Answers for Immigrants
(From a 1908 Rand McNally map of Oregon)
Public Lands--Their Character, Where Located, and How They May Be Acquired[edit]
Among the many
questions propounded by eastern inquirers to the various commercial and
promotion organizations of Portland, as well as the passenger
departments of transportation companies and resident friends of
restless residents of the East, are some that it is extremely difficult
to answer. Perhaps a majority of the unanswerable questions relate to
the character and location of public lands open to settlement. To meet
the demand for information of this kind, it would be necessary to keep
in daily touch with the records of the six United States land districts
in the State and make copious extracts from the field notes of
the Government surveys. Even then the information in all cases would
not be reliable, as the description of many sections is imperfect, and
the covering of much of the land has changed since the surveys were
made. The available Government land is scattered over every county in
the State. Much of it is worthless, being mountainous, and considerable
of it is unsuitable for agricultural purposes. The only way for an
intending settler to satisfy himself as to the worth or desirability of
a tract of public land is to consult the records of the land office in
the district in which the land is situated, and then make a personal
examination of the land. Even then, the cream of the desirable
Government land having been appropriated long ago, the intending
settler in nine cases out of ten will probably find it cheaper to buy a
farm already improved or partially improved, than to avail himself of
the generosity of the United States Government. Still there are good
tracts left. These must be expected in localities remote from the
centers of population and from transportation.
The six
United States Land Offices in the State of Oregon, where all
information relative to Government lands may be had, are located at
Portland, Multnomah County; Roseburg, Douglas County; Lakeview, Lake
County; The Dalles, Wasco County; La Grande, Union County, and Burns,
Harney County. There is a Register and Receiver in each office,
and the records are open to the inspection of the public.
While
there are nearly 20,000,000 acres of Government land available for
settlement in the State, these figures convey no information as to the
worth of this land or the acreage suitable for the making of homes. The
greater portion of the Government land not yet taken, is, however, not
adapted to agricultural purposes.
SCOPE OF LAND DISTRICTS[edit]
The
Dalles land district embraces Wasco, Sherman, Gilliam, and parts of
Crook, Morrow, Grant, and Clackamas counties.
The La
Grande district embraces in whole or in part the following counties:
Baker, Grant, Morrow, Umatilla, Union, Wallowa.
The
Burns district embraces in whole or in part the following counties:
Baker, Crook, Grant, Harney, Malheur, Wheeler. For the proposed
"Blue Mountain Reserve," 1,889,556 acres have been withdrawn from entry.
The
Roseburg district embraces in whole or in part the following counties:
Coos, Curry, Josephine, Lane, Benton, Crook, Klamath, Linn, and
Lincoln. There is included in the Cascade Forest Reserve, set apart by
Department order September 28, 1903, 3,227,559 acres.
The
Portland district embraces Clackamas, Clatsop, Marion, Multnomah, Polk,
Tillamook, Washington, Yamhill, the greater portion of Benton, Linn,
and Lincoln, and a small part of Wasco and Crook. The entire
reserves in the district foot up 1,191,666 acres--64,586 in the Grand
Ronde Indian Reservation in Yamhill and Polk counties, and 1,124,846
acres in the Bull Run and Cascade Forest reserves in the eastern part
of the district.
The
Lakeview land district embraces Klamath and Lake counties, and parts of
Crook and Harney counties.
Only
recently two more forest reserves have been created--one in Southern
Oregon, and the other in South Central Oregon. The new Southern Oregon
reserve, known as the Siskiyou Reserve, contains about thirty-one
townships, or 700,000 acres, and comprises about half of Josephine
County and a portion of Douglas County. This reserve includes
some 30,000 acres of unsold state school lands, and considerable
railroad land in the Oregon & California (now Southern Pacific)
land grant.
The
other reserve, comprising portions of 72 townships, takes in portions
of Crook and Klamath counties. It is known as the Fremont Forest
Reserve.
CLASSIFICATION OF LANDS[edit]
The Government lands are classified as agricultural, timber, desert, and mineral lands, according to the manner in which they may be obtained. The state lands include all these classes, but are obtained by purchase, regardless of the character of the land.
