Although the Desert Land Act was partly based on the Homestead Act and the
Preemption Act (1841), it did not contain a key provision of those acts, the residence requirement. While the claimant had to improve the land, the claimant did not need to live on the land while the improvements were made. In the end, that led to a significant amount of fraud, and
land speculation companies acquired tens of thousands of acres of California land by hiring "dummy entrymen" to make false claims of settlement. Well known areas that began as land patented under the Desert Land Act include the
Salt River in Arizona, the
Imperial Valley in California, the
Snake River in Idaho,
Gallatin, Montana, and
Yakima, Washington. Many of these communities facilitated further growth through the help of the
Reclamation Act of 1902. The peak of growth of these areas can be tracked by three separate eras prior to the current era: 1877–1887, 1888–1893, and 1893–1910. The time period ended with the
Panic of 1893.
1893–1910 The last era of the Desert Land Act began as the interest in irrigation and migration increased following the prosperity after the Depression of 1893. The last year of the era marks the peak of Desert Land Act original entries, over 15,000 in one year.
After 1910 By 1920, nearly all present irrigation systems had been in place in all lands grown in the West from the act. ==See also==