List of Illustrations
List of Tables
Acknowledgments
1. Competing Visions of Our Homesteading Past
2. Recalculating Homesteading’s Reach and Success
3. Evolving Views on Homesteading Fraud
4. Estimating the Extent of Fraud
5. Homesteading and Indian Land Dispossession
6. Women Proving Up Their Claims
7. Mapping Community Formation
8. Envisioning a New History of Homesteading
Appendix 1: An Annotated Review of GLO Circulars, 1862–1904
Appendix 2: Sources for Chapter 5 Graphs and Maps
Notes
Bibliography
Index
Richard Edwards is the director of the Center for Great Plains Studies and a professor of economics at the University of Nebraska–Lincoln. He is the author of numerous books, including Natives of a Dry Place: Stories of Dakota before the Oil Boom. Jacob K. Friefeld has a PhD in history from the University of Nebraska–Lincoln, where he is also a postdoctoral research fellow. Rebecca S. Wingo is assistant professor of history and director of the public history program at the University of Cincinnati.
"Homesteading the Plains is an important revisionist work-a
must-read for those interested in the revitalization of historical
interest in homesteading and the settlement of the Far West."-Mark
M. Carroll, Western Historical Quarterly "Homesteading the
Plains does an excellent job of providing reasons to be excited for
the future of homesteading research while celebrating the past
success of the Homestead Act, its principal role in the history of
both the Great Plains and the entire country, and its enduring
legacy on the land and the people who call it home."-Andrew
Husa, Great Plains Quarterly "Homesteading the Plains is a
provocative, well-informed, and strongly argued analysis of the
role of homesteading in settling the Great Plains from 1863 to
1900. . . . Throughout the book the factual evidence is
enriched by the stories of individual lives which are also embedded
in the records. The result is a definitive analysis which is also a
pleasure to read. It will serve as a model for future historians
who want to circumvent the myths and find the facts about
homesteading and its role in the development of the nation."-David
J. Wishart, Nebraska History "Homesteading looms large in the
folklore and memories of European settlement of the North American
Great Plains, but has almost disappeared from professional research
and writing, including mainstream US history textbooks. These three
authors aim to revise the standardized views of homesteading. . . .
Every library with any interest in frontier/western/Great Plains
history should have a copy of this book."-S. D.
Reschly, Choice "Homesteading the Plains showcases the value
of digitized homestead records, arguing persuasively that we need
to reconsider and challenge long accepted and widely circulated
"stylized facts" in the light of the detailed research now
possible."-Sarah Carter, Montana: The Magazine of Western
History "Edwards, Friefeld, and Wingo break new ground on the
well-trod soil of Plains settlement history."-Cynthia C.
Prescott, Middle West Reviews "Recommended for all plains folk
who like to brandish their homestead certificates, or who just
share a tie to the land."-Prairie Public News "A welcome
contribution to the understanding of our region."-Omaha
World-Herald "Homesteading the Plains is a "must-read" for Great
Plains scholars, as well as for those interested in the American
West and in GIS applications. It is a much-needed call for a
revitalization of homesteading scholarship, and an example of how
dramatically technology and historians' increased access to data
can shift the historiography. The authors should be congratulated
on their contribution to future Great Plains studies, as their book
will doubtless serve as a fine kick-start to a new renaissance in
homesteading research."-Julie Courtwright, Missouri Historical
Review "Homesteading the Plains represents an exciting new starting
point for studying the Homestead Act's impact on agricultural
expansion."-Ginette Aley, Kansas History
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