.Dear Members, If any of you have this Jacob Cagle, this will place him at a place and
time.
This is from the book The History Of Christian County, Illinois
Public Lands - The public lands were first offered for sale in November 1823, after which
they were subject to private entry.
On the 1st. of July 1820, Congress reduced the price of the land from $2 to $1.25 per
acre.
On the 8th of May 1822, a land office was established at Springfield, Illinois. The lands
in the
north half of the county were subject to entry at Springfield. All lands were exempt from
taxation for five years from date of entry.
The first tract of land entered in what now constitutes the boundary of Christian county,
was by Jacob Cagle; it being the E 1/2 of W. section 10, township 14-3 Buckhart township,
March 10th. 1827.Best Regards,Earl D. Cagle Sr.
Earl this is LaMona Phillips I have allot of Jacob Cagle with out dates I am
lost none of mine has Illinois dates I also checked the census at Family
History LDS there are allot there in Illinois if I had dates would be easy.
LaMona
-----Original Message-----
From: Earl Cagle via CAGLE
Sent: Tuesday, March 27, 2018 2:44 PM
To: Cagle E-Mail List
Cc: Earl Cagle
Subject: [CAGLE] Jacob Cagle of Christian County Illinois
.Dear Members, If any of you have this Jacob Cagle, this will place him at a
place and time.
This is from the book The History Of Christian County, Illinois
Public Lands - The public lands were first offered for sale in November
1823, after which
they were subject to private entry.
On the 1st. of July 1820, Congress reduced the price of the land from $2 to
$1.25 per acre.
On the 8th of May 1822, a land office was established at Springfield,
Illinois. The lands in the
north half of the county were subject to entry at Springfield. All lands
were exempt from taxation for five years from date of entry.
The first tract of land entered in what now constitutes the boundary of
Christian county, was by Jacob Cagle; it being the E 1/2 of W. section 10,
township 14-3 Buckhart township, March 10th. 1827.Best Regards,Earl D. Cagle
Sr.
The best part of genealogy is finding new family members you didn't know you
have.
The best part of genealogy is finding new family members you didn't know you
have.