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History of agriculture in the United States

The history of agriculture in the United States covers the period from the first English settlers to the present day. In Colonial America, agriculture was the primary livelihood for 90% of the population, and most towns were shipping points for the export of agricultural products. Most farms were geared toward subsistence production for family use. The rapid growth of population and the expansion of the frontier opened up large numbers of new farms, and clearing the land was a major preoccupation of farmers. After 1800, cotton became the chief crop in southern plantations, and the chief American export. After 1840, industrialization and urbanization opened up lucrative domestic markets. The number of farms grew from 1.4 million in 1850, to 4.0 million in 1880, and 6.4 million in 1910; then started to fall, dropping to 5.6 million in 1950 and 2.2 million in 2008.[1]

1946 Pictorial map, represent wealth of the United States soil

Pre-Colonial era edit

Before the arrival of Europeans in North America, the continent supported a diverse range of indigenous cultures. While some populations were primarily hunter-gatherers, other populations relied on agriculture. Native Americans farmed domesticated crops in the Eastern Woodlands, the Great Plains, and the American Southwest.

Colonial farming: 1610–1775 edit

Beginning in 1620, the first settlers in Plymouth Colony planted barley and peas from England but their most important crop was Indian corn (maize) which they were shown how to cultivate by the native Squanto. To fertilize this crop, they used small fish which they called herrings or shads.[2]

Beginning in 1619, Southern plantation agriculture, using slaves, developed in Virginia and Maryland (where tobacco was grown), and South Carolina (where indigo and rice was grown). Cotton became a major plantation crop after 1800 in the "Black Belt," and throughout the region from North Carolina in an arc through Texas where the climate allowed for cotton cultivation.[3]

Apart from the tobacco and rice plantations, the great majority of farms were subsistence, producing food for the family and some for trade and taxes. Throughout the colonial period, subsistence farming was pervasive. Farmers supplemented their income with sales of surplus crops or animals in the local market, or by exports to the slave colonies in the British West Indies. Logging, hunting and fishing supplemented the family economy.[4]

Ethnic farming styles edit

Ethnicity made a difference in agricultural practice. German Americans brought with them practices and traditions that were quite different from those of the English and Scots. They adapted Old World techniques to a much more abundant land supply. For example, they generally preferred oxen to horses for plowing. Furthermore, the Germans showed a long-term tendency to keep the farm in the family and to avoid having their children move to towns.[5][6] The Scots Irish built their livelihoods on some farming but more herding (of hogs and cattle). In the American colonies, the Scots-Irish focused on mixed farming. Using this technique, they grew corn for human consumption and for livestock feed, especially for hogs. Many improvement-minded farmers of different backgrounds began using new agricultural practices to increase their output. During the 1750s, these agricultural innovators replaced the hand sickles and scythes used to harvest hay, wheat, and barley with the cradle scythe, a tool with wooden fingers that arranged the stalks of grain for easy collection. This tool was able to triple the amount of work done by a farmer in one day. A few scientifically informed farmers (mostly wealthy planters like George Washington) began fertilizing their fields with dung and lime and rotating their crops to keep the soil fertile.

Before 1720, most colonists in the mid-Atlantic region worked in small-scale farming and paid for imported manufactures by supplying the West Indies with corn and flour. In New York, a fur-pelt export trade to Europe flourished and added additional wealth to the region. After 1720, mid-Atlantic farming was stimulated by the international demand for wheat. A massive population explosion in Europe drove wheat prices up. By 1770, a bushel of wheat cost twice as much as it did in 1720.[7] Farmers also expanded their production of flaxseed and corn since flax was in high demand in the Irish linen industry and a demand for corn existed in the West Indies.

Many poor German immigrants and Scots-Irish settlers began their careers as agricultural wage laborers. Merchants and artisans hired teen-aged indentured servants, paying the transportation over from Europe, as workers for a domestic system for the manufacture of cloth and other goods. Merchants often bought wool and flax from farmers and employed newly arrived immigrants who had been textile workers in Ireland and Germany to work in their homes spinning the materials into yarn and cloth.[citation needed] Large farmers and merchants became wealthy, while farmers with smaller farms and artisans only made enough for subsistence.

New nation: 1776–1860 edit

The U.S. economy was primarily agricultural in the early 19th century.[8][9] Westward expansion, including the Louisiana Purchase and American victory in the War of 1812 plus the building of canals and the introduction of steamboats opened up new areas for agriculture. Most farming was designed to produce food for the family, and service small local markets. In times of rapid economic growth, a farmer could still improve the land for far more than he paid for it, and then move further west to repeat the process. While the land was cheap and fertile the process of clearing it and building farmsteads wasn't. Frontier life wasn't new for Americans but presented new challenges for farm families who faced the challenges of bringing their produce to market across vast distances. Although the production expanded very rapidly, during the Antebellum decades per capita food production did not keep pace with the rapidly expanding urban population and industrial labor.

South edit

In the Southern United States, the poor lands were held by poor white farmers, who generally owned no slaves.[10] The best lands were held by rich plantation owners and were operated primarily with slave labor. These farms grew their own food and also concentrated on a few "cash crops" that could be exported to meet the growing demand in Europe, especially cotton, tobacco, and sugar. The cotton gin made it possible to increase cotton production. Cotton became the main export crop, but after a few years, the fertility of the soil was depleted and the plantation was moved to the new land further west. Much land was cleared and put into growing cotton in the Mississippi valley and in Alabama, and new grain growing areas were brought into production in the Mid West. Eventually this put severe downward pressure on prices, particularly of cotton, first from 1820–23 and again from 1840–43.[11] Sugar cane was being grown in Louisiana, where it was refined into granular sugar. Growing and refining sugar required a large amount of capital. Some of the nation's wealthiest men owned sugar plantations, which often had their own sugar mills.[12]

New England edit

In New England, subsistence agriculture gave way after 1810 to production to provide food supplies for the rapidly growing industrial towns and cities. New specialty export crops were introduced such as tobacco and cranberries.[13]

Western frontier edit

The British Empire had attempted to restrict westward expansion with the ineffective Proclamation Line of 1763, abolished after the American Revolutionary War. The first major movement west of the Appalachian Mountains began in Pennsylvania, Virginia and North Carolina as soon as the war was won in 1781. Pioneers housed themselves in a rough lean-to or at most a one-room log cabin. The main food supply at first came from hunting deer, turkeys, and other abundant small game.

