Jesus Christ; Mormon) from the Family History Library at Salt Lake City, Utah. Check the Family History Library catalog at www.familysearch.org.

Does your county have the deed indexes online? Search "(your county state) deeds."

Indexes

Indexing styles differ. Some examples I've found:

Grantor (or Direct) indexes on the left-hand page, Grantee (or Indirect) indexes on the right-hand page (or reversed); Separate books: Grantor index, Grantee index; Grantor index, or Grantee index only.

By first letter of surname: all the As, then all the Bs, etc.; By the first two letters of surname: Aa, Ab, Ac, etc.; Nelson County indexes: A grantors to A grantees, A grantors to B grantees, A grantors to C grantees, etc. This system is very handy if you're looking for deeds between members of a family, or if you know the name of both parties; not very handy if you're looking for all deeds for your ancestor.

Indexes are usually in several volumes, by groups of years; for example, 1797-1865. Indexes list only the names of the Grantor and Grantee. Your ancestor may have been a neighbor mentioned in the deed, or a witness to the deed. Published deed abstracts, if available, should index all the names mentioned in the deed.

Some indexes give number of acres and a brief description of the property. Some indicate whether the document is a Deed, a Mortgage, etc. Make a note of the Deed Book number and the page number. Look for deeds with "Heirs of …" as the Grantor.

Deeds will appear in the book as they were recorded; they may have been written years before. Check the indexes at least twenty years after your ancestor died or moved away.

There may be a separate index for Commissioners' Deeds (sale of the land directed by a court, to settle a lawsuit or an estate division).

Copy all the index entries for your surname. If you later decide you need a particular deed, you can order a copy from the state archives or from the county courthouse.

Have the deed books in your county been abstracted and published? Abstracts will list names of neighbors and witnesses, not given in the deed indexes.

Finding the Deed

Photocopies: be sure to add the name of the county, the name of the book, and the page number. Be aware that the deed in the book is a copy of the original deed; there may be errors. The original deed was usually retained by the buyer.

Abstracts: get all the details: book and page, date of deed, name(s) of grantor(s) and grantee(s) and their county of residence, type of document (deed, mortgage, power of attorney, etc.), payment, number of acres, watercourse, other landmarks mentioned, adjoining landowners, other details (improvements, dower rights, etc.), witnesses, acknowledgments and date of recording.

What if they owned land and you can't find them in Deed Records? Did they receive the land through a will? It may not have been recorded until it was sold out of the family. Was the land divided among the heirs, in a court case? Was the deed not recorded? Is there a file of unrecorded deeds at the courthouse? Did they receive a land grant?

Some terms you might see:

  • Hereditaments – what can be inherited; lands and everything thereon, heirlooms, furniture.
  • Appurtenances – that which belongs to the land – rights of way or easements.
  • Tenements – property held by tenant – houses or dwellings.
  • Improvements – may be buildings.
  • Fieri facias, or FiFa – a writ commanding the sheriff to sell property to raise the amount of a court judgment.

Now what?

In Kentucky, land is measured in "metes and bounds." Metes are measures of length, as rods or poles; bounds are boundaries, as property lines or watercourses.

To draw a plat map from the survey calls in the deed, you'll need a protractor and a ruler. See The Source, edited by Arlene Eakle and Johni Cerny, for instructions (1984 edition, page 221).

Mapping software, as DeedMapper, is available from large vendors.

Is there a surveyor's plat book at the courthouse, or a collection of survey plats?

What can deeds tell you?

When you get home with copies of your ancestor's deeds, don't just file them away. Scour them for information that will further your research:

Where did your ancestors live? How much land did they own?

Who were the neighbors? Where did they come from? Did they travel together? Did they intermarry?

Maybe you'll have the opportunity to stand on the land where your ancestor lived!

Even if your ancestor never owned land, he may show up in deed records, as a witness or a neighbor or a tenant.

Researching Kentucky Tax Lists

Who
Any white male of age 21 or over, or anyone – male, female, white, black – who owned real estate, was liable for county taxes.

What
Tax lists record the name of the property owner; acreage and class of land, and nearest watercourse (1st class land was comparable to the best lend in the Lexington area; 2nd and 3rd classes were of less quality, as hilly land or rocky soil); number of slaves; numbers of horses and cattle; number of children of school age (in the later lists).

Tax lists also record the name of the person who originally entered the land – this can help trace the ownership history of a piece of land.

When
Tax lists were compiled each year by the tax commissioner for each district in the county. Format varies from year-to-year, and by county. Most lists are alphabetical by first letter of the surname. (There may be more than one tax district in the county, listed separately. Many counties have tax lists available on microfilm, from the formation of the county through the 1870s.

Some tax lists are dated – dates seem to vary widely.

Where
Keep in mind the date your county was formed. What are the parent counties? Do you need to check those records?

Microfilm of Kentucky county tax lists can be accessed at the Kentucky Historical Society or the Kentucky Department of Libraries and Archives, at Frankfort. Your local library may have the microfilm for your county.

Why
Landowners paid the majority of the county taxes.

Frequently, as a son turns 21, he will be recorded on the tax list directly after his father. You'll have an estimate of that son's age, as well as a clue to his parentage.

Occasionally, a county resident was exempted from paying taxes, for various reasons. Check the county court order books, or county court minute books, if your ancestor is missing from one or more tax lists.

How
Many tax lists have been transcribed and published in books or in periodicals. Search by location (state and county) at www.USGenWeb.com and www.Cyndislist.com. Also search at PERSI (Periodical Source Index) at HeritageQuestOnline, available at some libraries, or remote access, with your library card number. Check your library's website.

References for Deed and Tax List Research

Adkinson, Kandie, Land Office, Kentucky Secretary of State, "Researching Early Kentucky Tax Lists: 1792-1840," Bluegrass Roots, Kentucky Genealogical Society, Fall 2002.

Everton Publishers, Inc., The Handybook for Genealogists, 9th Edition (Logan, Utah: Everton Publishers, 1999) [10th edition has been published]. General list of available records. Lists date of formation and parent counties for each county in the United States.

Hogan, Roseann Reinemuth, Kentucky Ancestry (Salt Lake City, Utah: Ancestry, Inc., 1992). Provides contact information for county clerk; inventory of microfilm for each county available at the Kentucky Historical Society, University of Kentucky Special Collections Library, and Kentucky Department of Libraries and Archives.

Schweitzer, George K., Kentucky Genealogical Research (Knoxville Tenn., privately published, 1987). Details type of record and dates for each.

Szucs, Loretto Dennis, and Luebking, Sandra Hargreaves, The Source: A Guidebook of American Genealogy (Salt Lake City, Utah: Ancestry, Inc., 1984). Information on getting the most out of county records.

Researching Deeds and Tax Lists
Betty R. Darnell, 171 Anna Lee Drive, Taylorsville KY 40071; bettyd@elkcreek.net (©2008)

The Bullitt County History Museum, a service of the Bullitt County Genealogical Society, is located in the county courthouse at 300 South Buckman Street (Highway 61) in Shepherdsville, Kentucky. The museum, along with its research room, is open 10 a.m. to 4 p.m. Monday through Friday. Saturday appointments are available by calling 502-921-0161 during our regular weekday hours. Admission is free. The museum, as part of the Bullitt County Genealogical Society, is a 501(c)3 tax exempt organization and is classified as a 509(a)2 public charity. Contributions and bequests are deductible under section 2055, 2106, or 2522 of the Internal Revenue Code. Page last modified: 13 Jan 2024 . Page URL: bullittcountyhistory.org/darnell/deeds_taxlists.html