Thursday, February 14, 2008

Willa Cather Tourism Video

Monday, February 11, 2008

The Homestead Movement

"In 1862, Congress passed and President Abraham Lincoln signed the Homestead Act. The act provided 160 acres to the head of a household, or to an applicant at least 21years old, including former slaves, single women and immigrants. The homesteader had to pay a minimal application fee, live on the land for five years and make improvements, such as cultivating a farm and building a house. The applicant had to be a U.S. citizen (or declared candidate for citizenship) who had never borne arms against the United States. Thus, Confederate soldiers could not apply.
The Union Pacific Railroad was chartered on July 1, 1862, when President Lincoln selected a route that would pass through Kansas and Nebraska. When the Union Pacific met up with the Central Pacific railroad in 1869, the transcontinental railroad made transportation more affordable. The federal government gave railroad companies large amounts of land to provide incentives for more development. These companies then advertised the sale of cheap land in foreign countries, which often led to unrealistic expectations among non-English-speaking immigrants. These changes--along with the 1862 Morrill Act authorizing land grant colleges to educate farmers--led thousands of eastern Americans and even more Europeans to move to Nebraska and Kansas.
For all its virtues, homesteading had a tragic side. Native Americans were pushed aside as the homesteading wave moved westward. Land fraud was common, especially as non-English-speaking families tried to negotiate with native born businessmen or farmers. Large companies applied for multiple homesteads, each one signed for by a company representative until sufficient acreage was amassed for large-scale ranching.
Failure was a constant companion. As the homesteaders moved westward into the dry plains, 160 acres was insufficient for a family farm. The land was not always cooperative, and heads of families--like Mr. Schimerda (Antonia's father) and Willa Cather's father--were not always successful farmers. Over 60% of homestead applicants never stayed the required five years to get their deed.
The Homestead Act and the transcontinental railroad were benchmarks of American history. By the end of the 19th century, over half a million homestead farmers had claimed more than 80 million acres of America. The West was forever changed by the settlement of families who left their native countries for a chance to obtain land to call their own."
From the Big Read Teacher's Guide

Thursday, February 7, 2008

Photos of and Information about Sod Houses










The sod house or "soddy" was a corollary to the log cabin during frontier settlement of the United States and Canada. The prairie lacked standard building materials such as wood or stone; however, sod from thickly-rooted prairie grass was abundant. Prairie grass had a much thicker, tougher root structure than modern landscaping grass. Construction of a sod house involved cutting patches of sod in rectangles, often 2'×1'×6" (600×300×150mm) long, and piling them into walls. Builders employed a variety of roofing methods. Sod houses could accommodate normal doors and windows. The resulting structure was a well-insulated but damp dwelling that was very inexpensive. Sod houses required frequent maintenance and were vulnerable to rain damage. Stucco or wood panels often protected the outer walls. Canvas or plaster often lined the interior walls. In the United States, the terms of the Homestead Act offered free farmland to settlers who built a dwelling and cultivated the land for five years. Related straw-bale construction developed in Nebraska with early baling machines and has endured as a modern building material. Sod houses achieved none of the nostalgia that log cabins gained, probably because soddies were much more subject to dirt and infestations of insects. Photos compliments of Pam McLaughlin, MLS, Reference and Genealogy Librarian,Fremont Public Library