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Claim club

Claim clubs, also called actual settlers' associations or squatters' clubs, were a nineteenth-century phenomenon in the American West. Usually operating within a confined local jurisdiction, these pseudo-governmental entities sought to regulate land sales in places where there was little or no legal apparatus to deal with land-related quarrels of any size.[1] Some claim clubs sought to protect squatters, while others defended early land owners.[2] In the twentieth century, sociologists suggested that claim clubs were a pioneer adaptation of democratic bodies on the East Coast, including town halls.[3]

  1. ^ Bogue, A. (1958) "The Iowa Claim Clubs: Symbol and Substance", The Mississippi Valley Historical Review, 45(2). September. pp. 231
  2. ^ Pelzer, L. (1936) The Cattlemen's Frontier. Glendale, CA: AR. Clark. p. 87.
  3. ^ Hogan, R. (1987) "Carnival and Caucus: A Typology for Comparative Frontier History", Social Science History, 11(2). Summer. p 147.

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