A Glimpse at Simple Homesteading Life in the 1800s

MoonShadows

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Homestead Farming Was Not for the Faint of Heart

There are numerous diaries that have been left behind by the folks who “traveled West” and the hardships of simple homesteading they endured; as well as diaries of those who “stayed behind” in the civilized world of chamber pots and chimney fires. Reading these diaries gives a very good insight into how people lived.

Are you interested in the day-to-day life of agrarian people as opposed to those who live in the city? If so—I recommend becoming a homesteader without electricity, power tools or indoor plumbing.

Also take away modern medicine, familiarize yourself with a healing herbs list and learn to recognize gangrene. Go to the grocery store for only flour, coffee and sugar. Grow your own linen (hemp is preferable to flax for durability and comfort), and wool. Simple homesteading of this era means you learn how to knit, spin and weave, and use only your own feet (or those of a horse) for transportation. Dig your own well, do your own blacksmithing and starve in the winter when you’ve had a bad crop year.

If you truly want to try life in the 1800s, be expected to have 18-20 children, all born at home, and have half of them die before the age of five because of dysentery, typhoid, scarlet fever or measles. Be prepared to get up with the sun and read by the light of your drafty fireplace. (Yes, the Franklin stove was invented in the late 1700s, but it weighed so much, most folks who went west didn’t take it with them. Of course, if you stayed in one of the “big” cities, you would have access to whale oil or kerosene for your lights.)

Be prepared to slaughter pigs and use everything except the “oink.” (Think pickled pig’s feet.) And you had better spend all day Sunday at church.

Let’s see—what else—oh yes, hygiene. It didn’t exist. There was usually a pan with water in it (that you carried from the well in a bucket) for rinsing your fingers before meals and washing your face in the morning. Everyone washed in the same basin of water. There was one bathtub full of water that everyone used for their Saturday night baths.

And ladies—would you like to know the origin of the phrase “on the rag?” Just one of the many uses of the rag bag. I heard a nurse tell a story that happened in 1950. An old “bachelor farmer” came into the hospital and had to have both pair of long johns cut off him. He had had them on so long, his hair was growing through them.

Babies wore cloth diapers (if they wore anything at all) and the diapers had to be boiled before hung on the line to dry. Yes, even in the winter. You’d hang them out so they froze, take them down and snap them so the water crystals would fly out, then bring them in and hang them from rope you strung from one side of the house to the other.

Clothes for the rest of the family? One dress for momma for church, and one dress for the rest of the week. One pair of pants and a shirt for poppa for church, and one outfit for him for the rest of the week.

The rest of the simple homesteading family— hand-me-downs. Clothes were remade and remade and remade until they ended up in the rag bag. Remember those funny pictures of baby boys wearing dresses? Yup! The ultimate in recycling. By the way ladies—there’s no underwear from the waist down—but there are chemise, corsets, corset covers, and then a blouse on top, and the skirts were multi layered—up to 16 layers.

Animal husbandry for simple homesteading? You’d better like being pecked by chickens, trying to solve mastitis without antibiotics, treating thrush (on your horses feet) with iodine, and trimming the hooves of everything that walks. Roosters need their spurs clipped, dogs need their claws shortened and so do cows, goats, horses, sheep and just about anything else you can think of except fish.

Don’t forget you should not drink water that is “downriver” from where the animals drink. And if you want your animals to work for you, they need to be fed before you are. You had better have good neighbors to swap seed and semen with. Remember, this is before artificial insemination and top seed companies. And animals are dangerous. Just because they are cute, doesn’t mean they are safe. Horses kick and bite. Bulls can gore you. A pig will eat you. Roosters’ spurs are sharp. I do hope you know how to sew up cuts and have alcohol (that you made yourself) to wash out wounds.

Housing. If you are living like a “pioneer,” expect a drafty cold house with snow on the bed, no glass in the windows and two rooms. One room is the bedroom, the other is for all other functions, including mending the harness, sharpening and oiling your tools, spinning and weaving, cooking and relaxing in the evening.

If you were smart, you put in a loft (heat rises). Up there you will find two beds. One bed is for mom and dad and the baby, and the other bed is for everyone else. Half the heads on the pillows at the “head” of the bed and half the heads on the pillows at the “foot” of the bed. The bed will have ropes tied about every foot going across, and three or four ropes going from head to food. This is your “box spring.” Your mattress will be a piece of thick cloth (ticking) that is stuffed with straw or cornhusks or something of that ilk. The featherbed (if there is one) goes on top to keep you warm.

