Zusammenfassung der Ressource
American West 4 -
THE HOMESTEADERS
- so many people wanted to become
homesteaders and settle on the
Plains
- Homestead Act 1862 – families
were given 160 acres of land for
free, providing that they lived on
it and farmed it for five years
- Timber Culture Act 1873 –
settlers were given a further
160 acres of free land if they
agreed to plant 40 acres of
their land with trees
- Desert Land Act 1877 – settlers who
wanted more land could buy 640 acres
of land cheaply in areas where lack of
rainfall was a problem
- End of the US Civil War – thousands of
demobilised soldiers and their families wanted
to rebuild their lives. Freed black slaves were
also looking for a new life. Many ex-slaves and
ex-soldiers became homesteaders, cowboys
and railroad builders
- Building of the Railroads – it was easy
for homesteaders to get onto the Plains
and land could be bought cheaply from
railroad companies which were selling
land either side of the railroad
- Pull Factors
- The offer
of free
land
- The
chance of a
new start
- Advertising by
the railroad
companies
- Leets home from those who had
already gone west, and who were
successfully farming, encouraged
people to move onto the Plains
themselves
- Push Factors
- Many were
looking to
escape poverty
and
unemployment
- Looking
for good
farming
land
- Some moved to the
Plains to escape
religious persecution
- Ex-soldiers from the
US Civil War saw lack
of opportunity when
the returned home
- Enabling factors
- Later
homesteaders
could travel by
railroad
- The Indians were
cleared from these
lands, defeated by the
US army and confined
to reservations or
pushed further west
- surviving on
the Plains
- Water
Shortages
- Water was scarce. It
was difficult to grow
crops without water
and homesteaders
couldn’t keep
themselves clean
- Windmills were
used to pump water
from underground.
Methods of dry
farming were also
used.
- Weather Extremes
- There was draught in
the summer and cold
in the winter. Fierce
winds blew. This could
destroy crops.
- Dry farming
techniques were
used to overcome
problems of draught
- Fuel
- There was no wood to
burn as fuel for heating and
cooking.
- Buffalo dung
and cow dung
were used as
fuels.
- Dirt and
Disease
- It was easy for disease
to develop and illness
was common among
homesteaders
- Women used
natural medical
remedies to treat
disease
- Building
Materials
- There was a lack of wood
and only a few could afford
wood to build their homes
- Blocks of earth
were cut and used
as building bricks
to build ‘sod’
houses
- Natural
Hazards
- Prairie fires started in the
summer. There were plagues of
grasshoppers that could
destroy crops.
- No solution! They had
to endure
- female
homesteaders
- Making and
washing
clothes
- Preparing
food for their
family
- Making
household
items, such as
soap and
candles
- No social life, because of the
long distances between
farmhouses
- Mental health
problems, due to the
lack of a social life
and the heavy
workload
- Coming into
contact with
hostile Indians
- Which factors
determined whether a
homesteader would
be successful
- Exact location of their land –
some parts of the Plains were
more fertile than others
- Adaptability – The
Great Plains
required them to
adapt their farming
techniques.
Homesteaders who
failed to adapt did
not succeed
- Weather – severe
droughts of the 1870s
and 1880s forced
thousands of
homesteaders into
bankruptcy
- Hard work and determination –
those who survived were helped
by a number of inventions and
developments in homesteading