Clad in typical frontier garb, leather breeches, moccasins, fur cap, and hunting shirt, and girded by a belt from which hung a hunting knife and a shot pouch – all homemade – the pioneer presented a unique appearance. In a short time he opened in the woods a patch, or clearing, on which he grew corn, wheat, flax, tobacco and other products, even fruit. In a few years the pioneer added hogs, sheep and cattle, and perhaps acquired a horse. Homespun clothing replaced the animal skins. The more restless pioneers grew dissatisfied with over civilized life, and uprooted themselves again to move 50 or hundred miles (80 or 160 km) further west.[14]

In 1788, American pioneers to the Northwest Territory established Marietta, Ohio as the first permanent American settlement in the Northwest Territory.[15] By 1813 the western frontier had reached the Mississippi River. St. Louis, Missouri was the largest town on the frontier, the gateway for travel westward, and a principal trading center for Mississippi River traffic and inland commerce. There was wide agreement on the need to settle the new territories quickly, but the debate polarized over the price the government should charge. The conservatives and Whigs, typified by president John Quincy Adams, wanted a moderated pace that charged the newcomers enough to pay the costs of the federal government. The Democrats, however, tolerated a wild scramble for land at very low prices. The final resolution came in the Homestead Law of 1862, with a moderated pace that gave settlers 160 acres free after they worked on it for five years.[16]

From the 1770s to the 1830s, pioneers moved into the new lands that stretched from Kentucky to Alabama to Texas. Most were farmers who moved in family groups.[17] Historian Louis M. Hacker shows how wasteful the first generation of pioneers was; they were too ignorant to cultivate the land properly and when the natural fertility of virgin land was used up, they sold out and moved west to try again. Hacker describes that in Kentucky about 1812:

Farms were for sale with from ten to fifty acres cleared, possessing log houses, peach and sometimes apple orchards, inclosed in fences, and having plenty of standing timber for fuel. The land was sown in wheat and corn, which were the staples, while hemp [for making rope] was being cultivated in increasing quantities in the fertile river bottoms. ... Yet, on the whole, it was an agricultural society without skill or resources. It committed all those sins which characterize a wasteful and ignorant husbandry. Grass seed was not sown for hay and as a result, the farm animals had to forage for themselves in the forests; the fields were not permitted to lie in pasturage; a single crop was planted in the soil until the land was exhausted; the manure was not returned to the fields; only a small part of the farm was brought under cultivation, the rest being permitted to stand in timber. Instruments of cultivation were rude and clumsy and only too few, many of them being made on the farm. It is plain why the American frontier settler was on the move continually. It was, not his fear of a too close contact with the comforts and restraints of a civilized society that stirred him into a ceaseless activity, nor merely the chance of selling out at a profit to the coming wave of settlers; it was his wasting land that drove him on. Hunger was the goad. The pioneer farmer's ignorance, his inadequate facilities for cultivation, his limited means, of transport necessitated his frequent changes of scene. He could succeed only with virgin soil.[18]

Hacker adds that the second wave of settlers reclaimed the land, repaired the damage, and practiced a more sustainable agriculture.[19]

Railroad age: 1860–1910 edit

A dramatic expansion in farming took place from 1860 to 1910 as cheap rail transportation opened the way for exports to Europe.[20] The number of farms tripled from 2.0 million in 1860 to 6.0 million in 1906. The number of people living on farms grew from about 10 million in 1860 to 22 million in 1880 to 31 million in 1905. The value of farms soared from $8 billion in 1860 to $30 billion in 1906.[21][22]

The federal government issued 160-acre (65 ha) tracts for very cheap costs to about 400,000 families who settled new land under the Homestead Act of 1862. Even larger numbers purchased lands at very low interest from the new railroads, which were trying to create markets. The railroads advertised heavily in Europe and brought over, at low fares, hundreds of thousands of farmers from Germany, Scandinavia, and Britain. The Government of Canada's Dominion Lands Act of 1872 served a similar function for establishing homesteads on the prairies in Canada.[23]

The first years of the 20th century were prosperous for all American farmers. The years 1910–1914 became a statistical benchmark, called "parity", that organized farm groups wanted the government to use as a benchmark for the level of prices and profits they felt they deserved.[24]

Rural life edit

 
Boosterism: cover of a promotional booklet published in 1907 by the Chicago, Rock Island and Pacific Railroad

Early settlers discovered that the Great Plains were not the "Great American Desert," but they also found that the very harsh climate—with tornadoes, blizzards, drought, hail storms, floods, and grasshopper plagues[25]—made for a high risk of ruined crops. Many early settlers were financially ruined, especially in the early 1890s, and either protested through the Populist movement, or went back east. In the 20th century, crop insurance, new conservation techniques, and large-scale federal aid all lowered the risk. Immigrants, especially Germans, and their children comprised the largest element of settlers after 1860; they were attracted by the good soil, low-priced lands from the railroad companies. The railroads offered attractive Family packages. They brought in European families, with their tools, directly to the new farm, which was purchased on easy credit terms. The railroad needed settlers as much as the settlers needed farmland. Even cheaper land was available through homesteading, although it was usually not as well located as railroad land.[26]

The problem of blowing dust resulted from too little rainfall for growing enough wheat to keep the topsoil from blowing away. In the 1930s, techniques and technologies of soil conservation, most of which had been available but ignored before the Dust Bowl conditions began, were promoted by the Soil Conservation Service (SCS) of the US Department of Agriculture, so that, with cooperation from the weather, soil condition was much improved by 1940.[27][28]

On the Great Plains, very few single men attempted to operate a farm or ranch; farmers clearly understood the need for a hard-working wife, and numerous children, to handle the many chores, including child-rearing, feeding and clothing the family, managing the housework, feeding the hired hands, and, especially after the 1930s, handling the paperwork and financial details.[29] During the early years of settlement in the late 19th century, farm women played an integral role in assuring family survival by working outdoors. After a generation or so, women increasingly left the fields, thus redefining their roles within the family. New conveniences such as sewing and washing machines encouraged women to turn to domestic roles. The scientific housekeeping movement, promoted across the land by the media and government extension agents, as well as county fairs which featured achievements in home cookery and canning, advice columns for women in the farm papers, and home economics courses in the schools.[30]

 
Temporary quarters for Volga Germans in central Kansas, 1875

Although the eastern image of farm life on the prairies emphasizes the isolation of the lonely farmer and farm life, rural folk created a rich social life for themselves. They often sponsored activities that combined work, food, and entertainment such as barn raisings, corn huskings, quilting bees, grange meeting, church activities, and school functions.[31] The womenfolk organized shared meals and potluck events, as well as extended visits between families.[32]

Women were also involved in poultry breeding. In 1896, farmer Nettie Metcalf created the Buckeye chicken breed in Warren, Ohio.[33][34][35] In 1905, Buckeyes became an official breed under the American Poultry Association.[36] The Buckeye breed is the first recorded chicken breed to be created and developed by a woman.[37][38][39]

Ranching edit

Much of the Great Plains became open range, hosting cattle ranching operations on public land without charge. In the spring and fall, ranchers held roundups where their cowboys branded new calves, treated animals and sorted the cattle for sale. Such ranching began in Texas and gradually moved northward. Cowboys drove Texas cattle north to railroad lines in the cities of Dodge City, Kansas and Ogallala, Nebraska; from there, cattle were shipped eastward. British investors financed many great ranches of the era. Overstocking of the range and the terrible Winter of 1886–87 resulted in a disaster, with many cattle starved and frozen to death. From then on, ranchers generally raised feed to ensure they could keep their cattle alive over winter.[40]

When there was too little rain for row crop farming, but enough grass for grazing, cattle ranching became dominant. Before the railroads arrived in Texas the 1870s cattle drives took large herds from Texas to the railheads in Kansas. A few thousand Indians resisted, notably the Sioux, who were reluctant to settle on reservations. However, most Indians themselves became ranch hands and cowboys.[41] New varieties of wheat flourished in the arid parts of the Great Plains, opening much of the Dakotas, Montana, western Kansas, western Nebraska and eastern Colorado. Where it was too dry for wheat, the settlers turned to cattle ranching.[42]