If you are “city folk,” instead of simple homesteading you’ll have curtains around your bed to help keep body warmth in. You might be smart enough to make a house that has good chinking between the logs. In which case, you have to worry about “cabin fever”—which is really another name for carbon dioxide poisoning, because you haven’t opened the door enough to bring in oxygen after the fire and all the people use it all up.

Here’s something else you can do in your spare time—boiling the horns from the cows so they can be flattened and used to make into spoons and the “glass” in the lantern. That’s after you oil and mend all the harnesses, clean all the glass lanterns of their soot, and drop a live chicken down the chimney to break loose all the creosote. (Yes—I know folks who do it.)

Cooking. If you are living “out west,” you’ll be using dried buffalo dung for fuel. If you happen to live where there is plentiful wood, you get to chop down trees. As in, with an ax. There are saws, but most of them take two people. Look up bucksaw and “Swede” saw. Then you hitch up your horses to haul it out of the woods, chop it into smaller pieces, stack it and haul it into the house whenever you need heat. (Cooking, keeping warm, keeping the wool warm so it will spin, etc.) Ten cords of wood should last you a winter. A cord is 8′ x 8′ x 4′. With a chainsaw it takes me two weeks solid to cut 10 cords.

And the only food you have is what you grow or kill. If there is a drought, or a flood, or the locusts hit your garden, or you get sick and can’t carry the water from the well to water the garden, you’re going to go hungry. By the way, you will probably only have two or three metal pans, a Dutch oven (or something that can be covered with coals), a frying pan and a boiling pan. (For 17 people, remember). In simple homesteading, lots of cooking is done in crockery or wrapped in leaves and stuck in the coals.

Expect to eat a lot of soup, especially for breakfast. And if it’s before the time of Napoleon, nothing canned. It’s all fresh, dried, salted, or fermented (think sauerkraut). Hopefully you have dug yourself a well wide enough you can keep stuff cool if you don’t have a springhouse or a root cellar. One of the reasons to make cheese is to use up all the milk you ended up with by milking by hand—after you weaned the calves. Another chore that isn’t fun—flour. If you grow your own grain, you’d better know the difference between a snath and a blade and how to sharpen the latter.

Have we talked about shoes yet? Before the American Civil War there were no “left” and “right” shoes. Or rather, they weren’t made that way, but after wearing them often enough, they developed “left” and “right.” The country songs that talk about getting a “brand new pair” when the kids go off to school is pretty accurate—for the 20th century. Before that, you went barefoot most of the year. If you lived in the city and were a lady, you had satin slippers to go dancing in. Yes, satin material. No insole. No sole. Just a piece of satin material sewn into a slipper shape.

By the way, did I discuss disease yet? You know all those vaccines that are pushed on you as a child? All those were diseases that killed or crippled. Polio, measles, mumps, chicken pox, small pox, influenza, diphtheria, tetanus, typhoid, whooping cough, trench mouth, milk fever, goiters, warts and worms. All those and all the “little” problems that we face such as arthritis, heart attacks, and diabetes, were out there with no cure. But there was opium!

Because of the high death rate among children, the “average” life span was 35. If you survived childhood, you had a good chance of living to be 60 or even 70. But by that time you were so worn out by all the work, you were ready. By the time you were 40 your skin was very wrinkled, you had lost most of your teeth, and every joint hurt—all the time.

Yup, life in the 1800s: the “good old days.” I’ll stick with homesteading today.
 

Mini Horses

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Well, you are up early and either posting a "read" or reporting from one! You either had a bad "homesteading" day yesterday or you will today -- or exceptional one as you use your power tools :p This is real "food for thought".

When people say "homestead" now, it generally refers to doing far more off grid with mostly no electric, maybe no heavy equipment (tractors, etc) but, MOSTLY no electric & more self-sufficiency with raising own foods. And that is extreme for many. It is a test for most to just "homestead" by raising all of their own foods using most of today's "benefits" and learning some older ways.

Reading this truly shows what our ancestors endured to just live!

