At sunset we came up out of the draw
to the crest of the ridge. Perched on the high
seat of the old spring wagon, we looked into a desolate
land which reached to the horizon on every side.
Prairie which had lain untouched since the Creation
save for buffalo and roving bands of Indians, its
brown grass scorched and crackling from the sun.
No trees to break the endless monotony or to provide
a moment’s respite from the sun.
The driver, sitting stooped over on
the front seat, half asleep, straightened up and looked
around, sizing up the vacant prairie.
“Well,” he announced, “I reckon
this might be it.”
But this couldn’t be it.
There was nothing but space, and sun-baked plains,
and the sun blazing down on our heads. My sister
pulled out the filing papers, looking for the description
the United States Land Office had given her:
Section 18, Range 77W about thirty miles
from Pierre, South Dakota.
“Three miles from the buffalo
waller,” our driver said, mumbling to himself,
ignoring the official location and looking back as
though measuring the distance with his eye. “Yeah,
right in here somewhere.”
“But,” faltered Ida Mary, “there
was to be a house
“Thar she is!” he announced,
pointing his long whip in the direction of the setting
sun. “See that shack over yonder?”
Whipping up the tired team with a
flick of the rawhide, he angled off across the trackless
prairie. One panic-stricken look at the black,
tar-papered shack, standing alone in that barren expanse,
and the last spark of our dwindling enthusiasm for
homesteading was snuffed out. The house, which
had seemed such an extraordinary stroke of luck when
we had heard of it, looked like a large but none too
substantial packing-box tossed haphazardly on the
prairie which crept in at its very door.
The driver stopped the team in front
of the shack, threw the lines to the ground, stretched
his long, lank frame over the wheel and began to unload
the baggage. He pushed open the unbolted door
with the grass grown up to the very sill, and set
the boxes and trunk inside. Grass. Dry,
yellow grass crackling under his feet.
“Here, why don’t you get
out?” he said sharply. “It’s
sundown and a long trip back to town.”
Automatically we obeyed. As Ida
Mary paid him the $20 fee, he stood there for a moment
sizing us up. Homesteaders were all in his day’s
work. They came. Some stayed to prove up
the land. Some didn’t. We wouldn’t.
“Don’t ’pear to
me like you gals are big enough to homestead.”
He took his own filled water jug from the wagon and
set it down at the door, thus expressing his compassion.
Then, as unconcerned as a taxi driver leaving his
passengers at a city door, he drove away, leaving us
alone.
Ida Mary and I fought down the impulse
to run after him, implore him to take us back with
him, not to leave us alone with the prairie and the
night, with nothing but the packing-box for shelter.
I think we were too overwhelmed by the magnitude of
our disaster even to ask for help.
We stared after him until the sudden
evening chill which comes with the dusk of the frontier
roused us to action.
Hesitantly we stepped over the low
sill of the little shack, feeling like intruders.
Ida Mary, who had been so proud of finding a claim
with a house already built, stared at it without a
word, her round, young face shadowed by the brim of
her straw hat drawn and tired.
It was a typical homestead shack,
about 10 x 12 feet, containing only one room, and
built of rough, foot-wide boards, with a small cellar
window on either side of the room. Like the walls,
the door was of wide boards. The whole house
was covered on the outside with tar paper. It
had obviously been put together with small concern
for the fine points of carpentry and none whatever
for appearance. It looked as though the first
wind would pick it up and send it flying through the
air.
It was as unprepossessing within as
it was outside. In one corner a homemade bunk
was fastened to the wall, with ropes criss-crossed
and run through holes in the 2 x 4 inch pieces of
lumber which formed the bed, to take the place of
springs. In another corner a rusty, two-hole oil
stove stood on a drygoods box; above it another box
with a shelf in it for a cupboard. Two rickety,
homemade chairs completed the furnishings.
