THE HOMESTEADER REPUTATION
If you ask most people – and certainly if you ask you ask
GCSE students – how the West was won, they will answer saying the Homestead Act.
“To throw open all the lands of the Republic free of charge, and bid each citizen to help himself, will open a new era” wrote Horace Greeley in 1862. And this belief in what Paul Gates called the “halo of political and economic significance which has greatly magnified the importance to be attributed to it”, continues in popular history books and textbooks to the present day:
“The Homestead Act, which became law on May 20, 1862, was responsible for helping settle much of the American West”,
declares the US National Archives website.
Jason Porterfield writes (2004):
“Many historians view the Homestead Act as a shining success that strengthened the country and provided a great opportunity for many Americans. Because of the act, millions of acres of prairie became prosperous farms. People who had never tried farming found themselves digging wells, building homes, and harvesting crops. The plains were integrated into the fabric of the country, and the territories became states within a few decades. The dream of one great nation extending across the continent came true.”
and Hannah Anderson adds (2011):
“More than 93 million homesteader descendants are estimated
to be alive today.
Land that is still farmed today on the Great Plains produces vast amounts of our nation's food. The Homestead Act helped create multiple roads, railroads, and towns across the West.
The Homestead Act has also been credited with escalating immigration, as the
news of free land reached foreign countries.
The Homestead Act affected US culture. Pioneers had to be resourceful to produce their own necessities. Small local governments encouraged democracy. Expansion fostered nationalism because as people moved from place to place, they began to identify less with specific regions and more as a national identity. Art, entertainment and literature evolved with Western influence.”
The Homestead Act was hailed as the expression of American ‘rugged individualism’ at its finest – as an article in a ‘teen-friendly’ magazine updating teachers’ knowledge (1997) comments:
“Pioneer families stood shoulder to shoulder to settle the harsh land, with women fighting fires, fear, and locusts right beside men.”
– a myth perpetuated by novels, films and TV series like ‘Little House on the Prairie’. Indeed, the more historians uncovered the true horror of the conditions that the early Homesteaders encountered, the greater the regard for their heroism and initiative.
Textbooks list the ‘problems’ faced by the early Homesteaders, and posit against
them ‘solutions’ clustered around individual endurance and resourcefulness, and
innovations in farming methods and technology.
And underlying all this was the unstated principle that Homesteading exemplified American capitalism – taking something that had no value, and working on it to create valuable, productive land. In 1962 President John F Kennedy, marking the centenary of the Homestead Act, declared it: “the single greatest stimulus to national development ever enacted”.
President George Bush declared it the exemplification of America’s ideal of
freedom.
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