French Grant
The French Grant (also known as the French-Grant Estates) was a land tract in the Northwest Territory, present day Scioto County, Ohio, that was paid out by the U.S. Congress on March 31, 1795.<ref name=act1795>Template:USStat - Text of Act of March 3, 1795 Library of Congress</ref> This was after a group of French colonists were defrauded by the Scioto Company of purchased land grants which rightly were controlled by the Ohio Company of Associates. Not all of the settlers took the grant, some preferring to stay on the East Coast others preferring stay in Gallipolis, Ohio in Gallia County. (Gallia and Gallipolis were named for Gaul, the ancient Latin name of France.)
The First Grant extended from a point on the Ohio River Template:Convert above and opposite the mouth of Little Sandy River (Kentucky) in Kentucky, and extending Template:Convert in a direct line down the river, and from the two extremities of that line, reaching back at right angles sufficiently far to include the quantity of land required, which somewhat exceeded Template:Convert. Of these Template:Convert, Template:Convert were awarded to John Gabriel Gervais for having pursued the grant; the remaining Template:Convert were split into 92 lots of Template:Convert each.
Another Template:Convert additional were granted on June 25, 1798<ref name=act1798>Template:USStat - Text of Act of June 25, 1798 Library of Congress</ref> called the Second Grant. These Template:Convert lots adjoined the first Grant towards its lower end. This grant was for eight Gallipolis residents who did not receive a portion of the First Grant.