Technically they were ran by families. There is no real recording on who owned the most. IT was the Families who owned them or the most.
great plains suffered a drought that lasted for years. Farmers lost their farms and traveled to find work
Peace would come if Native Americans settled on farms and adapted to white civilization.
It started when they needed someone to work in the tobbaco farms.
By the time there was anyone settling the Great Plains in the 1800's few were European immigrants. The settlement of the plains came as small homesteads and farms. The plains still exist as it did over a 100 years ago. Great expanses of grasslands still exist and the ruts of covered wagon wheels can still be seen. Most of the people were heading to California , Oregon, or Washington instead of staying in the plains area. Life in,the plains was hard with no trees, little water, and the weather could range from hot days to blizzards.
Nebraska, Kansas and South Dakota
Family settlement predominated in the American Midwest, particularly in areas like the Great Plains and the Midwest region of the United States. These regions saw families settle together to establish homesteads, start farms, and build communities.
During the Dust Bowl era of the 1930s, many families who had to abandon their farms in the Great Plains of the United States migrated westward to states like California in search of new opportunities and better living conditions. This migration was known as the "Okie" migration, and the migrants faced challenges and discrimination as they settled in new areas.
Most farms are owned by families.
Farms in the frontier
The Coastal Plains
Yes they have.
They are the same by the farms and railroads.
Farms, Factorys, Stores, ect..
it helped families develop farms.
Lexington was settled in 1642, and what is now Lexington was incorporated as Cambridge Farms, 1691. Concord was settled in 1635.
The answer is the soil on plains and plateaus provide their crops with rich soiling grounds for them to grow.