We tried to tell ourselves that we
were lucky; shacks were not provided for homesteaders,
they had to build their own but Ida Mary
had succeeded in finding one not only ready built
but furnished as well. We did not deceive ourselves
or each other. We were frightened and homesick.
Whatever we had pictured in our imaginations, it bore
no resemblance to the tar-paper shack without creature
comforts; nor had we counted on the desolation of
prairie on which we were marooned.
Before darkness should shut us in,
we hurriedly scrambled through our provisions for
a can of kerosene. Down in the trunk was a small
lamp. We got it out and filled it. And then
we faced each other, speechless, each knowing the
other’s fear afraid to voice it.
Matches! They had not been on our list.
I fumbled hastily through the old box cupboard with
its few dust-covered odds and ends. Back in a
corner was an old tobacco can. Something rattled
lightly as I picked it up matches!
We were too weary to light a fire.
On a trunk which we used as a table, we spread a cold
lunch, tried to swallow a few bites and gave it up.
The empty space and the black night had swallowed
us up.
“We might as well go to bed,” said Ida
Mary dully.
“We’ll start back home
in the morning,” I declared, “as soon as
it is daylight.”
Oddly enough, we had never questioned
the impulse which led two young city girls to go alone
into unsettled land, homesteading. Our people
had been pioneers, always among those who pushed back
the frontier. The Ammonses had come up from Tennessee
into Illinois in the early days and cleared the timberland
along the Mississippi Valley some forty miles out
of St. Louis. They built their houses of the hand-hewn
logs and became land and stock owners. They were
not sturdy pioneers, but they were tenacious.
Some of them went on into what Grandma
Ammons called the Santa Fe Bottoms, a low marshy country
along the river, where they became wealthy or
well-to-do, at least by fattening droves
of hogs on acorns. Generally speaking, my mother’s
family ran to professions, and my father’s family
to land. Though there was father’s cousin,
Jack Hunter, who had been west and when he came to
visit us now and then told wild tales about the frontier
to which my sister and I as little children listened
wide-eyed. He wove glowing accounts of the range
country where he was going to make a million dollars
raising cattle. Cousin Jack always talked big.
It was from his highly colored yarns
that we had learned all we knew of the West and
from the western magazines which pictured it as an
exciting place where people were mostly engaged in
shooting one another.
While Ida Mary and I were still very
young our mother died, and after that we divided our
time between our father’s home he
had married again and had a second family to take
care of and the home of his sister.
As a result my sister and I came to depend on ourselves
and on each other more than two girls of our age usually
do.
By the time we were old enough to
see that things were not going well financially at
home, we knew we must make our own way. Some of
the girls we knew talked about “going homesteading”
as a wild adventure. They boasted of friends
or relatives who had gone to live on a claim as though
they had gone lion-hunting in Africa or gold-hunting
in Alaska. A homestead. At first thought
the idea was absurd. We were both very young;
both unusually slight, anything but hardy pioneers;
and neither of us had the slightest knowledge of homesteading
conditions, or experience extending beyond the conventional,
sheltered life of the normal city girl in the first
decade of the century.
We were wholly unfitted for the frontier.
We had neither training nor physical stamina for roughing
it. When I tried to explain to an uncle of mine
that I wanted to go west, to make something of myself,
he retorted that “it was a hell of a place to
do it.” In spite of the discussion which
our decision occasioned, we made our plans, deciding
to risk the hazards of a raw country alone, cutting
ourselves off from the world of everyone and everything
we had ever known. And with little money to provide
against hardships and emergencies.
At that time the country was emerging
from the era of straggling settlers. Immigration
was moving west in a steady stream. The tidal
wave which swept the West from 1908 to the World War
was almost upon us although we could not see it then.
But, we thought, there would be new people, new interests,
and in the end 160 acres of land for Ida Mary.
Perhaps for me the health I had sought so unsuccessfully.
Primarily a quarter-section of land
was the reason for almost everyone coming west.
