About Homestead Diaries
Homestead Diaries retells the settling of the Great Plains the way the homesteaders lived it — one claim, one family, one sod house at a time. Each entry follows a single homestead from the day the claim was filed through the first winter to the five-year struggle to "prove up," drawn from the diaries, letters, land patents, and reminiscences they left behind.
What you'll find here
- Families who answered the Homestead Act's promise of 160 free acres
- The land runs that opened millions of acres in a single afternoon
- Sod houses, dugouts, and the long first winter on the open plains
- Drought, grasshoppers, prairie fire, and the Dust Bowl that drove them off
- The Black "Exoduster" colonies, the women who homesteaded alone, and the land the Act was carved from
Every entry follows the same shape: a summary, a dated timeline, "The Claim," "Building In," and "Proving Up," then the factors that decided their fate, "What's There Now," and the lessons — sourced from real diaries, land records, county histories, and archives.
The Homestead Act handed out 270 million acres and broke as many dreams as it made. Telling it one claim at a time is how you see both the promise and the price of the open land.
Sister sites
Homestead Diaries is part of Frontier Diaries — a family of sites about the people who went west: