After his discharge, Anderson (he and his siblings had by this time taken this last name, rather than Ball) initially returned to the plantation where he had grown up, but found conditions there chaotic and unappealing. He lived for a time in
Iowa, before ultimately deciding to move to Nebraska to pursue his dream of being an independent landowner. He purchased an ox team and paid for his journey by freighting goods into the state. He acquired land in
Butler County under the
Homestead Acts and worked to become a successful farmer, but his efforts were dashed by a string of calamities; the
Panic of 1873 brought sustained low farm prices, while drought and several years of
grasshopper infestations wreaked havoc on production. Anderson held out longer than most of his neighbors, but by 1881 was forced to give up his land and move on. He moved to Kansas, where he received his only formal education, and saved his wages in anticipation of another chance at independence. His second chance came in 1884, when he was able to acquire more homestead land, this time in western Nebraska, in what would later be organized as
Box Butte County. One of the first settlers in his area, he initially lived in a dugout shelter and sustained himself largely on wild game. Despite some early reversals, he was able to build a successful farming operation, adding to his landholdings by buying the acreage of neighbors who moved away. By 1902, he owned more than 1400 acres, and by 1910 he was the largest African-American landowner in the state. Ultimately he would own more than 2000 acres of land, before he quit farming in 1920. ==Later life==