South, 1860–1940 edit

Agriculture in the South was oriented toward large-scale plantations that produced cotton for export, as well as other export products such as tobacco and sugar. During the American Civil War, the Union blockade shut down 95 percent of the export business. Some cotton got out through blockade runners, and in conquered areas much was bought by northern speculators for shipment to Europe. The great majority of white farmers worked on small subsistence farms, that supplied the needs of the family and the local market.[43] After the war, the world price of cotton plunged, the plantations were broken into small farms for the Freedmen, and poor whites started growing cotton because they needed the money to pay taxes.[44][45]

Sharecropping became widespread in the South as a response to economic upheaval caused by the end of slavery during and after Reconstruction.[46][47] Sharecropping was a way for very poor farmers, both white and black, to earn a living from land owned by someone else. The landowner provided land, housing, tools and seed, and perhaps a mule, and a local merchant provided food and supplies on credit, while the sharecropper provided the labor. At harvest time the sharecropper kept a share of the crop production (from one-third to one-half), with the landowner taking the rest. The cropper used his share to pay off his debt to the merchant. The system started with blacks when large plantations were subdivided. By the 1880s, white farmers also became sharecroppers. The system was distinct from that of the tenant farmer, who rented the land, provided his own tools and mule and kept the crop (or paid some to the landowner through "crop rent"). Landowners provided more supervision to sharecroppers, and less or none to tenant farmers. Poverty was inevitable, because world cotton prices were low.[48]

Sawers (2005) shows how southern farmers made the mule their preferred draft animal in the South during the 1860s–1920s, primarily because it fit better with the region's geography. Mules better withstood the heat of summer, and their smaller size and hooves were well suited for such crops as cotton, tobacco, and sugar. The character of soils and climate in the lower South hindered the creation of pastures, so the mule breeding industry was concentrated in the border states of Missouri, Kentucky, and Tennessee. Transportation costs combined with topography to influence the prices of mules and horses, which in turn affected patterns of mule use. The economic and production advantages associated with mules made their use a progressive step for Southern agriculture that endured until the mechanization brought by tractors.[49]: 667–90  Beginning around the mid-20th century, Texas began to transform from a rural and agricultural state to one that was urban and industrialized.[50]

Grange edit

The Grange was an organization founded in 1867 for farmers and their wives that was strongest in the Northeast, and which promoted the modernization not only of farming practices but also of family and community life. It is still in operation.[51]

 
Promotional poster offering a "gift for the grangers", ca. 1873.

Membership soared from 1873 (200,000) to 1875 (858,050) as many of the state and local granges adopted non-partisan political resolutions, especially regarding the regulation of railroad transportation costs. The organization was unusual in that it allowed women and teens as equal members. Rapid growth infused the national organization with money from dues, and many local granges established consumer cooperatives, initially supplied by the Chicago wholesaler Aaron Montgomery Ward. Poor fiscal management, combined with organizational difficulties resulting from rapid growth, led to a massive decline in membership. By around the start of the 20th century, the Grange rebounded and membership stabilized.[52]

In the mid-1870s, state Granges in the Midwest were successful in passing state laws that regulated the rates they could be charged by railroads and grain warehouses. The birth of the federal government's Cooperative Extension Service, Rural Free Delivery, and the Farm Credit System were largely due to Grange lobbying. The peak of their political power was marked by their success in Munn v. Illinois, which held that the grain warehouses were a "private utility in the public interest," and therefore could be regulated by public law (see references below, "The Granger Movement"). During the Progressive Era (1890s–1920s), political parties took up Grange causes. Consequently, local Granges focused more on community service, although the State and National Granges remain a political force.[53][54]

World War I edit

The U.S. in World War I, was a critical supplier to other Allied nations, as millions of European farmers were in the army. The rapid expansion of the farms coupled with the diffusion of trucks and Model T cars, and the tractor, allowed the agricultural market to expand to an unprecedented size.

During World War I prices shot up and farmers borrowed heavily to buy out their neighbors and expand their holdings. This gave them very high debts that made them vulnerable to the downturn in farm prices in 1920. Throughout the 1920s and down to 1934 low prices and high debt were major problems for farmers in all regions.[55]

Beginning with the 1917 US National War Garden Commission, the government encouraged Victory gardens, agricultural plantings in private yards and public parks for personal use and for the war effort. Production from these gardens exceeded $1.2 billion by the end of World War I.[56] Victory gardens were later encouraged during World War II when rationing made for food shortages.

1920s edit

 
A 1919 sheet music cover

A popular Tin Pan Alley song of 1919 asked, concerning the United States troops returning from World War I, "How Ya Gonna Keep 'em Down on the Farm (After They've Seen Paree)?". As the song hints, many did not remain "down on the farm"; there was a great migration of youth from farms to nearby towns and smaller cities. The average distance moved was only 10 miles (16 km). Few went to the cities over 100,000. However, agriculture became increasingly mechanized with widespread use of the tractor, other heavy equipment, and superior techniques disseminated through County Agents, who were employed by state agricultural colleges and funded by the Federal government. The early 1920s saw a rapid expansion in the American agricultural economy largely due to new technologies and especially mechanization. Competition from Europe and Russia had disappeared due to the war and American agricultural goods were being shipped around the world.[57][58]

The new technologies, such as the combine harvester, meant that the most efficient farms were larger in size and, gradually, the small family farm that had long been the model were replaced by larger and more business-oriented firms. Despite this increase in farm size and capital intensity, the great majority of agricultural production continued to be undertaken by family-owned enterprises.

World War I had created an atmosphere of high prices for agricultural products as European nations demand for exports surged. Farmers had enjoyed a period of prosperity as U.S. farm production expanded rapidly to fill the gap left as European belligerents found themselves unable to produce enough food. When the war ended, supply increased rapidly as Europe's agricultural market rebounded. Overproduction led to plummeting prices which led to stagnant market conditions and living standards for farmers in the 1920s. Worse, hundreds of thousands of farmers had taken out mortgages and loans to buy out their neighbors' property, and now are unable to meet the financial burden. The cause was the collapse of land prices after the wartime bubble when farmers used high prices to buy up neighboring farms at high prices, saddling them with heavy debts. Farmers, however, blamed the decline of foreign markets, and the effects of the protective tariff.[59]

Farmers demanded relief as the agricultural depression grew steadily worse in the middle 1920s, while the rest of the economy flourished. Farmers had a powerful voice in Congress, and demanded federal subsidies, most notably the McNary–Haugen Farm Relief Bill. It was passed but vetoed by President Calvin Coolidge.[60] Coolidge instead supported the alternative program of Commerce Secretary Herbert Hoover and Agriculture Secretary William M. Jardine to modernize farming, by bringing in more electricity, more efficient equipment, better seeds and breeds, more rural education, and better business practices. Hoover advocated the creation of a Federal Farm Board which was dedicated to restriction of crop production to domestic demand, behind a tariff wall, and maintained that the farmer's ailments were due to defective distribution. In 1929, the Hoover plan was adopted.[61]

1930s edit

New Deal farm and rural programs edit

 
A migrant farm family in California, March 1935. Photo by Dorothea Lange.

