The photo shows the part of the 320 acres of land that Sadie, my grandmother, obtained by homesteading in Montana, beginning in 1911. The land is now owned by my brother.
Here is the final part of the short memoir that Sadie wrote about her homesteading experience:
I often feel like the Oscar winners when they receive their Oscars. I could not have done my homesteading if it had not been for all of the good people that helped me. People invited me into their homes, they loaned me horses, and hauled water to me. Water was a problem as wells could not be found very often. In winter I melted snow and in summer I carried water from reservoirs. This water was full of little crawling creatures and had to be strained and boiled.
I remember the time after a big blizzard, I looked out of the window and saw a lone rider coming down the lane. He said his wife could not sleep because she knew there was a young woman down there alone and she was afraid I needed something I assured him there was nothing I needed and he wended his way back through the drifted snow. It warmed my heart. It was a wonderful gesture that someone cared that much for someone that they did not know or had never seen.
(Although Sadie never wrote it in this memoir, she once told us that during those frigid winter’s nights, she would often sleep with potatoes under the covers to keep them from freezing.)
I had an outside cellar and one day during harvesting, I was going in for something and I heard a rustle. Looking down I saw a large rattler. I took one leap and was out of the cellar. I went into the cabin and told the girls who were helping me feed the harvesters. On of the girls was real brave. She said she was not afraid to go in. She started down the steps and she not only saw one snake, but two. It did not take her long to get out. I closed the cellar door forever and decided the snakes wanted it more than I did.
I had traveled back to South Dakota for Christmas, on my last leave of absence and returned to Montana in a blizzard. When the train reached Havre, the thermometer had dropped “out of sight” so the conductor told us. I stopped at Great Falls to go to the land office to announce my return then went out to Floweree where I was to pick up some of my belongings that Gertrude Trackwell had borrowed, since she had just filed a claim. They dropped me off me at my cabin and left.
When I went in to make my bed, I discovered someone had entered my cabin and stolen all of my bedding. I had to sit up all night and keep my little stove red hot to keep from freezing to death, as it was bitter cold. I walked to the neighbors the next day and remained there until I could get to Great Falls and purchase more bedding.
I regretted losing my army blankets that kept me so warm no matter how cold it was. Thats was in February and in May of that year, (1914) I “proved up” on my homestead and the land officially became mine. You will remember it was to have been five years, but thanks to new legislation that had been passed, the required residency time was reduced to three years.
The day came when I had to say goodbye to all of the fine friends I had made and we knew that we probably would never see each other again. I returned home to South Dakota to a very proud father. My homesteading experience made all that would later come in my life, easy.