By Patrick Grady
This article is a summary of a presentation Patrick Grady will make at the Tenth Annual Western History Symposium that will be held at the Hassayampa Inn on August 3rd. The Symposium is co-sponsored by the Prescott Corral of Westerners and the Sharlot Hall Museum and is open to the public free of charge. For more details, visit the Corral’s website atwww.prescorral.org or call Fred Veil (928-443-5580).
HOMESTEADING. The word evokes visions of sod houses in Nebraska or the fabled Oklahoma land rush or the novels of Laura Ingalls Wilder. But what about the desert and mountain regions of Arizona Territory? Homesteading is often ignored in the stories of the settlement of Arizona. While historians have generally downplayed the overall impact of the 1862 Homestead Act on western migration, an estimated 1.7 million homesteaders found opportunity that might otherwise have eluded them, successfully claiming 270 million acres.
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