bounty land warrant
bounty-land warrant. Hist. A state- or federal-government-issued certificate affirming a veteran’s eligibility to apply for ownership of a certain amount of public land. • A veteran had to apply for a bounty-land warrant; it was not automatically granted. When the application was approved, the veteran received notice that the warrant had been issued in the veteran’s name and was on file in the General Land Office. The veteran could then sell or otherwise transfer the bounty-land warrant to anyone, even a nonveteran. The warrant holder acquired the right to redeem the warrant and apply for a land patent. The last statute authorizing the issue of bounty-land warrants was enacted in 1894, and the last warrants were issued in 1906.