One example from Johnson County Iowa dealt with a claim jumper with a good whipping by the committee. A more drastic example in 1839 in Iowa City involved another claim jumper (someone who tried to take over someone else's land already claimed). Mr. Crawford tried to take over the claim of one William Sturgis, the rightful owner. Crawford refused to surrender the claim as requested several times. A meeting was called for on November 7 and sixty men marched to Crawford's cabin where he was still inside building. After another request to leave the claim was refused, and even an offer to pay him for the labor he had done, the men took the four corners of the cabin and in 15 minutes there was not a log left standing. Mr. Crawford was still standing with ax in hand in the center of the vacant lot.
The ruling of these association clubs was law since no lawyer, judge or jury could be found that were not members of the ruling association. Apparently there was no appeal or recourse for a person, as Mr. Crawford discovered when he tried to get his own justice against their actions.
Next time...Land Offices Arrive
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Today in Pioneer History: "On June 25, 1876, Native American forces and Sitting Bull defeat the U.S. Army troops of Lieutenant Colonel George Armstrong Custer near Montana's Little Bighorn River. Crazy Horse and Sitting Bull, leaders of the Sioux tribe of the Great Plains, had resisted the government confining their people to reservations, and even though they killed Custer and most of his men, within five years, they were confined to reservations. A sad fact of our history as Americans.
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