Review of 'Trespassing: An Inquiry into the Private Ownership of Land and Acequia Culture: Water, Land, and Community in the Southwest'
- By Paul Trachtman
- Smithsonian magazine, February 1999, Subscribe
- Trespassing: An Inquiry into the Private Ownership of Land
John Hanson Mitchell
Buy This Book. - Acequia Culture: Water, Land, and Community in the Southwest
José A. Rivera
Buy This Book.
Trespassing: An Inquiry into the Private Ownership of Land
John Hanson Mitchell
Addison-Wesley
Buy This Book."Something there is that doesn't love a wall," wrote Robert Frost, questioning the yearly rite of fence mending between New England neighbors. Author John Hanson Mitchell questions more than the wall; he wonders about the very concept that divides land into parcels of private property. "Who really owns any land for that matter?" he asks. "How do you determine where the boundaries lie exactly while you are out walking, and if you happen to cross an imaginary line, one run out and recorded and set on paper and filed in a registry of deeds, what does it matter?"
In Trespassing, Mitchell takes us with him across those imaginary lines, as he wanders over his neighbors' farms and fields, evoking a New England of Puritans and the Indians they dispossessed, and the generations of Yankee farmers who followed and who are now selling the land to rapacious developers. Mitchell's trespasses are focused on a particular Massachusetts landscape, a 16-square-mile tract near present-day Concord, that the Puritans called the Nashobah Plantation and which their General Court in 1654 "granted" to a group of Pawtucket Indians who professed Christianity and settled there. A missionary named John Eliot, supported from London by the Society for the Propagation of the Gospel Among the Poor Blind Indians of New England, converted these "praying Indians," but neither faith nor property protected them when the Puritans clashed with other New England tribes in 1675. Rousted from Nashobah, they were incarcerated on a wintry island in Boston Harbor, where many died. Those who returned to Nashobah eventually saw much of their land taken over by Puritan farmers. In 1736 their last survivor, a woman who was known as Sarah Doublet, signed away the last acres of the Nashobah tract to a family of tavern owners in exchange for a comfortable deathbed.
Mitchell walks in Sarah Doublet's footsteps, pondering the changing concepts of use and ownership that have shaped this stretch of land. Among the Indians, different groups had rights to use land for certain purposes, for farming, fishing or hunting, and at certain times of the year. So more than one group might have some rights to the same land. But no one owned it, and no one had the right to destroy it.
The Puritans arrived with a concept of property that included provisions for common as well as individual lots, and for the practice of surrounding villages with greens or grazing areas that required shared work, decision-making and use. In this arrangement, there was little room for land speculation.
In the Southern colonies, however, land was apportioned in larger, individually owned tracts, a system that allowed for land speculation. This option proved a common means of amassing a fortune. As the English colonists moved West, it was the Southern system that prevailed. "Wilderness, in the biblical sense, came to an end in America on May 20, 1785," writes Mitchell. "On that day Congress authorized the survey of the Western Territories and divided the continent into a system of six-mile-square townships. Each township was to be organized by straight lines running due north and south, and due east and west. Within this boundary, there was a further division...into thirty-six square sections, each amounting to 640 acres."
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