The Homestead Act (May 1862)

Cards (5)

  • The Homestead Act
    encouraged more people to settle and farm in the West. The government offered 160-acre plots of land called homesteads – a house with enough land to support a family.
    • Registering for a homestead plot cost $10, so it was affordable for ordinary people (e.g. ex-slaves).
    • Homesteaders had to live on and work the land themselves, and there was a limit on how many claims one person could file. The government didn’t want rich businessmen buying up all the land for profit.
    • As long as they were the head of a family, or single and over-21, anyone could file a claim for a plot. American Indians could not.
    • Once someone had lived on and worked the land for 5 years, they could buy it outright for $30 (known as “proving up”).
  • Achievements:
    • By 1876, over 6 million acres of government land had become homesteads.
    • Parts of the Plains were settled for the first time.
    • In Nebraska, the population grew so much that it became a state in 1867.
    • It encouraged immigration from Europe.
  • Limitations:
    • Only 16% of public land was homesteaded. Far more was sold to railroads or cattle ranchers.
    • 60% of homesteads were never “proved up”.
    • More homesteads were formed by railroad companies and squatting than by the Homestead Act.
    • Rich landowners still found ways to abuse the system: e.g. by filing claims in employees’ names.
    • Many people filed claims in order to sell it on for a profit afterwards.
  • Although the adverts made it sound easy, homesteaders faced challenges:
    • They needed savings of around $1000 to get started
    • They quickly ran out of money during spells of no rain