President Franklin D. Roosevelt, a liberal Democrat, was keenly interested in farm issues and believed that true prosperity would not return until farming was prosperous.[62][63] Many different New Deal programs were directed at farmers.[64][65] Farming reached its low point in 1932, but even then millions of unemployed people were returning to the family farm having given up hope for a job in the cities. The main New Deal strategy was to reduce the supply of commodities, thereby raising the prices a little to the consumer, and a great deal to the farmer. Marginal farmers produce too little to be helped by the strategy; specialized relief programs were developed for them. Prosperity largely returned to the farm by 1936.[66]

Roosevelt's "First Hundred Days" produced the Farm Security Act to raise farm incomes by raising the prices farmers received, which was achieved by reducing total farm output. In May 1933 the Agricultural Adjustment Act created the Agricultural Adjustment Administration (AAA). The act reflected the demands of leaders of major farm organizations, especially the Farm Bureau, and reflected debates among Roosevelt's farm advisers such as Secretary of Agriculture Henry A. Wallace, M.L. Wilson,[67] Rexford Tugwell, and George Peek.[68]

The aim of the AAA was to raise prices for commodities through artificial scarcity. The AAA used a system of "domestic allotments", setting total output of corn, cotton, dairy products, hogs, rice, tobacco, and wheat. The farmers themselves had a voice in the process of using government to benefit their incomes. The AAA paid land owners subsidies for leaving some of their land idle with funds provided by a new tax on food processing. The goal was to force up farm prices to the point of "parity", an index based on 1910–1914 prices. To meet 1933 goals, 10 million acres (40,000 km2) of growing cotton was plowed up, bountiful crops were left to rot, and six million piglets were killed and discarded.[69] The idea was the less produced, the higher the wholesale price and the higher income to the farmer. Farm incomes increased significantly in the first three years of the New Deal, as prices for commodities rose. Food prices remained well below 1929 levels.[70][71]

The AAA established a long-lasting federal role in the planning of the entire agricultural sector of the economy, and was the first program on such a scale on behalf of the troubled agricultural economy. The original AAA did not provide for any sharecroppers or tenants or farm laborers who might become unemployed, but there were other New Deal programs especially for them, such as the Farm Security Administration.[72]

In 1936, the Supreme Court of the United States declared the AAA to be unconstitutional for technical reasons; it was replaced by a similar program that did win Court approval. Instead of paying farmers for letting fields lie barren, the new program instead subsidized them for planting soil enriching crops such as alfalfa that would not be sold on the market. Federal regulation of agricultural production has been modified many times since then, but together with large subsidies the basic philosophy of subsidizing farmers is still in effect in 2015.[73]

Rural relief edit

 
Modern methods had not reached the backwoods such as Wilder, Tennessee (Tennessee Valley Authority, 1942)

Many rural people lived in severe poverty, especially in the South. Major programs addressed to their needs included the Resettlement Administration (RA), the Rural Electrification Administration (REA), rural welfare projects sponsored by the WPA, NYA, Forest Service and CCC, including school lunches, building new schools, opening roads in remote areas, reforestation, and purchase of marginal lands to enlarge national forests. In 1933, the Administration launched the Tennessee Valley Authority, a project involving dam construction planning on an unprecedented scale in order to curb flooding, generate electricity, and modernize the very poor farms in the Tennessee Valley region of the Southern United States.[74][75]

For the first time, there was a national program to help migrant and marginal farmers, through programs such as the Resettlement Administration and the Farm Security Administration. Their plight gained national attention through the 1939 novel and film The Grapes of Wrath. The New Deal thought there were too many farmers, and resisted demands of the poor for loans to buy farms.[76] However, it made a major effort to upgrade the health facilities available to a sickly population.[77]

Economics and Labor edit

In the 1930s, during the Great Depression, farm labor organized a number of strikes in various states. 1933 was a particularly active year with strikes including the California agricultural strikes of 1933, the 1933 Yakima Valley strike in Washington, and the 1933 Wisconsin milk strike.

Agriculture was prosperous during World War II, even as rationing and price controls limited the availability of meat and other foods in order to guarantee its availability to the American And Allied armed forces. During World War II, farmers were not drafted, but surplus labor, especially in the southern cotton fields, voluntarily relocated to war jobs in the cities.[78][79]

During World War II, victory gardens planted at private residences and public parks were an important source of fresh produce. These gardens were encouraged by the United States Department of Agriculture. Around one third of the vegetables produced by the United States came from victory gardens.[80][81]

Since 1945 edit

Government policies edit

The New Deal era farm programs were continued into the 1940s and 1950s, with the goal of supporting the prices received by farmers. Typical programs involved farm loans, commodity subsidies, and price supports.[82] The rapid decline in the farm population led to a smaller voice in Congress. So the well-organized Farm Bureau and other lobbyists, worked in the 1970s to appeal to urban Congressman through food stamp programs for the poor. By 2000, the food stamp program was the largest component of the farm bill. In 2010, the Tea Party movement brought in many Republicans committed to cutting all federal subsidies, including those agriculture. Meanwhile, urban Democrats strongly opposed reductions, pointing to the severe hardships caused by the 2008–10 economic recession. Though the Agricultural Act of 2014 saw many rural Republican Congressman voting against the program, it passed with bipartisan support.[83][84][85]

Changing technology edit

Ammonia from plants built during World War II to make explosives became available for making fertilizers, leading to a permanent decline in real fertilizer prices and expanded use.[86] The early 1950s was the peak period for tractor sales in the U.S. as the few remaining mules and work horses were sold for dog food. The horsepower of farm machinery underwent a large expansion.[87] A successful cotton picking machine was introduced in 1949. The machine could do the work of 50 men picking by hand. The great majority of unskilled farm laborers move to urban areas.[88][89]

Research on plant breeding produced varieties of grain crops that could produce high yields with heavy fertilizer input. This resulted in the Green revolution, beginning in the 1940s.[90] By 2000 yields of corn (maize) had risen by a factor of over four. Wheat and soybean yields also rose significantly.[91][92]

Economics and labor edit

After 1945, a continued annual 2% increase in productivity (as opposed to 1% from 1835–1935)[93]: 97  led to further increases in farm size and corresponding reductions in the number of farms.[93]: 99  Many farmers sold out and moved to nearby towns and cities. Others switched to part-time operation, supported by off-farm employment.

The 1960s and 1970s saw major farm worker strikes including the 1965 Delano grape strike and the 1970 Salad Bowl strike. In 1975, the California Agricultural Labor Relations Act of 1975 was enacted,[94] establishing the right to collective bargaining for farmworkers in California, a first in U.S. history.[95] Individuals with prominent roles in farm worker organizing in this period include Cesar Chavez, Dolores Huerta, Larry Itliong, and Philip Vera Cruz. Chavez mobilized California workers into the United Farm Workers organization.[96]

In 1990, undocumented workers made up an estimated 14 percent of the farm workforce. By the year 2000, the percentage had grown to over 50%, and has remained around 50% in the 2000-2020 period.[97]

In 2015, grain farmers started taking "an extreme step, one not widely seen since the 1980s" by breaching lease contracts with their landowners, reducing the amount of land they sow and risking long legal battles with landlords.[98]

Technology edit

New machinery—especially large self-propelled combines and mechanical cotton pickers—sharply reduced labor requirements in harvesting.[93]

In addition, electric motors and irrigation pumps opened up new ways to be efficient.[93]: 107  Electricity also played a role in making major innovations in animal husbandry possible, especially modern milking parlors, grain elevators, and CAFOs (confined animal-feeding operations).[93] Advances in fertilizers,[93]: 109–12  herbicides,[93]: 109–112  insecticides and fungicides,[93]: 115–16  the use of antibiotics[93]: 116–17  and growth hormones.[93]: 118–19  Significant advances occurred in plant breeding and animal breeding, such as crop hybridization, GMOs (genetically modified organisms), and artificial insemination of livestock. Post-harvest innovations occurred in food processing and food distribution (e.g. frozen foods).[93]

