Home on the Range
A new public television series transplants three American families to the frontier West of 1883, without electricity, running water orgasp!visits to the mall
- By Doug Stewart
- Smithsonian magazine, May 2002, Subscribe
(Page 3 of 8)
“I’m in the middle of goat cheese production,” says Kristen, in granny boots and braids tied in twine. “I hadn’t ever milked an animal before I got here.” By law, homesteaders needed a permanent dwelling, and Kristen has done her part. She proudly points to a window she helped install.
Passed in 1862 to spur settlement of the West, the Homestead Act invited any U.S. citizen to file a claim for 160 acres of public land. If you “proved up”—occupied and farmed the homestead for five years—the land was yours. Nearly two million people, including many a tenderfoot, filed land claims over the act’s 124 years (Alaska was the last state in which the act operated). But working a homestead was an endurance test that many settlers failed; just 40 percent of homesteaders lasted the five years.
It’s still a test. “Without modern conveniences, it takes me five hours to make breakfast and lunch and then clean up,” Kristen says. “It’s all I do.” (In the 1880s homesteaders typically ate off unwashed dishes, saving both time and water.) Divvying up the chores, Nate took on chopping and plowing, and Kristen became the cook. “It’s kind of fun now, because I’ve embraced this role that I normally loathe,” Kristen says. But it was hard in the beginning. “Nate could point to the cabin he built, the garden he planted, his chicken coop. But what could I show?” “When she’s done with a whole day of work,” says Nate, “and we’ve eaten the food and washed the dishes, things look exactly the same as the day before.” Kristen couldn’t even vent for the cameras. “The film crew would say, ‘Oh, we’ve already done frustration.’”
Down the valley, Karen Glenn, a 36-year-old Tennessean, has to cook constantly for her family of four: her husband, Mark, 45, and two children from a previous marriage, Erinn, 12, and Logan Patton, 9. Outgoing, feisty and cheerfully talkative, Karen is baking bread. When not cooking, she scrubs clothes on a washboard. She works as she talks. “In the 21st century, we’re so into being clean,” she says in a twangy drawl, ignoring buzzing houseflies. “We keep our bodies clean, our clothes clean, our houses clean. Here, we bathe only twice a week. But we have much less trash because we reuse everything.” The Glenns even dry the peels from precious store-bought lemons to add to tea, then later chew on the tea-sweetened rinds. Empty tin cans serve as measuring cups, candle reflectors, stove racks, lunch pails and extra cooking pots. Karen uses tin can lids as mouse guards on a cord strung across the cabin for hanging grain sacks and ham shoulders. Tin can labels are used as writing paper.
Single Page « Previous 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 Next »
Subscribe now for more of Smithsonian's coverage on history, science and nature.









Comments (10)
Nate and Kristen are in Bali, seemingly with three kids now. http://www.facebook.com/pages/Brooks-Family/265067470260216
Posted by REC on January 13,2013 | 07:14 PM
I just saw the ending. Nate and Kristen are still together, according to the summary. They win at life and on the Frontier, it seems!
Posted by Sarah on June 26,2012 | 05:01 PM
My DVR did the same thing, and like you no luck finding out what happened to the Brooks. I hope their marriage made it!
Posted by Gina on June 15,2012 | 09:56 AM
Thank you - thank you for having this article online. I had watched the program when it first aired and fell in love with the families... a few weeks ago, I caught a blurp of it on the DIY network, not being able to follow the re airing of the program on DIY, I turned to You Tube and located all the Episodes... What a brave group of people. I'm saddened to learn of the divorces I hope that hearts are being mended. There were many lessons played out from week to week on the program... I've recommened my Son and his wife watch it and I've sat thru a couple Episodes with my grand daughter... so that she can learn ... Thank you again for running the articles... they help fill in the gap the families.... They all were fantastic... Would be great to have a follow up interview or story on the families...
Posted by Linda on June 10,2012 | 11:55 PM
It was replayed recently on the History or discovery channel. There were updates at the end. The Clunes divorced several years after the show aired. The Glenns divorced right after the show aired. My DVR cut off what the happened to the Brooks family. I have been trying find out but haven't had any luck
Posted by cathy on June 4,2012 | 11:15 AM
Where are they now? What are they doing and thinking now? And most certainly, how did that 'once in a life time' experience influence their growing years since. I purchased the Frontier House book, and it was certainly worth it. It resides on my shelves to this day. It's heavy on history and a little lighter on the actual TV production, but it's a wonderful read for those wanting more Frontier House. I don't know why, but I felt such a strong connection to all the families and the spirit and of the show and the history it was based on. I have DVDs and watch the series, usually twice a year. It never gets old. I'm compelled to say it... do it again! Repeat the experiment. Put out the call for more families. Repeat the experience in different locales of the US. The great plains, the south, the Ozark mountains, even the hills of Tennessee. Do it again. Frontier House struck a chord with so many folks on such a deep level. Keep it pure and true as the original, but do it again. Lane
Posted by Lane on May 11,2012 | 05:51 PM
Like Anna, I could watch this inspirational reality series over & over again! Also like Peggy, I wish I could get a 10 year update to find out how these familes are doing & how their lives were influenced by this experience :-)!!
Posted by Corky on January 17,2012 | 01:41 AM
"But Kristen draws the line at giving up her washing machine"
Amen sister! Washing machines and Vaccume cleaners (to prevent pests not to get dust) are necessities, all other appliances beyond that are luxuries :)
Posted by TwisterB on January 14,2012 | 09:17 PM
I just saw this on Netflix & was glad to find this article. Now that it's 10 yrs. later I'd be curious to know where they are & how they feel the experience affected their lives.
Posted by Peggy on December 7,2011 | 07:43 PM
I loved this show so much that I've watched it over and over again, down the years. I even bought, though not made, the materials for the quilts that were on the beds at the Clune cabin.
It was terrific to find this article up after all the intervening years. I hope that all the kids and the adults are doing well. I wish then all happy endings!
Posted by Anna on July 25,2011 | 04:02 PM