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Land Policy in the Spanish Southwest, 1846–1891: A Study in Contrasts

Howard R. Lamar

The Journal of Economic History, 1962, vol. 22, issue 4, 498-515

Abstract: In Choosing to discuss land policy in that part of the Spanish Southwest which comprises present central and northern New Mexico and most of southern Colorado, I would appear to be using a model area of the West to demonstrate once again that the Homestead Act and principle were unworkable. In actuality the purpose is to note generally what can happen when an American land system runs into an older and highly different Spanish-Mexican one. As Howard W. Odum has observed, “Here two great culture systems have met and clashed and fused and are still in process of clashing and fusing.”

Date: 1962
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