Samuel Harris Journal, 17741 vol., 19 cm., 12 leaves, with 21 pages of manuscript in Harris's hand; 1 additional document. A journal of the surveyor Samuel Harris (1733-1825), written as a member of a surveying party working along the North Branch of the Susquehanna River in what is now Bradford County, Pennsylvania. The journal commences on 14 October 1774, when Harris was below Wyalusing on the Susquehanna, and runs through 1 December, and the conclusion of the party's work. Entries appear for most days during that span. Much of the content consists of Harris's field notes, but entries also include descriptions of the party's movements, observations on the land and weather, and one extended account (on 8 November) of a council with an unidentified Indian "King or Chief." The surveys were made on lands lying along, and to the east of, the Susquehanna, immediately south of the "42 degree" (i.e., the New York line). This was land sold by the Iroquois in 1768. The specific purpose of the survey is not immediately apparent from the manuscript. Harris notes that the work was done for Robert Lettis Hooper, Jr. (c1730-1797), probably the chief surveyor in the party and a man who had contracted to perform many surveys for Pennsylvania proprietors. Accompanying the journal is an undated, unsigned document titled "List of Proprietarey Property of Sundry favorite grants," which appears to include grants ranging from the Susquehanna to the area around Fort Pitt. The relation of this document to the journal is unclear. MSN/COL 9100-1 to MSN/COL 9100-2-F1. [Finding Aid]