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Great Plains Homesteaders
1862 Homestead Act
A01=Richard Edwards
African American homesteaders
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Agricultural History
American History
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Black Homesteaders
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Female homesteaders
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Homestead Act
Homestead Act of 1862
homestead history
homesteading history
homesteading stories
Homesteading women
Indian homesteaders
Indian Land Dispossession
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migration to the plains
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plains migration
plains settlers
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religious homesteaders
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Product details
- ISBN 9781496238948
- Dimensions: 127 x 203mm
- Publication Date: 01 Sep 2024
- Publisher: University of Nebraska Press
- Publication City/Country: US
- Product Form: Paperback
- Language: English
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Great Plains Homesteaders tells the epic story of how millions of people, white and Black, women and men, young and old, and of many different religions, languages, and ethnic groups, moved to the Great Plains to claim land. Most were poor, so the government’s offer of “free” farms through the Homestead Act of 1862 seemed a godsend. The settlers found harsh growing conditions and many perils-including exploitation by railroads and banks, droughts, prairie fires, and bitter winters-yet they persisted. The settlers successfully “proved up” nearly a million claims between the 1860s and the 1920s. They filled up the immense grassland, transforming it into productive farms, the beginning of the region’s agriculture. They also created a distinct culture that continues to shape their estimated fifty million descendants living today.
Every homesteader’s experience was different, as particular and distinct as the people were themselves. Yet their collective story, with all its hardships and toil, its ambitions and setbacks, its fresh starts and failures and successes, is central to the American experience.
Every homesteader’s experience was different, as particular and distinct as the people were themselves. Yet their collective story, with all its hardships and toil, its ambitions and setbacks, its fresh starts and failures and successes, is central to the American experience.
Richard Edwards is director emeritus of the Center for Great Plains Studies at the University of Nebraska–Lincoln. He is author or coauthor of numerous books, including The First Migrants: How Black Homesteaders’ Quest for Land and Freedom Heralded America’s Great Migration (Nebraska, 2023) and Homesteading the Plains: Toward a New History (Nebraska, 2017).
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