Crops edit

Wheat edit

Wheat, used for white bread, pastries, pasta, and pizza, has been the principal cereal crop since the 18th century. It was introduced by the first English colonists and quickly became the main cash crop of farmers who sold it to urban populations and exporters. In colonial times its culture became concentrated in the Middle Colonies, which became known as the "bread colonies". In the mid-18th century, wheat culture spread to the tidewaters of Maryland and Virginia, where George Washington was a prominent grower as he diversified away from tobacco. The crop moved west, with Ohio as the center in 1840 and Illinois in 1860.[99] Illinois replaced its wheat with corn (which was used locally to feed hogs). The invention of mechanical harvesters, drawn first by horses and then tractors, made larger farms much more efficient than small ones. The farmers had to borrow money to buy land and equipment and had to specialize in wheat, which made them highly vulnerable to price fluctuations and gave them an incentive to ask for government help to stabilize or raise prices.[100] Wheat farming depended on significant labor input only during planting, and especially at harvest time. Therefore, successful farmers, especially on the Great Plains, bought up as much land as possible, purchased very expensive mechanical equipment, and depended on migrating hired laborers at harvesting time. The migrant families tended to be social outcasts without local roots and mostly lived near the poverty line, except in the harvesting season.[101] From 1909 to today, North Dakota and Kansas have vied for first place in wheat production, followed by Oklahoma and Montana.

 
McCormick reaper and twine binder in 1884

In the colonial era, wheat was sown by broadcasting, reaped by sickles, and threshed by flails. The kernels were then taken to a grist mill for grinding into flour. In 1830, it took four people and two oxen, working 10 hours a day, to produce 200 bushels.[102] New technology greatly increased productivity in the 19th century, as sowing with drills replaced broadcasting, cradles took the place of sickles, and the cradles in turn were replaced by reapers and binders. Steam-powered threshing machines superseded flails. By 1895, in Bonanza farms in the Dakotas, it took six people and 36 horses pulling huge harvesters, working 10 hours a day, to produce 20,000 bushels.[102] In the 1930s the gasoline powered "combine" combined reaping and threshing into one operation that took one person to operate. Production grew from 85 million bushels in 1839, 500 million in 1880, 600 million in 1900, and peaked at 1.0 billion bushels in 1915. Prices fluctuated erratically, with a downward trend in the 1890s that caused great distress in the Plains states.[103]

 
A 1928 Wallis tractor made by Massey Ferguson

The marketing of wheat was modernized as well, as the cost of transportation steadily fell and more and more distant markets opened up. Before 1850, the crop was sacked, shipped by wagon or canal boat, and stored in warehouses. With the rapid growth of the nation's railroad network in the 1850s–1870s, farmers took their harvest by wagon for sale to the nearest country elevators. The wheat moved to terminal elevators, where it was sold through grain exchanges to flour millers and exporters. Since the elevators and railroads generally had a local monopoly, farmers soon had targets besides the weather for their complaints. They sometimes accused the elevator men of undergrading, shortweighting, and excessive dockage. Scandinavian immigrants in the Midwest took control over marketing through the organization of cooperatives.[104]

Varieties edit

 
The horse-powered thresher; it removes the inedible chaff from the wheat kernels

Following the invention of the steel roller mill in 1878, hard varieties of wheat such as Turkey Red became more popular than soft, which had been previously preferred because they were easier for grist mills to grind.[105]

Wheat production witnessed major changes in varieties and cultural practices since 1870. Thanks to these innovations, vast expanses of the wheat belt now support commercial production, and yields have resisted the negative impact of insects, diseases, and weeds. Biological innovations contributed roughly half of labor-productivity growth between 1839 and 1909.[106]

In the late 19th century, hardy new wheat varieties from the Russian steppes were introduced on the Great Plains by the Volga Germans who settled in North Dakota, Kansas, Montana and neighboring states.[107] Legend credits the miller Bernhard Warkentin (1847–1908), a German Mennonite from Russia for introducing the "Turkey red" variety from Russia.[108] More exactly, in the 1880s numerous millers and government agricultural agents worked to create "Turkey red" and make Kansas the "Wheat State".[109] The U.S. Dept. of Agriculture, and the state experiment stations, have developed many new varieties, and taught farmers how to plant them.[110] Similar varieties now dominate in the arid regions of the Great Plains.

Exports edit

Wheat farmers have always produced a surplus for export. The exports were small-scale until the 1860s, when bad crops in Europe, and lower costs due to cheaper railroads and ocean transport, opened the European markets to cheap American wheat. The British in particular depended on American wheat during the 1860s for a fourth of their food supply, making the government reluctant to risk a cutoff if it supported the Confederacy. By 1880, 150,000,000 bushels were exported to the value of $190,000,000. World War I saw large numbers of young European farmers conscripted into the armies, so Allied countries, particularly France and Italy depended on American shipments,[111] which ranged from 100,000,000 to 260,000,000 bushels a year. American farmers reacted to the heavy demand and high prices by expanding their production, many taking out mortgages to buy out their neighbors farms. This led to a large surplus in the 1920s. The resulting low prices prompted growers to seek government support of prices, first through the McNary-Haugen bills, which failed in Congress, and later in the New Deal through the Agricultural Adjustment Act of 1933 and its many versions.[112]

World War II brought an enormous expansion of production, topping off at a billion bushels in 1944. During the war and after large-scale wheat and flour exports were part of Lend Lease and the foreign assistance programs. In 1966 exports reached 860 million bushels of which 570 million were given away as food aid. A major drought in the Soviet Union in 1972 led to the sale of 390 million bushels and an agreement was assigned in 1975 under the détente policy to supply the Soviets with grain over a five-year period.

Marketing edit

By 1900 private grain exchanges settled the daily prices for North American wheat. Santon (2010) explains how the AAA programs set wheat prices in the U.S. after 1933, and the Canadians established a wheat board to do the same there. The Canadian government required prairie farmers to deliver all their grain to the Canadian Wheat Board (CWB), a single-selling-desk agency that supplanted private wheat marketing in western Canada. Meanwhile, the United States government subsidized farm incomes with domestic-use taxes and import tariffs, but otherwise preserved private wheat marketing.[113]

Cotton edit

In the colonial era, small amounts of high quality long-staple cotton were produced in the Sea Islands off the coast of South Carolina. Inland, only short-staple cotton could be grown but it was full of seeds and very hard to process into fiber. The invention of the cotton gin in the late 1790s for the first time made short-staple cotton usable. It was generally produced on plantations ranging from South Carolina westward, with the work done by slaves. Simultaneously, the rapid growth of the industrial revolution in Britain, focused on textiles, created a major demand for the fiber. Cotton quickly exhausts the soil, so planters used their large profits to buy fresh land to the west, and purchase more slaves from the border states to operate their new plantations. After 1810, the emerging textile mills in New England also produced a heavy demand. By 1820, over 250,000 bales (of 500 pounds each) were exported to Europe, with a value of $22 million. By 1840, exports reached 1.5 million bales valued at $64 million, two thirds of all American exports. Cotton prices kept going up as the South remained the main supplier in the world. In 1860, the US shipped 3.5 million bales worth $192 million.[114][115]