As people in the early pioneer days had talked of settling
in Nebraska and Kansas and the eastern Dakotas, they
now talked about the country lying farther on the
western Dakotas, Wyoming, Montana, Colorado.
Over the Midwest the homestead idea was spreading rapidly
to farm and hamlet and city. One heard a great
deal about families leaving their farms and going
west to get cheap land; of young college men who went
out to prove up a quarter-section. The land would
always be worth something, and the experience, even
for a short time, was a fruitful one in many ways.
To the public, however, not so romantically
inclined, the homesteaders were the peasantry of America.
Through the early homesteading days folk who “picked
up and set themselves down to grub on a piece of land”
were not of the world or important to it. But
the stream of immigration to the land was widening,
flowing steadily on.
How did one go about homesteading?
we asked. Well, all you had to do to get a deed
to a quarter-section 160 acres of land was
to file on it at the nearest Land Office, live on
it eight months, pay the government $1.25 an acre and
the land was yours. Easy as falling off a log!
The only improvement required by the
government was some sort of abode as proof that one
had made the land his bona-fide residence for the full
eight months.
What would that cost? And the
whole undertaking? It depended partly on what
kind of shack one built and whether he did it himself
or hired it done. A shack cost all the way from
$25 to $100 or more. Some of those who had families
and intended to stay, built cheap two-and three-room
houses.
Of course, it cost women who had to
hire things done more to homestead. But with
grub, fuel and other necessities we figured it would
cost not more than $500 all told.
Then we learned of this quarter-section
with a shack already built, bunk and all. It
had been filed on and the owner had left before proving-up
time so that the claim, shack and all, had reverted
to the government. We had about $300 saved up,
and this was enough, we decided, to cover homesteading
expenses, inasmuch as the shack was provided.
So we had all but the final payment of $200 to the
government, which would be due when we had “made
proof.”
We decided to let the money for that
final payment take care of itself. The thing
to do was to get hold of a piece of land before it
was all gone. To hear people talk, it was the
last day of grace to apply for a claim. They
talked like that for ten years. We did not know
there were several million acres lying out there between
the Missouri and the Pacific waiting to be settled.
We would have all winter to figure out how to prove
up. And we found that one could get $1000 to $1500
for a raw claim after getting a deed to it.
The claim with the shack on it was
in South Dakota, thirty miles from a town called Pierre.
We looked that up in the geography to make sure it
really existed. But when we tried to get detailed
information, facts and figures to help us prepare
for what was to come, we got only printed pamphlets
of rules and regulations which were of no real help
at all. Land Offices were so busy in those days
that all they could do was to send out a package of
printed information that no one could understand.
Armed with our meager array of facts,
we talked to our father as though the information
we gave him so glibly had any real bearing on this
precarious undertaking of his two young daughters.
Whatever his doubts and hesitations, he let us decide
for ourselves; it was only when we boarded the old
Bald Eagle at St. Louis one summer day in 1907, bound
up the river, that he clung to our hands as though
unable to let us go, saying, “I’m afraid
you are making a mistake. Take care of yourselves.”
“It will be all right,”
Ida Mary told him cheerfully. “It is only
for eight months. Nothing can happen in eight
months.”
The first emergency arose almost at
once. We started up the Mississippi in high spirits,
but by the time we reached Moline, Illinois, I was
taken from the boat on a stretcher the aftermath
of typhoid fever. It was bad enough to be ill,
it was worse to have an unexpected drain on our funds,
but worst of all was the fear that someone might file
on the claim ahead of us. For a week or ten days
I could not travel, but Ida Mary went ahead to attend
to the land-filing and the buying of supplies so that
we could start for the homestead as soon as I arrived.
The trip from Moline to Pierre I made
by train. Ida Mary was at the depot to meet me,
and at once we took a ferry across the river to Ft.
Pierre. The river was low and the ever-shifting
sandbars rose up to meet the skiffs. Ft.