Government land is obtained through the land offices at The Dalles, La
Grande, Roseburg, Portland, Burns, and Lakeview, while state land is
obtained through the State Land Board at Salem. The settler or
purchaser must be a citizen of the United States, or must have declared
his intention to become such. To secure Government land he must be 21;
to obtain state land, 18.
Agricultural
Lands--Agricultural
land may be secured from the Government under the Homestead Act, which
gives to every settler 160 acres, requiring no payment, except $22 in
fees. For a period of five years actual residence upon the land is
necessary, during which time certain improvements must be made and
cultivation carried on, the purpose being to require the homesteader to
show that he is in good faith.
Timber
Lands--Timber
lands can be secured from the Government under the Timber and Stone
Act, each purchaser not being allowed over 160 acres. The land must be
chiefly valuable for its timber, and must have no valuable mineral
deposits. These facts must be set forth in an affidavit, and must be
published for a period of sixty days, at the end of which time, if no
adverse claim is made, upon payment of $2.50 an acre, the Government
will issue a patent for the land. Land chiefly valuable for the stone
upon it may be secured in the same manner.
Desert
Lands--Desert
land may be secured under the Desert Land Act, not more than 320 acres
being allowed to any one person, the applicant making an affidavit
that, without irrigation, the land would not produce remunerative
crops, and that he has provided a water supply sufficient to make the
land productive. The affidavit must be accompanied by that of a witness
setting forth the same facts, and, upon being approved, a fee of 25
cents per acre must be paid, when the purchaser can proceed with
reclamation. Annual reports must be made for three years, showing that
he has made improvements to the cost of $1 per acre each year. When the
$3 per acre has been expended, and one-eighth of the land has been
reclaimed and under cultivation, by paying an additional $1 per acre he
may secure a patent from the Government. If the land is within the
limit of a railroad grant, the price is $2.50 per acre.
Arid
land in
larger tracts may be taken up by corporations or individuals under the
Carey Act.
Mineral
Lands--Mineral
lands are secured under the general mining laws by locating a claim,
recording it, and making certain improvements each year until $500 has
been expended for this purpose, when a patent can be secured from the
Government.
State
School Lands--There are probably
140,000 acres of state school lands in Oregon, situated in the
sixteenth and thirty-sixth sections in each township, commonly called
school sections. These, lands are sold at minimum price of $2.50 per
acre. no residence or cultivation being required, and, if desired, the
purchase price can be paid in five annual installments, the deferred
payments drawing 8, 7, and 6 per cent interest, respectively. At the
time of making the first payment the purchaser receives a certificate
of sale, assignable by writing the transfer, duly acknowledged, upon
the back of the instrument. Any assignee of the certificate may secure
a deed by returning the certificate and paying what is due.
What proportion of Oregon crops are grown without irrigation?[edit]
There are
to-day perhaps 450,000 acres of land under irrigation in Oregon. The
total area of the State is 61,459,200 acres. The cultivated or
crop-producing area is about one-sixth of the total area, or 10,243,200
acres. It is thus seen that less than one-twentieth of Oregon's crops
are grown under irrigation, the percentage being about 4.4. What
are the leading valleys of Oregon, their areas, and where located?
Willamette
Valley--This
is the principal valley in Oregon, and one of the garden spots of the
Pacific Slope. The Willamette Valley is situated in Western Oregon,
between the Cascade and Coast Ranges of mountains, is watered by the
Willamette River and its tributaries, and produces to perfection all
the farm, orchard, and garden crops known to the temperate zone. It is
about 150 miles in length north and south, with an average width of
sixty miles. Portland is at the north end, and Cottage Grove, on the
line of the Southern Pacific Railroad, which passes through it, at the
south end. The total area of nearly nine of the most productive
counties in the State are embraced in this valley, which has a total
acreage of 5.125,971 acres. Exclusive of the foothills, the Willamette
Valley has about 4,000,000 acres of productive, cultivable soil, which,
allowing 50 acres to a family, means that it can support about 80,000
families, or three or four times its present population.
Umpqua
Valley--South
of the Willamette Valley in Western Oregon is the Umpqua Valley, noted
for the excellence of its fruits. This valley is situated in
Douglas County, which is credited with an area of 93,360 acres of
tillable soil and 1,457,971 acres of untillable soil. For a small
valley the Umpqua is one of the most productive in the State.