After the American Civil War, cotton production expanded to small farms, operated by white and black tenant farmers and sharecroppers.[102]: 76–117  The quantity exported held steady, at 3,000,000 bales, but prices on the world market fell.[116] Although there was some work involved in planting the seeds, and cultivating or holding out the weeds, the critical labor input for cotton was in the picking. How much a cotton operation could produce depended on how many hands (men women and children) were available. Finally in the 1950s, new mechanical harvesters allowed a handful of workers to pick as much as 100 had done before. The result was a large-scale exodus of the white and black cotton farmers from the south. By the 1970s, most cotton was grown in large automated farms in the Southwest.[117][118]

See also edit

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Bibliography edit

Surveys edit

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Before 1775 edit

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1775–1860 edit

North edit

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South edit

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1860-present, national edit

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  • Lord, Russell. The Wallaces of Iowa (1947) online edition
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  • Mayer, Oscar Gottfried. America's meat packing industry; a brief survey of its development and economics. (1939) online edition
  • McCormick, Cyrus. The century of the reaper; an account of Cyrus Hall McCormick, the inventor (1931) online edition
  • Mullendore, William Clinton. History of the United States Food Administration, 1917–1919 (1941) online edition
  • Nourse, Edwin Griswold. Three years of the Agricultural Adjustment Administration (1937) online edition
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  • Zulauf, Carl, and David Orden. "80 Years of Farm Bills – Evolutionary Reform." Choices (2016) 31#4 pp. 1–7 online

1860-present, regional studies edit

  • Cyclopedia of American agriculture; a popular survey of agricultural conditions, ed by L. H. Bailey, 4 vol 1907–1909. online edition highly useful compendium
  • Black, John D. The Rural Economy of New England: A regional study (1950) online edition
  • Cannon, Brian Q., "Homesteading Remembered: A Sesquicentennial Perspective," Agricultural History, 87 (Winter 2013), 1–29.
  • Clawson, Marion. The Western range livestock industry, (1950) online edition
  • Dale, Edward Everett. The range cattle industry (1930) online edition
  • Danbom, David B. Sod Busting: How families made farms on the 19th-century Plains (2014)
  • Fite, Gilbert C. The Farmers' Frontier: 1865–1900 (1966), the west
  • Friedberger, Mark. "The Transformation of the Rural Midwest, 1945–1985," Old Northwest, 1992, Vol. 16 Issue 1, pp. 13–36
  • Friedberger, Mark W. "Handing Down the Home Place: Farm Inheritance Strategies in Iowa" Annals of Iowa 47.6 (1984): 518–36.
  • Friedberger, Mark. "The Farm Family and the Inheritance Process: Evidence from the Corn Belt, 1870–1950." Agricultural History 57.1 (1983): 1–13. uses Iowa census and sales data
  • Friedberger, Mark. Shake-Out: Iowa Farm Families in the 1980s (1989)
  • Fry, John J. "" Good Farming-Clear Thinking-Right Living": Midwestern Farm Newspapers, Social Reform, and Rural Readers in the Early Twentieth Century." Agricultural History (2004): 34–49.
  • Gisolfi, Monica Richmond, "From Crop Lien to Contract Farming: The Roots of Agribusiness in the American South, 1929–1939," Agricultural History, 80 (Spring 2006), 167–89.
  • Hahn, Barbara, "Paradox of Precision: Bright Tobacco as Technology Transfer, 1880–1937," Agricultural History, 82 (Spring 2008), 220–35.
  • Hurt, R. Douglas. "The Agricultural and Rural History of Kansas." Kansas History 2004 27(3): 194–217. ISSN 0149-9114 Fulltext: in Ebsco
  • Larson, Henrietta M. The wheat market and the farmer in Minnesota, 1858–1900 (1926). online edition
  • MacCurdy, Rahno Mabel. The history of the California Fruit Growers Exchange (1925). online edition
  • Miner, Horace Mitchell. Culture and agriculture; an anthropological study of a corn belt county (1949) online edition
  • Nordin, Dennis S. and Scott, Roy V. From Prairie Farmer to Entrepreneur: The Transformation of Midwestern Agriculture. Indiana U. Press, 2005. 356 pp.
  • Sackman, Douglas Cazaux. Orange Empire: California and the Fruits of Eden (2005)
  • Saloutos, Theodore. "Southern Agriculture and the Problems of Readjustment: 1865–1877," Agricultural history (April, 1956) Vol 30#2 58–76 online edition
  • Sawers, Larry. "The Mule, the South, and Economic Progress." Social Science History 2004 28(4): 667–90. ISSN 0145-5532 Fulltext: in Project Muse and Ebsco

Environmental issues edit

  • Craven, Avery Odelle. Soil Exhaustion as a Factor in the Agricultural History of Virginia and Maryland, 1606–1860 (1925)
  • Cronon, William. Changes in the Land, Revised Edition: Indians, Colonists, and the Ecology of New England (2nd ed. 2003), excerpt and text search
  • Cunfer, Geoff. On the Great Plains: Agriculture and Environment. (2005). 240 pp.
  • McLeman, Robert, "Migration Out of 1930s Rural Eastern Oklahoma: Insights for Climate Change Research," Great Plains Quarterly, 26 (Winter 2006), 27–40.
  • Majewski, John, and Viken Tchakerian, "The Environmental Origins of Shifting Cultivation: Climate, Soils, and Disease in the Nineteenth-Century U.S. South," Agricultural History, 81 (Fall 2007), 522–49.
  • Melosi, Martin V., and Charles Reagan Wilson, eds. The New Encyclopedia of Southern Culture: Volume 8: Environment (v. 8) (2007)
  • Miner, Craig. Next Year Country: Dust to Dust in Western Kansas, 1890–1940 (2006) 371 pp. ISBN 0-7006-1476-1
  • Silver, Timothy. A New Face on the Countryside: Indians, Colonists, and Slaves in South Atlantic Forests, 1500–1800 (1990) excerpt and text search
  • Urban, Michael A., "An Uninhabited Waste: Transforming the Grand Prairie in Nineteenth Century Illinois, U.S.A.," Journal of Historical Geography, 31 (Oct. 2005), 647–65.

Historiography edit

  • Atack, Jeremy. "A Nineteenth-century Resource for Agricultural History Research in the Twenty-first Century." Agricultural History 2004 78(4): 389-412. ISSN 0002-1482 Fulltext: in University of California Journals and Ebsco. Large database of individual farmers from manuscript census.
  • Bogue, Allan G. "Tilling Agricultural History with Paul Wallace Gates and James C. Malin." Agricultural History 2006 80(4): 436–60. ISSN 0002-1482 Fulltext: in Ebsco
  • Edwards, Everett Eugene (1970), A bibliography of the history of agriculture in the United States, ISBN 978-0-8337-1002-4
  • Levins, Richard A. Willard Cochrane and the American Family Farm (University of Nebraska Press, 2000.) 88p
  • Peters, Scott J. "'Every Farmer Should Be Awakened': Liberty Hyde Bailey's Vision of Agricultural Extension Work." Agricultural History (2006): 190-219. online[dead link]