Pierre was a typical frontier town, unkempt and unfinished,
its business buildings, hotel and stores, none of more
than two stories, on the wide dirt road called Main
Street. At one end of Main Street flowed the
old Missouri, at the other it branched off into trails
that lost themselves in the prairie.
Beyond Main Street the houses of the
little town were scattered, looking raw and new and
uncomfortable, most of them with small, sunburned,
stunted gardens. But there was nothing apologetic
about Ft. Pierre. “We’ve done
mighty well with what we’ve had to work with,”
was its attitude.
Section 18, Range 77W about
thirty miles from Pierre. It seemed more real
now. The hotel proprietor promised to find us
a claim locator to whom that cryptic number made sense.
The next morning at sun-up we were
on our way. At that hour the little homestead
town of Ft. Pierre lay quiet. Other homesteaders
were ready to start out: a farmer and his wife
from Wisconsin, who were busy sandwiching their four
children into a wagon already filled with immigrant
goods, a cow and horse tied on behind.
At a long table in the fly-specked
hotel dining room we ate flapjacks and fried potatoes
and drank strong coffee in big heavy cups. Then,
at long last, perched on the seat of the claim locator’s
high spring wagon, we jolted out of town, swerving
to let a stagecoach loaded with passengers whip past
us, waiting while a team of buffalo ambled past, and
finally jogged along the beaten road through the bad
lands outside of town.
Beyond the rough bad lands we came
upon the prairie. We traveled for miles along
a narrow, rutted road crossed now and then by dim trails
leading nowhere, it seemed. Our own road dwindled
to a rough trail, and the spring wagon lurched over
it while we clung to the sides to ease the constant
jolting, letting go to pull our hats over our eyes
which ached with the glare, or over the back of our
necks which were blistered from the sun.
Our frantic haste to arrive while
the land lasted seemed absurd now. There was
land enough for all who wanted it, and few enough to
claim it. All that weary day we saw no people
save in the distance a few homesteaders mowing strips
of the short dry grass for hay. Now and then
we passed a few head of horses and a cow grazing.
Here and there over the hot, dusty plain we saw shacks
and makeshift houses surrounded by patches of corn
or flax or dried-up garden. Why were the houses
so scattered, looking as though they had been thrown
down at random? “They had to be set on
the claims,” our locator said dryly.
About noon we stopped at a deserted
ranch house, surrounded by corrals a camp,
our driver explained, where some stockman held his
cattle overnight in driving them to market. Here
we ate a lunch and the locator fed and watered the
team, refilling the jars from an old well with its
long wooden water troughs.
There the trail ended. Now we
struck out over a trackless land that grew rougher
the farther we went. To look for a quarter-section
here was like looking for a needle in a haystack.
It was late summer and the sun beat down on the hot
prairie grass and upon our heads. We had driven
all day without sign of shade and save
for that brief interval at noon, without sight of
water. Our faces and hands were blistered, our
throats parched from the hot wind.
This was not the West as I had dreamed
of it, not the West even of banditry and violent action.
It was a desolate, forgotten land, without vegetation
save for the dry, crackling grass, without visible
tokens of fertility. Drab and gray and empty.
Stubborn, resisting land. Heroics wouldn’t
count for much here. It would take slow, back-breaking
labor, and time, and the action of the seasons to
make the prairie bloom. People had said this
was no place for two girls. It began to seem that
they were right.
And this was the goal of our long
journey the tar-paper shack. We pushed
the trunk over in front of the door which had no lock,
piled the chairs and suitcases on top of the trunk;
spread a comfort over the criss-cross rope bed and
threw ourselves across it without undressing.
We had no gun or other weapon for protection and were
not brave enough to use one had we possessed it.
The little cellar windows which stood
halfway between the low ceiling and the floor were
nailed shut. But we needed neither window nor
door, so far as air was concerned. It poured
through the wide cracks like water through a sieve.
