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Nov 19, 2011, 11:13 AM
#1
Abandoned Homesteads in Colorado, Kansas, Oklahoma
The area of SE Colorado, Western Kansas, and Northern Oklahoma was homesteaded in the 1850's. I'm not sure how far the homesteaded area extends. Each homesteader was given a 1/4 section or 4 homesteads per square mile. Most of these were abandoned and bought up by the big ranchers.
I was in Lamar Colorado from 1979-1981 and roamed the area for many miles, and found many treasures. Oak Furniture, silver and gold jewelry, toys, cars and trucks (1920-1950), bottles, you name it. It's been a long time, not sure whether everything has been picked over by now, but only one way to find out.
The locals don't like strangers, especially trespassers, so get written permission.
Close the gates, watch out for snakes. Good area for Prairie Dogs and Coyotes. There was a $25 bounty on Coyotes back in the day, and the ranchers were more than happy to let you at the Prairie Dogs as long as you didn't shoot toward the livestock, homes, or roads. The guy I worked for told me that he and his son would go out east of Lamar to a rattlesnake den where they would sit in the back of the pickup and shoot snakes all day long at certain times of year when they were migrating. A waste of a good skin if you ask me. Ask the old locals.
P.S. I never MD anything.
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Nov 29, 2011, 01:12 PM
#2
Re: Abandoned Homesteads in Colorado, Kansas, Oklahoma
Written permission is a must. I know first hand that they (read we) will shoot your a&^ for snooping around out there uninvited. It's like the wild west in those parts and lots of room for holes to be dug... We can see things amiss at distances most would need a spotting scope for. Ever known a rancher to not carry a gun in the truck? As far as yotes... yeah, they don't last long though. I take out about 40 yotes a year on average.
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Dec 07, 2011, 09:53 AM
#3
Re: Abandoned Homesteads in Colorado, Kansas, Oklahoma
The metal detecting club in Colorado Springs has done a number of outings in that area, where they got permission to detect specific private property. Unfortunately, there is no website for the club to refer you to.
Getting with a detector club may help you gain access - otherwise, you would have many problems even starting to try to figure out who to talk to.
I used to detect old abandoned train stops (in the 1800's you need to a place to re-water the steam engines every 10 to 15 miles - as the trains carried more water, coal and supplies, some of these train stations fell by the wayside, and eventually, only 5% or so remained in use in any kind of populated areas). Getting an old train map of your area (late 1800's - early 1900's) will help you locate where these were. Many of these train stops also spurred development of homesteads, so knowing where these were may help you in your research for places that had a population a long time ago.
Getting permission to detect is not impossible, but it helps if you know someone that lives in the area - that's the hard part. Letting the people try to detect themselves (or have one of their kids join you) - which means you would need a spare detector to loan them, and your time and patience to teach them how to use the detector - will often go a long way in making new friends.
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