Document Type
Article
Publication Date
2020
Keywords
women's rights, homesteads, western history, legal history, marriage, marital desertion
Disciplines
Family Law | History of Gender | Law and Gender | Property Law and Real Estate | United States History | Women's History
Abstract
During the late nineteenth and early twentieth centuries, the federal government of the United States distributed 270 million acres of land to homesteaders. The federal land-grant legislation allowed single women, but not married women, to partake in homesteading. Existing in a “legal netherworld” between single and married, deserted wives did not have clear rights under the federal legislation, much like deserted wives did not have clear rights in American marital law. During the homesteading period, many deserted wives litigated claims in front of the Department of the Interior, arguing they had the right to homestead. This is the first article to collect and analyze the administrative decisions regarding the homesteading rights of deserted wives, offering a unique view of American marriage. After documenting the history of homesteading rights of deserted wives, this Article explores how these unique administrative decisions adopted or rejected the prevailing marital norms in America and how understanding these administrative decisions can aid in our understanding of marriage in American history.
Publication Title
Nebraska Law Review
Recommended Citation
Hannah Haksgaard, The Homesteading Rights of Deserted Wives: A History, 99 Neb. L. Rev. 419 (2020).
Included in
Family Law Commons, History of Gender Commons, Law and Gender Commons, Property Law and Real Estate Commons, United States History Commons, Women's History Commons