Primary sources edit

  • Bruchey, Stuart, ed. Cotton in the Growth of the American Economy: 1790–1860 (1967)
  • Carter, Susan, at al. eds. The Historical Statistics of the United States (Cambridge U.P. 2006), 6 vol.; online in many academic libraries; 105 tables on agriculture
  • Phillips, Ulrich B. ed. Plantation and Frontier Documents, 1649–1863; Illustrative of Industrial History in the Colonial and Antebellum South: Collected from MSS. and Other Rare Sources. 2 Volumes. (1909). online vol 1 and online vol 2
  • Rasmussen, Wayne D., ed. Agriculture in the United States: a documentary history (4 vol, Random House, 1975) 3661pp. vol 4 online
  • Schmidt, Louis Bernard. ed. Readings in the economic history of American agriculture (1925) online edition
  • Sorokin, Pitirim et al., eds. A Systematic Sourcebook in Rural Sociology (3 vol. 1930), 2000 pages of primary sources and commentary; worldwide coverage

External links edit

  • Agricultural History a leading scholarly journal
  • Agricultural History Society
  • 331 historic photographs of American farmlands, farmers, farm operations and rural areas; These are pre-1923 and out of copyright.
  • Online Libraries of Historical Agricultural Texts and Images 2015-04-02 at the Wayback Machine USDA, Alternative Farming Systems Information Center

