Today in History

History & Celebrations Today – May 20

Celebrations Today – May 20

Holidays and observances

Celebrations Today – USA: May 20

National Be a Millionaire Day
National Pick Strawberries Day
National Quiche Lorraine Day
National Armed Forces Day – Third Saturday in May
National Learn to Swim Day – Third Saturday in May
National Eliza Doolittle Day
National Weights and Measures Day
World Autoimmune Arthritis Day

Today in US History: May 20

The Homestead Act

President Abraham Lincoln signed the Homestead Act on May 20, 1862. The act provided settlers with 160 acres of surveyed public land after payment of a filing fee and five years of continuous residence. Designed to spur Western migration, the Homestead Act culminated a twenty-year battle to distribute public lands to citizens willing to farm. Concerned that free land would lower property values and reduce the cheap labor supply, Northern businessmen opposed the act. Unlikely allies, Southerners feared homesteaders would add their voices to the call for abolition of slavery. With Southerners out of the picture in 1862, the legislation finally passed.


John Bakken Sod House, Milton, North Dakota,
John McCarthy, photographer, ca. 1895.
The Northern Great Plains, 1880-1920: Photographs from the Fred Hultstrand and F. A. Pazandak Photograph Collections


The Homestead Act, 1862-1962 Commemorative Stamp, 4 Cents, U.S. Postage,
Charles R. Chickering, designer, Matthew D. Fenton, engraver, 1962.
The Northern Great Plains, 1880-1920: Photographs from the Fred Hultstrand and F. A. Pazandak Photograph Collections

The Homestead Act commemorative stamp, based on a photograph by John McCarthy, was released at Beatrice, Nebraska, on May 20, 1962. The picture also was used by Norway on its 1975 postage stamp commemorating the sesquicentennial of Norwegian emigration to America.

By 1900, homesteaders had filed 600,000 claims for 80 million acres. Most pioneers settled in the Western Plains states. Experienced farm workers from other states or Europe, they abandoned family and community ties for the isolation of pioneer life gambling that conditions would favor prosperity. Louise Lane Trace was sixteen when her family arrived in Nebraska. After navigating a series of disasters, they reached their homestead in the spring of 1866. Over seventy years later, WPA interviewer George Wartman recorded Mrs. Trace’s memories of that difficult time:

Mr. Lane had arrived at his homestead with 30 head of cattle and several horses. He put out sod corn which gave all indication of being a wonderful crop, but the grasshoppers took the entire crop. There was an abundance of wild grass, but no way to harvest it. After winter set in with no feed for the stock they commenced to suffer. The horses became so weak from starvation [that?] they were not fit for traveling so Mr. Lane would walk 15 miles to what they called the “Dutch Settlement” and now known as Swanton, pay $2.00 per bushel for corn and carry a sack full on his shoulder making a thirty mile-round-trip for one sack of corn.”Mrs. Wm. Trace,” Lincoln, Nebraska, November 29, 1938.
American Life Histories, 1936-1940

Charity Couch and her husband filed their homestead claim near the South Platte River in western Nebraska nearly twenty years later. Yet, the prairie remained an isolated place. Her WPA interviewer noted:

Mrs. Couch says she scarcely dared step outside the yard because there were so many long horned cattle and there were no neighbors between their place and Ogallala except the old Searle Ranch. There was no school for a year or so as their were no children in the district, and no social gatherings at that time such as church, Sunday school, literary, or dances, as people lived too far apart. There were a few buffalo, deer, antelope and gray wolves, and also large numbers of wild fowl such as prairie chickens, grouse, geese, and ducks.”Charity B. Couch,” Ogallala, Nebraska, November 16, 1938.
American Life Histories, 1936-1940


Longhorn Cattle, Ninety-Six Ranch (Home Ranch), Paradise Valley, Nevada,
Carl Fleischhauer, photographer, May 1978.
Buckaroos in Paradise

Prosperous ranchers, the Couch family added to their original homestead, eventually accumulating 1,800 acres. Like farming, successful ranching required hard work and more than a little luck. Nevertheless with ready access to railroads and a rising demand for beef, ranches proliferated across the Plains states. Between 1860 and 1880, cattle in Kansas, Nebraska, Colorado, Wyoming, Montana, and Dakota increased from 130,000 to 4.5 million head.


Daniel Freeman Standing, Holding Gun, with Hatchet Tucked in Belt,
The “first homesteader” to settle in Beatrice, Nebraska, 1863, copyright 1904.
Prints & Photographs Online Catalog

Use the American Memory collections to learn more about Western settlement:

Today in History – May 20-External Links

Today’s Weather in History
Today in Earthquake History
This Day in Naval History
Today’s Document from the National Archives
Today’s Events, Births & Deaths –Wikipedia
Today in History by AP
On this Day -1950 to 2005 – Today’s Story–BBC
On This Day: The New York Times
This Day in History –History.com
Today in Canadian History – Canada Channel
History of Britain that took place On This Day
Russia in History –Russiapedia

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