 |
Grayson
County
TXGenWeb
Records |
CLAIMING
THEIR LAND : WOMEN HOMESTEADERS IN TEXAS
by Florence
C. Gould & Patricia N. Pando
El Paso,
Texas : University of Texas at El Paso,
c1991
(Note from
Grayson County CC-Check here for
what 'Homestead' information meant
for Texas.
Texas was
unlike other states)
Individual
women had obtained grants of land from
the Republic of Mexico, male
impresarios, and the Republic of Texas.
Only during statehood, 1845 -
1898, women and men could file claims
for "homesteads" in Texas.
The Homestead act of May 20, 1862
allowed a maximum of 160 acres to anyone
staking a homestead. Those who
qualified were heads of households or a
person over 21 years of age; they had to
reside on the land for 5 years, make
improvements to the land, and file for a
patent of ownership.
Married women who were heads or
households and single women qualified
under Federal Law.
Texas kept is public lands when it
entered the Union in 1845.
According to the Constitution of
the Republic of Texas, everyone in Texas
on or before the date of March 2, 1836,
excluding Indians ad Blacks, who had not
refused military service was entitled to
land under a First Class Headright;
bounty grants were also given to men who
had fought in the war for independence
and their heirs.
The Texas
Homestead Law of 1866 allowed only
white settlers that were the head of a
family or a person 21 years or older
to qualify to file homestead claims.
By 1870 the law stated that
"every head of a family and single men
over the age of 21 were allowed to
claim a homestead in Texas. The
Constitution of 1876 lowered the age
for single men to 18 years of age or
older. In 1898 the Texas State
Supreme Court ruled that there was no
more vacant public land available.
Late 19th century
women were bound as strongly by social
practice as by statutory law.
Social etiquette required the
woman and older female daughters of
the house to perform the household
duties and abide by the decisions of
the male had of the household
Early Texas census records show
that a woman was rarely listed as
having an occupation other than
"keeping house - KH" even when they
appeared on the census as the head of
the household. Some women would
not be shown with an occupation
(usually widows) while a son in his
late teens or 20s would have the
occupation of "farmer".
WOMEN CLAIMANTS, 1845 - 1869
| NAME |
COUNTY |
CLAIM SIZE |
LAND DISTRICT |
FILE NO. |
|
|
|
|
|
| Fitzgerald, Nancy |
Fannin |
160 acres |
Fannin |
2155 |
|
|
|
|
|
| Rich, Elizabeth |
Grayson |
160 acres |
Fannin |
2249 |
|
|
|
|
|
| Self, Catherine |
Fannin |
76.8 acres |
Fannin |
3280 |
| Sperman,
Elizabeth |
Grayson |
128.5 acres |
Fannin |
1960 |
WOMEN CLAIMANTS, 1870 - 1898
| NAME |
COUNTY |
CLAIM SIZE |
LAND DISTRICT |
FILE NO. |
|
|
|
|
|
| Anderson, Mary A |
Grayson |
160 acres |
Fannin |
33 |
|
Susan
Hawkins
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