homesteading

The New Deal split Wyoming's federal policy in two. In the west, the Taylor Grazing Act of 1934 brought public range under federal regulation, creating grazing districts and permits that permanently reshaped grazing rights. In the east, federal programs deemed homesteaded Great Plains land unfit for farming and worked to resettle its residents.

In 1890 Confederate veteran Frank Nevin established a small, 160-acre homestead southeast of Rawlins. As the old open-range system was fast disappearing, he and his family grew vegetables and ran small herds of cattle and sheep. Archaeological excavations at the site have provided provide rich information about these changing times on the range.

In 1909, Elinore Pruitt answered Burntfork, Wyo. rancher Clyde Stewart’s Denver Post ad for a housekeeper. She soon married Stewart and achieved her dream of becoming a homesteader. Her vivid letters about her experiences were published in the book Letters of a Woman Homesteader, bringing her nationwide fame.