Is Colorado a Square State?

The same topography that hampered the surveyors could also make the corrections easier. Survey Correction Line

Survey Correction Line
Play trivia long enough and you’ll get asked to name one or both of the ‘square states’; A fun way to annoy the trivia host is to remind them that they are wrong—both Colorado and Wyoming are rectangular. But are they really?
On the drawing board, Colorado started out rectangular. Just before the Civil War, on February 28, 1861, the 36th Congress established the boundaries of the new territory as being between 37 and 41 degrees north of the equator, and 25 and 32 degrees west from Washington, DC. This sweeping measure carved out land from the territories of Kansas in the east, Utah in the west, Nebraska in the north (Dakota Territory wasn’t formed until a few days later) and New Mexico in the south.
At this point, Colorado’s boundary was still perfectly rectangular, but not for much longer. In the 1860s and 1870s, Congress authorized official surveys to establish boundary markers and funny things began to happen. Long before GPS helped us find our way around, surveyors had to use more error-prone tools. Or, more accurately, the tools were used by error-prone humans. This led to lots of zigs and zags in surveying lines.
Pressed for time, these zigzags were usually followed by steep corrections up to a mile or more back to the proper line rather than having the team go back and re-survey a given stretch.
In the most famous example along Colorado’s boundary, the Four Corners area was marked about 1,800 feet east of where it should have been placed. However, under U.S. law, once the parties (in this case the states and territories) agreed on the marker’s placement it became the actual boundary. This also holds true for all of the numerous zigs and zags that make up our border.  And while state maps still show the boundary as straight, any detailed topographic map (we have almost all of them in the Western History and Genealogy Department) offers a glimpse into the lives of those surveyors from the late 19th century as they laid out our modern boundaries.
Further Reading:
Geological Survey (U.S.). 1:24,000-scale topographic map of Monero, NM-CO (1983). Image at the top of this post taken from this map. USGS’s Topo Viewer is the best place to find historic USGS topographic maps online.
Van Zandt, F.K. Boundaries of the United States and the several States. Professional Paper 909 (1976). Good summary of all the state boundaries.
Everett, Derek R. Creating the American West: boundaries and borderlands (2014). Up-to-date take on the western borders of the U.S.
Statutes at Large, 36th Congress, 2nd Session (page 172). 12 Stat. L. p.172  (ch.59). February 28, 1861. Established boundary of Colorado as being between 37th and 41st parallel (latitude) and 25th and 32nd meridian (longitude, west from Washington DC)
 
 

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