The SOHS Library is OPEN to the public at 106 N. Central Avenue in Medford, with FREE access to the SOHS Archives, from 12:00 - 4:00 pm, Tuesday through Saturday. Appointments are not necessary. Please contact library@sohs.org, or call 541-622-2025 ex 200 to ask questions or request research.

 

Milo, Ore. Rancher Fights Congress for Property Rights

Submitted by Anonymous (not verified) on

Congress had taken away 40 acres of his father’s 160-acre homestead.
Southern Oregon rancher John Johnson of Milo, Ore., struggled for decades to get the U.S. Congress to return 40 acres of property taken from his inherited homestead.
Finally, successful, Johnson told his story to a reporter in 1967 who visited him at his log cabin on the property where he was born and had lived for 69 years.
Johnson’s father claimed the land in the foothills east of Canyonville, Ore., in 1888. A railroad that owned the acreage had ceded title to the elder Johnson, but in 1916 Congress reasserted federal ownership on a great deal of land given to the railroads to encourage their expansion. In the process, Johnson lost 40 acres.
John Johnson, who claimed to be part Indian, tried for years to regain full title to the original 160-acre homestead.
In the 1960s, he made his case to Oregon Sen. Wayne Morse, who worked together with Oregon Rep. John Dellenback to push a bill through Congress that removed the cloud from the title.
Johnson got the land back when President Lyndon Johnson signed the rare private-relief bill specific to the Johnson case in June 1967.
Source: Turner, Kernan R. "Man Gets Homestead Restored." The Associated Press 1967 [Portland, Ore.]. Print.

Episode
2649
Date
Author
Kernan Turner