Rogue
River Valley--The southernmost
valley of Western Oregon, and one that is equally as productive as the
Willamette and Umpqua, is the Rogue River Valley, lying in Jackson and
Josephine counties, and drained by the water of the Rogue River and its
tributaries. This valley is noted for its choice peaches, pears,
apples, grapes, plums, and watermelons. An idea of the productive
capacity of this valley may be obtained from the tillable areas of the
two counties in which it lies. Jackson County has a tillable area of
87,007 acres, and Josephine's tillable area is 18,745. The nontillable
area of the former county is 888,414 acres, and of the latter 316,881
acres.
Hood
River Valley--Going east from
Portland, the first valley met along the Columbia River is the
far-famed Hood River Valley, which, though small, has made a name for
itself in, almost every fruit market of the world, through the
excellence of its apples and strawberries. Hood River strawberries are
pronounced by connoiseurs the finest berries grown, a reputation which
is confirmed by the fact that the first pickings bring as high as 75
cents per box wholesale in the markets of the East. Hood River apples
are unexcelled in flavor and keeping qualities, and always command
fancy prices in the markets of the East and even London. By reason of
the high reputation enjoyed by its production, Hood River Valley
lands,in bearing bring all the way from $200 to $800 an acre. Hood
River Valley is 23 miles long, with an average width of five miles, and
only about one-sixth of the area is in cultivation. Irrigation has been
a potent factor in the production of this beautiful valley. The apple
crop of this valley annually reaches about 60,000 boxes, which bring
all the way from $1.50 to $3 a box, in the markets of the East and
London. The strawberry crop of this valley averages perhaps 90,000
crates of 24 pounds each, which adds to the, wealth of this valley
$150,000 annually.
Grand
Ronde Valley--One of the largest
and most productive valleys in the eastern part of the State is the
Grand Ronde Valley in Union County. This is about 35 x 18 miles, with
an area of nearly 300,000 acres, of which over 140,000 acres are
tillable. The Grand Ronde Valley is the home of the only sugarbeet
factory in the State, the production of sugar from the beets grown in
this valley reaching nearly 3,000,000 pounds annually. This valley is
also noted for its fine fruit, large grain and hay crops, and choice
live stock.
Harney
Valley--The
largest valley in the eastern part of the State in area is Harney
Valley, in Harney County. This valley is about 75 miles long, with an
average width of 35 miles. Though there is some fine fruit grown in
Harney Valley, in consequence of its distance from rail transportation,
it is in the main given over to the stock industry. The irrigation of
this large valley has been found to be entirely feasible, and when once
water is taken to the land it will probably rank next to the Willamette
Valley in production.
Deschutes
Valleys--Along
the Deschutes River and its tributaries there are three large valleys
that promise soon to blossom as the rose in consequence of irrigation.
In this section of the State--Central Oregon east of the Cascade
Mountains--there are several large irrigation projects under way, with
prospects of their early completion. The Deschutes River heads in
Klamath County, passes north through Crook and a portion of Wasco, and
then forms the boundary line between Sherman and Wasco on its way to
the Columbia. The upper valley of the Deschutes is about 30 x 10 miles,
the central valley 30 x 40 miles, and the Agency Plains section 25 x 7
miles.
Crooked
River Valley--The Crooked River
Valley, in Crook County, containing about 75 square miles, 12 miles
long by six or seven wide, offers another inviting field for
irrigation. This is in the arid district, and as yet produces little
beyond the needs of live stock.
John
Day Valley--Along
the John Day River, that drains portions of Sherman, Gilliam, Wasco,
Wheeler, and Grant counties, emptying into the Columbia on the boundary
line between Sherman and' Gilliam counties, there are many beautiful
stock farms, while considerable grain is also raised in portions of
this shoestring valley. The John Day Valley proper may be said to be
about 100 miles long, and from a quarter to two and three miles wide.
Umatilla
County--In
Umatilla County there are about 100,000 acres under the Umatilla
River's water that in time will be made productive. A portion of this
is under irrigation already. Some of Umatilla County's table-land can
also be irrigated from the Columbia River.
