Keith: Please re-read our posts. Granted? individual surveys are available for free; but the pieced together maps of all the surveys in the entire townships are mostly not free.? I wouldn't really call an individual survey a "map", though I've seen that terminology used.? For example, one of the Lancaster township warranty?"maps" ?that I have from the state shows five or six properties of one of groups of my families I have studied.? It shows how large each parcel was relative to the others, how close they all lived, what mutual boundaries they had, and the dates for survey, warrant and patent are all either in the middle of the large properties or in a separate legend along the side.? It also shows all the others who owned property in the same township who were original land owners, many of whom served as witnesses to wills, guardians of orphaned children, moved to some of the same places outside the county, etc.? etc.? This is the rough equivalent of what was later the atlases, w! hich depict, in contrast, all the people who owned land in the same township at exactly the same time, i.e. the time the atlases were charted. In other words, if you only get the individual surveys for individual original land owners you are only getting pieces of an unpieced puzzle, not the pieced together puzzle. Not that you will find many forebears on these warrantee maps, because very few will have been original land owners, and some with the same surname appearing on the maps you may never have known of before.? So you may have more puzzles to solve still... But they may be worth checking (or purchasing.) Richard B.