Homesteaders, Heroines and Hell-Raisers
True West|July - August 2020
It was a century ago that American women were granted suffrage, but they had been proving their equality in the settlement of the West long before.
STUART ROSEBROOK
Homesteaders, Heroines and Hell-Raisers

“It is curious how quickly one’s animal instinct of survival comes to the fore in primitive lands,” recalled Edith Eudora Kohl in her homesteading memoir Land of the Burnt Thigh: A Lively Story of Women Homesteaders on the South Dakota Frontier. The year was 1907, and Edith and her sister Ida Mary had settled on their homestead claim 30 miles southeast of Pierre. “It was a frontier saying that homesteading was a gamble: ‘Yeah, the United States government is betting you 160 acres of land that you can’t live on it eight months.’ Ida and I weren’t betting; we were holding on, living down to the grassroots. The big problem was no longer how to get off the homestead, but how to keep soul and body together on it.”

Edith and Ida weren’t the first or the last single women 21 years old or older to try their hands at—and be challenged by—homesteading Western lands. The 1862 Homestead Act—and later the Kincaid Act of 1904 that doubled the homestead from 160 to 320 acres—gave single, widowed, divorced, and abandoned women the right to homestead. And they did it successfully at a greater rate than men.

Homesteading proved to be an acceptable enterprise for single women (married women could keep their claims after marriage) in the West, and those who settled the West outside of homesteading or were married had fewer rights under the law and in the courts.

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