Columbia
River--There
are a number of small depressions that might be dignified by the
appellation of valleys along the Columbia River bottom in Wasco,
Sherman, Gilliam, Morrow, and Umatilla counties. Irrigation has
given birth to many small fruit farms along this river. At
Irrigon one of the most successful irrigation projects in the State is
under way.
Malheur
County--In
Malheur County, the Malheur Basin, which will be the scene of the first
Government irrigation work in this State, comprises about 100,000
acres. This county also contains a portion of the famous Snake
River Valley.
Baker
County Valleys--Baker County has a
number of small valleys, in which fruits, vegetables, and forage crops
are grown to perfection. Chief among these are the Powder River, Pine,
Sumpter, Eagle, and Pleasant valleys.
Wallowa
County--Wallowa
County has the great Wallowa Valley, once the paradise of Chief Joseph
and his tribe of aborigines. This valley produces some fruit and grain,
but for the most part is given up to the stock industry.
Lake
County--Lake
County has perhaps 100,000 acres in its various valleys, chief of which
is the basin of Silver Lake and the land tributary to the Chewaucan
River.
Klamath
County--Klamath
County probably also has 100,000 acres of valley land tributary to
Klamath Lake and other smaller lakes and the Sprague River.
What
is the average price of farm land in Oregon that produces the same
crops that are grown in Iowa, Illinois, and Indiana? The answer to this
question would perhaps involve the value of lands adapted to
diversified farming. The average sale price of cultivated lands is
about as follows:
Clackamas
County, $49 per acre.
Columbia
County, small farms, $41.40 per acre.
Washington
County, small farms, $53.82 per
acre; large
farms; $38.62 per acre.
Yamhill County,
small farms (embracing considerable areas of orchards and hops),
$119.66 per acre; large farms, $21.50 per acre.
Marion County,
small farms, $46.11 per acre; large farms, $35.76 per acre.
Polk County,
large farms, $22.70 per acre.
Linn County,
small farms, $52.15 per acre; large farms, $23.28 per acre.
Benton County,
small farms, $32.10 per acre; large farms, $21 per acre.
Lane County,
small farms, $32.88 per acre; large farms, $26.44 per acre.
In Baker County
unirrigated farms averaging 375 acres in area, with 52 1/2 per cent of
the land under cultivation, the average price per acre is found to be
$30.50, and farms with a good portion of the land under irrigation,
averaging 485 acres in area, with 58 1/2 per cent under cultivation,
average $33.40 per acre.
Unimproved
lands suitable for agricultural purposes can be bought in Oregon at
from $10 to $15 an acre.
What
percentage of the land contained in Oregon farms is cultivated?
In farms of 160
acres or less, the percentage of land under cultivation in eight of the
Western
Oregon counties
is found to be as follows:
Clackamas
County, 44 per cent.
Columbia
County, 75 per cent.
Washington
County, 41 per cent.
Yamhill County,
77 1/2 per cent.
Marion County,
45 1/2 per cent.
Benton County,
53 1/2 per cent;
Linn County, 74
1/2 per cent.
Lane County, 65
1/2 per cent.
Averages for
eight counties, 59 1/2 per cent.
In farms of 160
acres or over, the percentage of cultivated land of the total farm area
is found to be
as follows:
Clackamas
County, 44 1/2 per cent.
Washington
County, 44 1/2 per cent.
Yamhill County,
43 1/2 per cent.
Marion County,
46 1/2 per cent.
Polk County, 44
1/2 per cent.
Linn County, 43
pet cent.
Benton County,
30 1/2 per cent.
Lane County, 53
3/4 per cent.
Average for
eight counties, 43.7 per cent.
These figures
go to show that Oregon farmers only utilize about half of the
cultivatable area of their farms, while in the Eastern States farmers
cultivate their farms up to 95 and even 100 per cent of their area.
What
are the average prices of all classes of lands In Oregon?
To obtain an
average on the price of lands of different classes is a difficult
matter, prices varying with productive capacity of the soil, degree of
cultivation, area of similar land adjoining, nearness of
transportation, and proximity to markets. In consequence of the great
diversity of conditions, there is of necessity a wide range in values.