While we tossed, too tired and sick
at heart to sleep, I asked: “What became
of the young man who built this shack?”
“He lived here only a few weeks
and abandoned it,” Ida Mary explained.
“The claim reverted to the government, shack,
bunk and all. He couldn’t stick it out.”
The next morning we awoke to a world
flooded with sunshine, and it was the surprise of
our lives that we had lived to see it.
Ida started the oil stove and put
on the coffee. Wearily I dragged myself out of
bed. We fried bacon, made toast, unpacked our
few dishes. Discovering that a hinged shelf on
the wall was intended for a table, we put it up and
set our breakfast on it. We found that we were
really hungry.
Our determination to start back home
was still unshaken, but we had reckoned without the
prairies. We were marooned as on a desert island.
And more pressing, even, than some way of getting back
to Pierre and home was the need
for water. We must get a jug of water somewhere.
Water didn’t come from a tap on the prairies.
We began to wonder where it did come from; certainly
there wasn’t a drop to be found on Ida Mary’s
claim.
In the glaring morning sun which blazed
on the earth, we saw a shack in the distance, the
reflection of the sun on yellow boards. It was
farther away than it appeared to be with the bright
light against it.
This new home was larger than the
regulation shack, and it had a gable a
low-pitched roof which in itself was a symbol
of permanence in contrast to the temporary huts that
dotted the plains. It was made of tongue-and-groove
drop-siding, which did away with the need of tar paper,
and in the homestead country marked a man’s prestige
and solidity.
We were met at the open door by a
pretty, plump young woman. A little girl of seven
stood quietly at one side, and a little boy, perhaps
five, at the other. As we stood there with the
jug she broke into a pleasant laugh. “You’ve
come for water! We have no well, but Huey hauled
two barrels this morning from Crooks’s, several
miles away.”
We were led into a large room, clean
and cool. After one has been in a low, slant-roofed,
tar-papered shack that becomes an oven when the sun
shines on it, entering a house with a gable is almost
like going into a refrigerator. There wasn’t
much in the room except beds and a sewing machine.
The floor, on which a smaller child was playing, was
bare except for a few rag rugs, but shining.
An opening led into a small lean-to kitchen with a
range in one corner; in the other a large square table
spread with a checked tablecloth was set ready for
the next meal, and covered with a mosquito bar.
The home, the family, gave one a feeling of coming
to anchor in a sea of grass and sky.
We learned that the name was Dunn
and that they were dirt farmers from Iowa, but they
had not come in time to do much farming that season.
They had thrown up a makeshift barn as a temporary
shelter for the horses and one cow until they could
build a real barn after they found out what
the soil would do, Mrs. Dunn explained.
She hurried out to the kitchen, talking
as she moved about, and came in with coffee and a
plate of oatmeal cookies.
“I am so glad you are going
to live here,” she told us. “Neighbors
within a mile and a half! I won’t feel so
much alone with neighbors close by to chat with.”
We hadn’t the courage to tell
her that we weren’t going to stay.
“You must have found the shack
dirty,” she said, with a glance at her spotless
house. “A bachelor homesteader had it and
they are always the worst. They wait until the
floor is thick with dirt and grease and then spread
newspapers over it to cover up the dirt. You’ll
have a time getting it fixed as you want it.”
We wondered how anyone made a home
of a tar-paper shack. To hear Mrs. Dunn’s
casual remarks, one would think it no more of a problem
than redecorating a city home.
As we started on the trek back, she
called after us, “Huey will haul you over a
keg of water tomorrow.”
As soon as we were out of earshot
I said, “We can hire Mr. Dunn to take us back
to Pierre.”
“That’s an idea,” Ida Mary agreed.
By the time we had walked back the
mile and a half which seemed five in the
scorching heat it was past noon and we were
completely exhausted. So we did not get started
back to Pierre that day. But we felt a little
easier. There was a way to get out.