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Don't Blame the RRs
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<P>[quote user="futuremodal"] How many farmers received land grants? </P> <P> [/quote]</P> <P>[quote user="Murphy Siding"]</P> <P> How many? Literally thousands of farmers did. Around here, they called it homesteading. What did they call it there?</P> <P>[/quote]</P> <P>[quote user="JOdom"]</P> <P>Wasn't massive, but one of my ancestors did. In 1851. In south Georgia. I imagine most of his neighbors did, too.</P> <P>[/quote]</P> <P>[quote user="Limitedclear"]</P> <P>Seems to me that many settlers of our western states did indeed receive massive land grants from the Federal and in some cases (California) state land grants to settle and cultivate vast lands.</P> <P>[/quote]</P> <P>Ya know, it's so elementary - you just bait the hook, cast your line, and wait patiently.</P> <P>First time I've ever caught three at once, though![swg]</P> <P>Homestead lands and railroad land grants were two different things. With homesteading, the farmer had to make his living off that land, a measley 160 acres, and if he failed (as many did), the land went up for auction by the revenuers.</P> <P>The land was the farmer's sole source of income for the most part. No one in their right mind would call it a "land grant" because it wasn't.</P> <P>With the railroad land grants, the land itself was mainly used to provide collateral for construction bonds The rest was kept as future collateral, basically banked right up until just recently by most of the railroad companies. The land itself was not meant to provide a sole source of revenue for the railroads, rather incentive for construction of the lines themselves. Little if any of the railroad land grants were ever reaquired by the feds via seizure and auction.</P> <P>Hmmmmm, 160 acres is some kind of moral equivalent to the millions of acres of railroad land grants per company?</P> <P>Nice try, rookies.</P>
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