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-11- lcI been ained r>rior to British governors of '.Vest Florida. 10.Linds for which warrants of survey the ratification cf the Spanish treaty, but which could rot be patented until after that d. .: ;. 11. L^nds of -..13 above dascription, but never patented, ths proprietor hold ins th-2 -arrant of survey, and plot, and certificate of tho district surveyor prior to the treaty. 12. Land for which warrants of survey were obtained before the treaty, out surveyed and patented after the treaty. 15. Lands for which warran ts of survey were obtained prior to the treaty, but surveyed after the treaty, and not patented. 14. ’'arrant of survey and patent obtained since the treaty, but during ths ezeroise of the Spanish jurisdiction, as agreed in an instrument bstueen the American commissioners and the Spanish authorities. 15. Warrant of survey, v/iih plot and certificate <s£ the district surveyors obtained sines the treaty, but no patent. 1G. Warrant of survey obtained before ths treaty, and improvement thereon, but the land nob surveyed. _ 17. '-arrant obtained since the treaty, with improvement and^actual occupation., but no survey. 18. Warrant before the treaty, without improverrent or survey. 19. ’^arrant since the treaty, without improvement or survey. SO. improvement by houses, crop, stock and actual occupation, ’without authority by warrant or otherwise. 21. -mprovement end crop without residing on the land, end without warrant. 22. improvement and occupancy, and verbal permission of ths Spanish Governor, with surve yor1 s certi fi cate . rfere then are twenty-tY.T> conflicting classifications covering the lands of T.'ssj riorida and t2_e Mississippi ’i’a rr-it or y, and each one hi;; enough So bear a hundred law-suits. i'io wender the .lawyers came to this country in crowds, and the very ablest cf the profession. The -tion. uchn a3nc1erscn—afterwards U, S. Senator — associated him- self with Gen. -^ray. i;iost of yci hi:t.—his courtly demeanor— his severe losic--his inexhaustible Ergumentative faculty—his great and generous efforts and sacrifices for the liberation of Cuba. tVt -T . O » **15 but Thcmas-i-£-*--Kcett"came ■to_i%tch'5z~'fr6m'"^en’i;ucIcy, in early lii was a man cf£ imposing, put haughty exterior, of oomzSandir.g manners, plifeanb /cr popular. His suprSsior talents provoked envy, and-^e number p\]iis ©nomie.s^-lcQSu nafce Vith his professi/5nal\ pro^TS'Ss. r-e rose al ysts an spies/of ill- btained a so/at in ttt6 Senat^/of tho sty nimssii\/there, but j&ied ini jbre prira of life, “hlenj Attorney General, ha occasionally attended ta’nr cou^Vs. ! 7 . / / . (\ ; J 7 \ •^i chard St edition resided in *<aft(JJie&—was frosey/--con of one of th&_ sirnei^s diT'lJlfe/ Dacia rat ioi^af Independence—^rafcu^ted at tho head of his class'%t -‘■'ri licet on, be can was attorney ganeraS. ^believe—quart e at Stovalls Springs ,\in“f‘arion-c'ounty, r^br-i-; Le d ian< was shot./ through the i-li'aht ccroei* in Mississippi— ith a Lt.3y,* °r lear.fi ge nt I"*"----- in the duel follow *iaBry of an influential Tennessee family, soti/ed in »ilkin- son county, made a fortunate marriage, and by the influoaca of his wifof; connections, became circuit jud^e, de was eftorwards elected to Congress
Hancock County 1 Claiborne-JFH-July-4-1876-address-Joe-Pilet-(052)