Methods
Build a Deed Chain Without Overclaiming
This field note is part of the FOBA learning stream. It is meant to orient readers and point toward better source work.
Key points
- A deed chain is a timeline of transactions, not a certificate of identity, ancestry, or permanent family ownership.
- Each deed should answer one narrow question: who transferred what, to whom, when, where, and under what recorded terms.
- The chain gets stronger when deeds are compared with tax books, probate, mortgages, court records, maps, churches, cemeteries, and newspapers.
Next steps
- Make one row per transaction with grantor, grantee, date, book, page, acreage, boundary clues, and exact claim supported.
- Mark gaps, missing books, tax sales, liens, partitions, and name variants as review items.
- Keep active land disputes, current addresses, parcel details, and living-family conflict out of public copy.
Source trail
- FOBA Deed Chains, Property Lines, and Land Records – Internal deed-chain toolkit entry.
- FOBA Safe Sharing – Privacy guardrails for land and family material.