Just 60 years ago I remember my grandparents lived with no electric, kero lights, wood stoves to heat & cook. Hand cut wood -- they had a crosscut saw! Plowed garden with a horse, milked cow, made butter, had chickens (eggs & meat), sometimes a pig, always venison, coon, rabbit, all hunted & canned, butchered at home (I held rabbits up by hind legs for skinning/gutting-- my reward was the fluffy tail). The cellar was full of water canned foods....carefully hand hoed and prepped, canned all summer. Nuts & fruits foraged. A bucket lowered into hand dug well. Yes, water heated for clothes washing & any bathing. The proverbial wash basin on front porch -- right outside kitchen so you could get hot water. They could each have clean water :cool: so, almost "upper class". They had gotten to point of being able to walk or bum a ride to a store & bought flour, salt, sugar, coffee. No car. Quilts were heavy to keep warm at night in a non-insulated house -- hand fans for summer heat. Outdoor privy. Ahhhhhhh, good old days!! :idunno

I am of the opinion that I prefer to "know how & be prepared" for life with far, far less than I have (survival)....but, sure not wanting to regress as far as this read defines "homesteading".
 

MoonShadows

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Always up early...usually about 3:30am. Good day yesterday. Got half the back field cut, planted some vegetable seeds destined for the Fall in the greenhouse, and got a few more slates down on the greenhouse floor...a backbreaker when trying to lift them and place them while on my knees. Also, got some of the cases of jams and salsas ready for a 2 day craft show we have this weekend.

I found that article while surfing around the internet...something I do with my coffee early in the morning after I check out the news. It reminded me a lot of the stories my father used to tell me about growing up on the farm. Somewhere I have a pic of him as a young boy with a few of his siblings in front of the farmhouse, all in ragged clothes, dirty faces from playing or working, and barefoot.
 

baymule

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I liked reading that article. It's practically the way my father was brought up, only there were cars. Not many, but there were cars. He was born in 1919 and his father was a sharecropper. Poorest of the poor.

I like my electricity. Could I live without it? Yes, but I'd rather flip a switch than light a stinking kerosene lamp. That said, I have kerosene lamps and can walk in the dark to a box of matches. That's why old houses have no closets, they didn't have anything to put in one.
 

canesisters

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I have said over and over again how aware and thankful I am that my garden is a hobby and not the single source of food for my family. How many days have I complained that my air-conditioned house was 'too warm' to run the canner and lost half a basket of tomatoes that ended up as chicken feed?
I remind myself constantly how blessed I am to be learning the 'old wisdom' AND have access to modern technology.
 

Mini Horses

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I suppose it is all in how one processes the information being presented. Personally I did not feel it derogatory, rather more factual than many want to hear, especially since it states that much of this was taken from diaries left by those who were a part of the settling of the West. We know for a fact that many died of starvation, disease and such (as was stated here) from historical finds at archeological sites. Most did not live long lives then, as shown with bone scans from many grave sites. Life was just too hard. We are talking the 1800's in this article.

It seems a valid recap of the terrible extremes that these pioneers had to endure to just live from day to day. IMO there are many worse things that were left out of the script. Times were unforgiving and life was very, very hard. These people were not stupid, they found ways to perform work that we would shake our heads at now!! My hat is off to them. For me it was a read of their very real trials and life circumstances.

BeeKissed, you make a good point about staying busy and out of trouble. There wasn't much free time for trouble then. And there were NO hospitals or laboratories for the medical issues we see now. And our world is not perfect now. That only comes when you are transported Home, as you know.

You are right, doing without many of our conveniences is "no big deal" for some, inconvenient for others, & life threatening for others. I believe we each do what we can if we are looking to lead a more self-reliant lifestyle for our own health and contentment. While many could do more, they may not need or want to. I'm ok with that and I still feel proud to be able to say that I will help any who want it -- be it food, information, research, concept, or past experiences both good and bad. Hopefully, I will do so following the Golden Rule. Life is too short for less.
 

MoonShadows

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@Beekissed , Wow, you seem angry. I didn't find the tone of that article derogatory either. "Homesteading" has changed tremendously over the past 200 years, like it or not. We cannot deny the advances that have been made, and to mock the author and today's folks as you did, as if they are some how ill-informed or inferior, is in itself derogatory.
 
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Beekissed

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You're right and I apologize! Just struck me the wrong way for some reason...sometimes that happens on a bad pain day and then I have to go back and review later on, then adjust my tone. Just a difference in perspective and culture, I expect, tempered with feeling bad.

I'll remove the post so your thread will not have to suffer from it. ;)
 
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