The following figures are given for what they, are worth: Fruit land,
wild, from $30 to $75 per acre. Fruit land, in cultivation, from $200
to $800 per acre. Wheat land, wild, from $10 to $20 per acre. Wheat
land, in cultivation, from $30 to $60 per acre. Grazing land, from $8
to $15 per acre. Dairy ranches, from $50 to $75 per acre. Desert land,
without water, worthless. Desert land, under irrigation system, with
water prospects, $10 to $15 per acre. Desert land, under irrigation,
from $60 to $300 per acre. Timber land, from $10 to $100 per acre.
PRINCIPAL FRUIT SECTIONS OF THE STATE AND THE FRUITS RAISED.[edit]
Williamette
Valley-Prunes, apples, pears, cherries, and all small fruits.
Rogue River
Valley-Apples, prunes, peaches, grapes, pears, and all the small fruits.
Umpqua
Valley-Same as Rogue River Valley.
Hood River
Valley-Apples, strawberries, cherries, peaches, prunes, grapes, and all
the small fruits.
Grand Ronde
Valley-Apples, prunes, and all the small fruits.
These are the
principal fruit sections of the State with the fruits raised in the
order of their importance. It must not be forgotten, however, that
excellent fruits are also raised in the foot-hills throughout the
State, and in many of the valleys in Eastern Oregon, partially under
irrigation, where the production has not yet reached commercial
proportions, notably, Pine, Eagle, and Pleasant valleys, in Baker
County, the Harney Valley, in Harney County, and the Snake River
Valley, in Malheur County. Fruit is beginning to be raised for market
in many sections that have heretofore produced only sufficient for home
consumption.
Are
there any places in the State where colonies could be located to
advantage?
To say that
Oregon, with her mil1ions of acres of the choicest soil upon God's
footstool, is without opportunities for the location of colonies would
be a libel upon the fair name of this State, and it would not be the
truth. And yet, Oregon, with all her wealth of acreage, does not offer
so many openings for the settlement of colonies of any considerable
size. While there is room for thousands of more families in the
Williamette Valley and other settled sections of the State, the
satisfactory location of colonies in these localities is an entirely
different question.
Colonization
means the placing of a large number of people on lands that may be
obtained at a comparatively low figure. Colonization is possible in
developed agricultural communities, but the cost of land would probably
preclude the advantageous consummation of such enterprises.
Colonization would be possible on Broadway, in New York City, but not
practicable. Colonization is possible in the
Willamette
Valley, but as the prices of land are rather high, the productive
capacity of the soil justifying even higher prices, truth would compel
one to say that this, and similarly situated productive areas in the
State, do not offer the most attractive field for the planting of
colonies.
There are a
number of places in Oregon, however; that do offer exceptional
opportunities, for the placing of large colonies. These places are in
the irrigable areas of the State, where water is either already
available or soon will be. The price of land in these localities is
exceptionally low, considering the productive capacity and earning
powers of the land, and no one can have any hesitancy in recommending
land under irrigation systems to the thoughtful consideration of
homeseekers or the promoters of colonization enterprises.
Within a very
few years, or possibly even one year, there will be a number of
sections under irrigation that will ofter exceptional opportunities to
colonies. Just now there are but a few. Chief among these is the land
of the Deschutes Irrigation & Power Company, which is opening up
much of the cream of the land in the great Deschutes Basin. This
corporation has a great deal of land under water already, being the
largest reclamation corporation in the State, and by the first, of the
year will have at least 75,000 acres available. While the land of this
company will cost the homeseeker or colonist but $15 per acre, this
being the price fixed by the State Land Board, the value of the land
with water is not a cent less than $75 per acre. Here is one of the
opportunities where the homeseeker or bona fide settler profits by the
labors of the irrigation promoter and gets his land at a fraction of
the value of its real worth. No land under irrigation in Oregon
produces less than $75 to $300 per acre, and the production of some
runs up to as high as $800 per acre.
At Irrigon, on
the Columbia, where 6,000 acres are already under water, where a
good-sized town has sprung up in less than two years, and where the
practical fruits of irrigation are already in evidence there are
opportunities for colonies perhaps second to none in the State. Here
about 40,000 acres are included in the irrigable belt, with the chance
of getting water on about half of this area at least within a year.-From
the Chamber of Commerce Bulletin.