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KS 66285
913-708-5119
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NEBRASKA LEGENDS
The First Homestead |
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By Addison Erwin
Sheldon, 1913 |
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The free
homestead law
has been called the most important act for the welfare of the people ever
passed in the United States. Under this law any man or woman twenty-one
years old or the head of a family can have 160 acres of land by living on
it five years and paying about eighteen dollars in fees. For the first
eighty years of United States history there were no free
homesteads.
The settlers were obliged to buy their land. The price was low but they
were often very poor and in many cases lost their land after living upon
and improving it because they had no money to pay for it.
In 1852 a party, called the Free Soil party,
demanded free
homesteads for the people. In 1854 the first free
homestead
bill was introduced in Congress by Congressman Galusha A. Grow of
Pennsylvania. The people of the West and poor people everywhere were in
favor of the bill. There was strong opposition to it, however.
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Daniel Freeman when older, courtesy Library of
Congress
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The first
Homestead
Act required the settler to pay twenty-five cents an acre for his
land and was passed in 1860. This bill was vetoed by President
Buchanan. It was not until May 20, 1862, that the free
Homestead
Act was finally passed and signed by President Abraham Lincoln.
The law took effect on January 1, 1863.
The first free
homestead
in the United States was taken by Daniel Freeman on Cub Creek in Gage
County,
Nebraska,
about five miles northwest of Beatrice. Daniel Freeman was born in
Ohio in 1826, and moved with his parents to
Illinois
in 1835. He was intensely interested in the free
homestead
bill from the time it was first introduced in Congress. Year after
year he watched its progress and hoped for its passage and many times
said that he wished to be the first man to take a
homestead.
When the free
homestead
bill was signed Daniel Freeman was a soldier in the Union army. A few
months later he was given a brief furlough and came to
Nebraska
to look over the beautiful country, then lying vacant, for a home. He
found the place that suited him and started for the nearest United
States land office, which was then at Brownville,
Nebraska,
arriving there December 31, 1862. The little town was thronged with
settlers who had come there to take land. That night there was a New
Year's Eve party at the hotel, which was attended by all. The new
Homestead
Act was to go into effect the next day but as New Year's was a
holiday the land office would not be open until January 2nd.
Mr.
Freeman was under orders to join his regiment and expected to
leave the next day. He told his story and his great desire to be the
first
homesteader in the United States. All the others agreed that he
should have the first chance and with him persuaded a clerk in the
land office to open the office a few minutes past midnight on January
1st for Daniel Freeman alone.
Thus it came that
Daniel
Freeman made
homestead
entry number one and afterwards received
homestead
patent number one for 160 acres on Cub Creek near Beatrice. Thus
Nebraska
has the honor of having the first
homestead
in the United States. Since that time over 1,000,000
homesteaders have followed
Daniel
Freeman's example, receiving over 120,000,000 acres of land as a
free gift from our government. Of these
homesteaders over 100,000 have lived in
Nebraska.
Nothing has helped so much in the settlement of the West as its free
lands. One of the songs sung everywhere after the passage of the
Homestead
Act had for its refrain these words:
"Come along,
come along, make no delay,
Come from every nation, come from every way,
Our lands they are broad enough, have no alarm
For Uncle Sam is rich enough to give us all a farm."
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The first
homestead sketch |
Daniel Freeman served his country
in the Union army until the close of the Civil War, in 1865. Then he
brought his bride and settled on his
Nebraska
homestead.
This has remained ever since the family home. Here their seven children
grew to manhood and womanhood and here Mrs. Freeman lives with children
and grandchildren.
Mr. Freeman
died December 30, 1908. This first
homestead
is a beautiful farm in the valley where the prairie and timber land join.
The old log cabin with sod roof, which was the first home of the
Freeman
family, has long since disappeared.
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There is a brick
house and orchard, and an old freighting road, from Missouri River to the
mountains runs for nearly a mile through the place, with rows of giant
cottonwoods planted by Mr. Freeman on either side. On the hill at one
corner of the farm, overlooking the valley and the freighting road is the
grave of
Daniel Freeman. It is proposed that the United States shall purchase
this first
homestead from the Freeman family and make it a public park to
commemorate what is regarded as the most important law passed by the
United States and the place where that law was first applied.
Written 1913
Follow-up to Sheldon's Historic Tale:
Agnes Suiter
Freeman
continued to live on the
homestead until shortly
before her death in 1931. In 1936, by an act of the United States
Congress, the site of Freeman's
homestead was recognized
as the "first"
homestead in the United
States when it was designated the Homestead National Monument of America.
The national monument comprises the original
homestead claim of Daniel
Freeman, the Freeman School, constructed in 1872, one other historic
cabin, Freeman's grave, and tree plantings. The property is administered
by the National Park Service.
Homestead National Monument of America is
located in southeastern
Nebraska,
40 miles south of Lincoln and 4 miles west of Beatrice on NE Highway 4.
Contact Information:
Homestead National
Monument
8523 W. State Highway 4
Beatrice,
Nebraska 68310
402-223-3514
Added June, 2005
Also See:
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The Homestead
Act - Creating Prosperity in America
Excerpted from the book, History and
Stories of Nebraska, by
Addison Erwin Sheldon,
1913. (now in the public domain.)
Addison Erwin Sheldon
(1861-1943) was director of the
Nebraska Historic Society, and
wrote numerous books devoted to the history of
Nebraska. Many of the
photographs and illustrations in his many texts were also taken and drawn
by Sheldon.
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Homestead Monument, September, 2005, Kathy
Weiser
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Visit
The Rocky Mountain General Store
The
Rocky Mountain General Store is a very unusual place. You just never
know what you might find!! We always carry a wide selection of new and
used
books that are travel related or historic minded. And, you can depend
on seeing a wide selection of
vintage
postcards as well as country store products, old west items, Mother
Road memorabilia and more. |
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