Sunnyjim333 t1_j7cb5h8 wrote
I believe early excplorers like LaSal did this in the 1600s in early America.
jesse4788 t1_j7cd2j6 wrote
My dad found one in our yard (Picton, Ontario) years ago with "dieu et Mon droit" on it.
CommentContrarian t1_j7cnpzy wrote
Despite the French language, that's England. Kinda cool to find that
Realworld t1_j7csk6m wrote
It's the motto of the monarch of the United Kingdom and appears on Royal coat of arms of UK outside Scotland.
BeatlesTypeBeat t1_j7d1k2e wrote
How did that come to be?
Pippin1505 t1_j7d3v90 wrote
Oversimplifying a lot : Because kings of England were related to the kings of France and saw themselves as the rightful kings of France (see the 100 Years War) hence "mon droit"
other exemple : Richard the Lionheart, king of England, only spoke French and spent most of his time in his French estates or crusading
CommentContrarian t1_j7d3529 wrote
William Plantagenet--a French noble--took the British crown in 1066. The British royal court spoke French for hundreds of years afterwards.
BoringView t1_j7d909z wrote
William of Normandy.
Geoffrey V was a Plantagenet
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Motor_Assumption_290 t1_j7d2the wrote
Have you heard of the Normans? Vous devriez l’ur demander.
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whyenn OP t1_j7cnqzj wrote
I read the wiki on the U.S. Public Land Survey system in response to u/duncan345's comment, and apparently moving (or removing) property markers is still techincally a Federal offense in the U.S. (of which Picton, Ontario is admittedly not a part.) But if that isn't still being used as such, that might be of interest to someone somewhere.
Do you remember the dimensions of it?
My-other-user-name t1_j7cqluf wrote
Moving USGS benchmarks is very much a Federal offense.
https://www.lsi-inc.us/is-it-illegal-to-move-a-survey-marker/
Moving survey staking and other markers depends on the situation and state.
machospaghetti93 t1_j7dit6a wrote
I work for a land survey firm in Ontario. It is also a federal offense in Canada.
The Criminal Code of Canada R.S. 1985, c. C-46 under Part XI, Sec. 442 and 443 states, "Every one who wilfully pulls down, defaces, alters or removes anything planted or set up as the boundary line or part of the boundary line of land is guilty of an offence punishable on summary conviction."
jesse4788 t1_j7xmc78 wrote
It's been quite a while since I've seen it, but I would guess it was 3-4 inches in diameter, maybe half an inch thick.
GavUK t1_j7cp6zp wrote
>dieu et Mon droit
This is the motto of our Monarch (UK and Commonwealth). You can read more at https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Dieu_et_mon_droit
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4_string_troubador t1_j7d67x2 wrote
Celeron did it too, when he led an expedition in 1749 to strengthen French claims to the Ohio River Valley
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wakka55 t1_j7daa1f wrote
They carried lead along the oregon trail? The heaviest known substance of the time? To...mark corners of peoples home plots????
Please elaborate so this stops sounding crazy
Sunnyjim333 t1_j7dlv09 wrote
Lead does not decay very rapidly. It is also soft, you can scratch words onto it. You don't need much to mark a corner. I don't know about the Oregon Trail, but it was used through the ages.
wakka55 t1_j7dofrg wrote
people were saying these were large, 1/2" thick, foot or two wide slabs in the comments. how else would they find them later?
Sunnyjim333 t1_j7e2h0g wrote
Not a clue. One wonders what they were thinking.
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