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Homesteader cutting sod in South Dakota. |
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Free Land
In 1862 the U.S. Congress passed the Homestead Act. This law permitted any 21-year-old
citizen or immigrant with the intention of becoming a citizen to lay claim to 160 acres of land known as the
Great American Prairie. After paying a filing fee, farming the land, and living on it for five years, the ownership
of the land passed to the homesteader. |
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Mr. and Mrs. Curry in front of their sod house. |
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People came from all over the world to take advantage of this opportunity.
By 1900 over 600,000 claims had been filed.
Life on the Prairie
The homesteaders faced many challenges. Everything about the prairie was extreme.
The land was flat and treeless and the sky seemed to go on forever. On a tall-grass prairie, the grass
sometimes grew to be more than 6 feet tall. It is said that riders on horseback could pick wildflowers
without dismounting. Women worried about their children getting hopelessly lost in the grass.
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A family posing beside their new frame house and their sod house.
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Summer brought endless days of heat when the surface
temperature could exceed 120 degrees. Periods of drought, rainstorms,
tornadoes, swarms of grasshoppers that could destroy fields of crops,
and never-ending wind also challenged settlers.
Winters were long and cold. Blizzards were so strong that they could
trap livestock and homesteaders under the snow. During the long winter
of 1886, horses and cattle died when their breaths froze over the
ends of their noses, making it impossible for them to breathe.
Building a home and establishing a farm was a challenge for even the
most experienced farmers, but the free land, abundant wildlife, and
richness of the soil made the challenge hard to resist.
Choosing Your Homestead
Choosing the right location for a homestead was very important. Newly
arrived settlers, known as "sod busters," looked for land which featured
a stream or creek and small rolling hills which served as windbreaks.
Easy access to planned railroad lines was also an asset because it
made it easier to ship goods and livestock to market. Once the land
was selected, the homesteader went to the Land Office to make sure
that the property was not already taken and to file a claim.
One of the requirements for fulfilling the claim was building a "home"
to live in within six months. Choosing the right site for a house
was nearly as important as choosing the right claim. Building next
to a small hill provided some protection from the constant wind. Being
near a stream meant easy access to water. But building too close also
made flooding a very real danger.
Building a House
Without trees or stone to build with, homesteaders had to rely on
the only available building materialprairie sod, jokingly called
"Nebraska marble." Sod is the top layer of earth that includes grass,
its roots, and the dirt clinging to the roots. Building a sod house
was a lot of work and often took many weeks, especially if the settler's
nearest neighbors were too far away or unable to help.
Because tents or the top of a covered wagon provided little comfort
or shelter from the prairie's wild weather, many settlers began by
building dugouts. Dugouts were small, dark spaces dug into the side
of a hill that could be made quickly and were much warmer and drier
than tents. Many people built a sod house right in front of the dugout
and then used the dugout as another room.
Cutting Sod
Cutting sod was a very difficult task. Motorized tractors weren't
commonly available to farmers until the 1910s. Farmers in the 1800s
used mules, oxen or horses, and special plows equipped with curved
steel blades to cut through the tough roots of the sod. The roots
were so tough that as the plow cut through the sod a loud tearing
sound was created.
Farmers soon learned that they should only cut as much sod as they
planned to use in one day. Sod quickly dried, cracked, and crumbled
if not used immediately. Most farmers cut sod from the area where
they planned to build their house. Doing so provided a flat surface
on which to build and helped protect the house from prairie fires.
Removing the grass from the area also helped keep insects, snakes,
and vermin from burrowing into the house.
Building the House
Most homesteaders cut bricks that were 18 inches wide by 24 inches
long and weighed around 50 pounds each. Approximately 3000 bricks
were required to build a 16 x 20 foot house. Freshly cut sod bricks
were laid root-side up in order for the roots to continue to grow
into the brick above it. Over time, the bricks in fact grew together
to form a very strong wall.
Today, most houses in the United States are built straight up and
down, with angled roofs, and brick or wooden exterior walls that keep
out the rain and other elements. Sod houses, however, required a thick,
wide foundation. The walls sloped down on the outside of the house
so that as the walls settled, they would not collapse. The top of
the house looked smaller than the bottom.
Putting in Windows
Windows were the most expensive part of a sod house and were difficult
to install. After setting the frame into the wall, the builder continued
to lay rows of sod around it. When the bricks reached the top of the
window frame settlers left off two layers of brick and laid cedar
poles over the gap. The resulting space, stuffed with grass or rags,
protected the windows from breaking as the house settled.
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A sod house with a collapsed roof.
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Making a Roof
The roof was the most difficult and dangerous part of the house to
build. The lack of normal roofing materials, like wooden shingles
or slate tiles, led to the inventive use of natural materials. A series
of cedar poles held up layers of brush tied into bundles, mud, grass
and sod. These roofs were a constant source of irritation and concern.
Dirt or water, depending on the weather, fell from the ceiling most
of the time. People hung muslin sheets from the ceiling to keep dirt
from dropping into their food or an occasional snake from falling
on to their bed. Roofs that became too wet sometimes collapsed.
Moving In!
Many people were surprised by the coziness of dugouts and sod houses.
They were cool in the summer, warm in the winter and good shelter
from the wild prairie weather. The fact that they were basically made
of dirt made them virtually fireproof.
Turning a Soddie into a Home
Most sod houses were about 16 feet by 20 feet and had only one room.
Furniture was kept to a minimum due to the lack of space. Beds and
tables were often built right into the walls. Many people slept on
pallets that could be moved out of the way during the day. Crowded
conditions meant that some household objects, like sewing machines,
were kept outside when the weather was good, and had to be squeezed
inside when it rained or snowed.
Smoothing the inside walls and either plastering or wallpapering them
brightened the room and helped keep out mice. Women found floors made
from packed dirt hard to live with. Adding raised wooden floors was
usually one of the first improvements that homesteaders made to their
sod houses.
Flowers on the wide windowsills and pets — dogs, cats, and caged
birds — made the house feel like a home. Many settlers threw
flower seeds up on the roofs that brightened up their dugouts when
they bloomed.
The requirements for fulfilling the terms of the claim agreement varied
for different types of claims. Whether it meant building a structure
to live in within six months; raising successful crops and staying
for five years; planting a certain number of acres of trees; or purchasing
the land from the governmentless than 50 percent of homesteaders
succeeded.
Bad weather, illness, accident or loneliness could all bring a homesteader's
dream of land ownership to a bitter end. Those who failed went "back
home" or continued moving west.
For those who stayed, time and experience often led to more successful
crops and eventually to moving out of the soddie and into a frame
house. Most soddies became barns or storage buildings. |
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