That was minimum size habitable dwelling required for "Prove-Up" if you were homesteading under the (1883) Federal Homesteading Act.
How big is the family?That was minimum size habitable dwelling required for "Prove-Up" if you were homesteading under the (1883) Federal Homesteading Act.
That was the minimum required size. You could build a larger home. Many people did build a very small home to meet the requirements to prove up on their homestead. Later, when they built a larger home, that small home became a chicken coop.It did not matter. You could build larger, but if you wanted that land for free, one of the several requirements, was a dwelling 120 square feet.
My mother and her older sister and brother were born in a reclaimed chicken coop.That was the minimum required size. You could build a larger home. Many people did build a small very small home to meet the requirements to prove up on their homestead. Later, when they build a larger home, that small home became a chicken coop.
I've been looking for a Nebraska history story of someone who had a dug out, home dug out of the side of a hill. I think it was 18 by 18 and had about that many people who lived in it over a winter. It didn't have a door! Nebraska can be brutal in the winter.
I remember the old homestead cabins out in the Mojave desert around 29 Palms and north to around California City. Pretty tough living.This act I believe began just after WWII, in 1945 or 1946. It is a far cry from the earlier Homestead Act of 1862.
The old homestead act in California offered you 5 free acres, provided you built a 10' x 10' structure, and made $500 annual improvements.
120 sq ft is a 10' x 12', so very similar with California Homestead act.
And those homestead homes still exist. Im guessing maybe one out of 500 are still occupied, and the rest are just abandoned shells.I remember the old homestead cabins out in the Mojave desert around 29 Palms and north to around California City. Pretty tough living.
In the desert, they often built with stone or brick. That would last longer than wood. I know that my gg grandparents had a sod home in Nebraska. I drove by their homestead a few years ago, and the sod is gone, probably plowed back into a field, but a wooden home is still there, and the farm is still active with people living there.And those homestead homes still exist. Im guessing maybe one out of 500 are still occupied, and the rest are just abandoned shells.
Your current property was either homesteaded by someone, or it was a "Land Grant" to someone.NO TAKING THE FREE!! Free = they own you! Stop feeling like you have to take care of everyone else! I don't have kids......I do have my precious animals!! I would never take FREE!! IT'S NOT FREE!!
I sure wish there was land to homestead now, even if it were only a few acres.When the Federal Homesteading was closed in the mid 1970's Alaska (the State of) started more State of Alaska homesteading on State land. In many ways it was a better deal than the Federal Act.
my families original land grant was in year 1795 for 75k acres...its on the state books still. much of it is in national forest now.Your current property was either homesteaded by someone, or it was a "Land Grant" to someone.
It was not FREE, you purchased it with very hard and dangerous MANUAL LABOR.NO TAKING THE FREE!! Free = they own you!
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