history, agriculture, united, states, history, agriculture, united, states, covers, period, from, first, english, settlers, present, colonial, america, agriculture, primary, livelihood, population, most, towns, were, shipping, points, export, agricultural, pro. The history of agriculture in the United States covers the period from the first English settlers to the present day In Colonial America agriculture was the primary livelihood for 90 of the population and most towns were shipping points for the export of agricultural products Most farms were geared toward subsistence production for family use The rapid growth of population and the expansion of the frontier opened up large numbers of new farms and clearing the land was a major preoccupation of farmers After 1800 cotton became the chief crop in southern plantations and the chief American export After 1840 industrialization and urbanization opened up lucrative domestic markets The number of farms grew from 1 4 million in 1850 to 4 0 million in 1880 and 6 4 million in 1910 then started to fall dropping to 5 6 million in 1950 and 2 2 million in 2008 1 1946 Pictorial map represent wealth of the United States soilContents 1 Pre Colonial era 2 Colonial farming 1610 1775 2 1 Ethnic farming styles 3 New nation 1776 1860 3 1 South 3 2 New England 3 3 Western frontier 4 Railroad age 1860 1910 4 1 Rural life 4 2 Ranching 5 South 1860 1940 6 Grange 7 World War I 8 1920s 9 1930s 9 1 New Deal farm and rural programs 9 2 Rural relief 9 3 Economics and Labor 10 Since 1945 10 1 Government policies 10 2 Changing technology 10 3 Economics and labor 10 4 Technology 11 Crops 11 1 Wheat 11 1 1 Varieties 11 1 2 Exports 11 1 3 Marketing 11 2 Cotton 12 See also 13 References 14 Bibliography 14 1 Surveys 14 2 Before 1775 14 3 1775 1860 14 3 1 North 14 3 2 South 14 4 1860 present national 14 5 1860 present regional studies 14 6 Environmental issues 14 7 Historiography 14 8 Primary sources 15 External linksPre Colonial era editFurther information Eastern Agricultural Complex Agriculture in the prehistoric Southwest and Agriculture on the prehistoric Great Plains Before the arrival of Europeans in North America the continent supported a diverse range of indigenous cultures While some populations were primarily hunter gatherers other populations relied on agriculture Native Americans farmed domesticated crops in the Eastern Woodlands the Great Plains and the American Southwest Colonial farming 1610 1775 editBeginning in 1620 the first settlers in Plymouth Colony planted barley and peas from England but their most important crop was Indian corn maize which they were shown how to cultivate by the native Squanto To fertilize this crop they used small fish which they called herrings or shads 2 Beginning in 1619 Southern plantation agriculture using slaves developed in Virginia and Maryland where tobacco was grown and South Carolina where indigo and rice was grown Cotton became a major plantation crop after 1800 in the Black Belt and throughout the region from North Carolina in an arc through Texas where the climate allowed for cotton cultivation 3 Apart from the tobacco and rice plantations the great majority of farms were subsistence producing food for the family and some for trade and taxes Throughout the colonial period subsistence farming was pervasive Farmers supplemented their income with sales of surplus crops or animals in the local market or by exports to the slave colonies in the British West Indies Logging hunting and fishing supplemented the family economy 4 Ethnic farming styles edit Ethnicity made a difference in agricultural practice German Americans brought with them practices and traditions that were quite different from those of the English and Scots They adapted Old World techniques to a much more abundant land supply For example they generally preferred oxen to horses for plowing Furthermore the Germans showed a long term tendency to keep the farm in the family and to avoid having their children move to towns 5 6 The Scots Irish built their livelihoods on some farming but more herding of hogs and cattle In the American colonies the Scots Irish focused on mixed farming Using this technique they grew corn for human consumption and for livestock feed especially for hogs Many improvement minded farmers of different backgrounds began using new agricultural practices to increase their output During the 1750s these agricultural innovators replaced the hand sickles and scythes used to harvest hay wheat and barley with the cradle scythe a tool with wooden fingers that arranged the stalks of grain for easy collection This tool was able to triple the amount of work done by a farmer in one day A few scientifically informed farmers mostly wealthy planters like George Washington began fertilizing their fields with dung and lime and rotating their crops to keep the soil fertile Before 1720 most colonists in the mid Atlantic region worked in small scale farming and paid for imported manufactures by supplying the West Indies with corn and flour In New York a fur pelt export trade to Europe flourished and added additional wealth to the region After 1720 mid Atlantic farming was stimulated by the international demand for wheat A massive population explosion in Europe drove wheat prices up By 1770 a bushel of wheat cost twice as much as it did in 1720 7 Farmers also expanded their production of flaxseed and corn since flax was in high demand in the Irish linen industry and a demand for corn existed in the West Indies Many poor German immigrants and Scots Irish settlers began their careers as agricultural wage laborers Merchants and artisans hired teen aged indentured servants paying the transportation over from Europe as workers for a domestic system for the manufacture of cloth and other goods Merchants often bought wool and flax from farmers and employed newly arrived immigrants who had been textile workers in Ireland and Germany to work in their homes spinning the materials into yarn and cloth citation needed Large farmers and merchants became wealthy while farmers with smaller farms and artisans only made enough for subsistence New nation 1776 1860 editThe U S economy was primarily agricultural in the early 19th century 8 9 Westward expansion including the Louisiana Purchase and American victory in the War of 1812 plus the building of canals and the introduction of steamboats opened up new areas for agriculture Most farming was designed to produce food for the family and service small local markets In times of rapid economic growth a farmer could still improve the land for far more than he paid for it and then move further west to repeat the process While the land was cheap and fertile the process of clearing it and building farmsteads wasn t Frontier life wasn t new for Americans but presented new challenges for farm families who faced the challenges of bringing their produce to market across vast distances Although the production expanded very rapidly during the Antebellum decades per capita food production did not keep pace with the rapidly expanding urban population and industrial labor South edit In the Southern United States the poor lands were held by poor white farmers who generally owned no slaves 10 The best lands were held by rich plantation owners and were operated primarily with slave labor These farms grew their own food and also concentrated on a few cash crops that could be exported to meet the growing demand in Europe especially cotton tobacco and sugar The cotton gin made it possible to increase cotton production Cotton became the main export crop but after a few years the fertility of the soil was depleted and the plantation was moved to the new land further west Much land was cleared and put into growing cotton in the Mississippi valley and in Alabama and new grain growing areas were brought into production in the Mid West Eventually this put severe downward pressure on prices particularly of cotton first from 1820 23 and again from 1840 43 11 Sugar cane was being grown in Louisiana where it was refined into granular sugar Growing and refining sugar required a large amount of capital Some of the nation s wealthiest men owned sugar plantations which often had their own sugar mills 12 New England edit In New England subsistence agriculture gave way after 1810 to production to provide food supplies for the rapidly growing industrial towns and cities New specialty export crops were introduced such as tobacco and cranberries 13 Western frontier edit Further information American frontier The British Empire had attempted to restrict westward expansion with the ineffective Proclamation Line of 1763 abolished after the American Revolutionary War The first major movement west of the Appalachian Mountains began in Pennsylvania Virginia and North Carolina as soon as the war was won in 1781 Pioneers housed themselves in a rough lean to or at most a one room log cabin The main food supply at first came from hunting deer turkeys and other abundant small game Clad in typical frontier garb leather breeches moccasins fur cap and hunting shirt and girded by a belt from which hung a hunting knife and a shot pouch all homemade the pioneer presented a unique appearance In a short time he opened in the woods a patch or clearing on which he grew corn wheat flax tobacco and other products even fruit In a few years the pioneer added hogs sheep and cattle and perhaps acquired a horse Homespun clothing replaced the animal skins The more restless pioneers grew dissatisfied with over civilized life and uprooted themselves again to move 50 or hundred miles 80 or 160 km further west 14 In 1788 American pioneers to the Northwest Territory established Marietta Ohio as the first permanent American settlement in the Northwest Territory 15 By 1813 the western frontier had reached the Mississippi River St Louis Missouri was the largest town on the frontier the gateway for travel westward and a principal trading center for Mississippi River traffic and inland commerce There was wide agreement on the need to settle the new territories quickly but the debate polarized over the price the government should charge The conservatives and Whigs typified by president John Quincy Adams wanted a moderated pace that charged the newcomers enough to pay the costs of the federal government The Democrats however tolerated a wild scramble for land at very low prices The final resolution came in the Homestead Law of 1862 with a moderated pace that gave settlers 160 acres free after they worked on it for five years 16 From the 1770s to the 1830s pioneers moved into the new lands that stretched from Kentucky to Alabama to Texas Most were farmers who moved in family groups 17 Historian Louis M Hacker shows how wasteful the first generation of pioneers was they were too ignorant to cultivate the land properly and when the natural fertility of virgin land was used up they sold out and moved west to try again Hacker describes that in Kentucky about 1812 Farms were for sale with from ten to fifty acres cleared possessing log houses peach and sometimes apple orchards inclosed in fences and having plenty of standing timber for fuel The land was sown in wheat and corn which were the staples while hemp for making rope was being cultivated in increasing quantities in the fertile river bottoms Yet on the whole it was an agricultural society without skill or resources It committed all those sins which characterize a wasteful and ignorant husbandry Grass seed was not sown for hay and as a result the farm animals had to forage for themselves in the forests the fields were not permitted to lie in pasturage a single crop was planted in the soil until the land was exhausted the manure was not returned to the fields only a small part of the farm was brought under cultivation the rest being permitted to stand in timber Instruments of cultivation were rude and clumsy and only too few many of them being made on the farm It is plain why the American frontier settler was on the move continually It was not his fear of a too close contact with the comforts and restraints of a civilized society that stirred him into a ceaseless activity nor merely the chance of selling out at a profit to the coming wave of settlers it was his wasting land that drove him on Hunger was the goad The pioneer farmer s ignorance his inadequate facilities for cultivation his limited means of transport necessitated his frequent changes of scene He could succeed only with virgin soil 18 Hacker adds that the second wave of settlers reclaimed the land repaired the damage and practiced a more sustainable agriculture 19 Railroad age 1860 1910 editFurther information History of rail transportation in the United States A dramatic expansion in farming took place from 1860 to 1910 as cheap rail transportation opened the way for exports to Europe 20 The number of farms tripled from 2 0 million in 1860 to 6 0 million in 1906 The number of people living on farms grew from about 10 million in 1860 to 22 million in 1880 to 31 million in 1905 The value of farms soared from 8 billion in 1860 to 30 billion in 1906 21 22 The federal government issued 160 acre 65 ha tracts for very cheap costs to about 400 000 families who settled new land under the Homestead Act of 1862 Even larger numbers purchased lands at very low interest from the new railroads which were trying to create markets The railroads advertised heavily in Europe and brought over at low fares hundreds of thousands of farmers from Germany Scandinavia and Britain The Government of Canada s Dominion Lands Act of 1872 served a similar function for establishing homesteads on the prairies in Canada 23 The first years of the 20th century were prosperous for all American farmers The years 1910 1914 became a statistical benchmark called parity that organized farm groups wanted the government to use as a benchmark for the level of prices and profits they felt they deserved 24 Rural life edit nbsp Boosterism cover of a promotional booklet published in 1907 by the Chicago Rock Island and Pacific RailroadEarly settlers discovered that the Great Plains were not the Great American Desert but they also found that the very harsh climate with tornadoes blizzards drought hail storms floods and grasshopper plagues 25 made for a high risk of ruined crops Many early settlers were financially ruined especially in the early 1890s and either protested through the Populist movement or went back east In the 20th century crop insurance new conservation techniques and large scale federal aid all lowered the risk Immigrants especially Germans and their children comprised the largest element of settlers after 1860 they were attracted by the good soil low priced lands from the railroad companies The railroads offered attractive Family packages They brought in European families with their tools directly to the new farm which was purchased on easy credit terms The railroad needed settlers as much as the settlers needed farmland Even cheaper land was available through homesteading although it was usually not as well located as railroad land 26 The problem of blowing dust resulted from too little rainfall for growing enough wheat to keep the topsoil from blowing away In the 1930s techniques and technologies of soil conservation most of which had been available but ignored before the Dust Bowl conditions began were promoted by the Soil Conservation Service SCS of the US Department of Agriculture so that with cooperation from the weather soil condition was much improved by 1940 27 28 On the Great Plains very few single men attempted to operate a farm or ranch farmers clearly understood the need for a hard working wife and numerous children to handle the many chores including child rearing feeding and clothing the family managing the housework feeding the hired hands and especially after the 1930s handling the paperwork and financial details 29 During the early years of settlement in the late 19th century farm women played an integral role in assuring family survival by working outdoors After a generation or so women increasingly left the fields thus redefining their roles within the family New conveniences such as sewing and washing machines encouraged women to turn to domestic roles The scientific housekeeping movement promoted across the land by the media and government extension agents as well as county fairs which featured achievements in home cookery and canning advice columns for women in the farm papers and home economics courses in the schools 30 nbsp Temporary quarters for Volga Germans in central Kansas 1875Although the eastern image of farm life on the prairies emphasizes the isolation of the lonely farmer and farm life rural folk created a rich social life for themselves They often sponsored activities that combined work food and entertainment such as barn raisings corn huskings quilting bees grange meeting church activities and school functions 31 The womenfolk organized shared meals and potluck events as well as extended visits between families 32 Women were also involved in poultry breeding In 1896 farmer Nettie Metcalf created the Buckeye chicken breed in Warren Ohio 33 34 35 In 1905 Buckeyes became an official breed under the American Poultry Association 36 The Buckeye breed is the first recorded chicken breed to be created and developed by a woman 37 38 39 Ranching edit Much of the Great Plains became open range hosting cattle ranching operations on public land without charge In the spring and fall ranchers held roundups where their cowboys branded new calves treated animals and sorted the cattle for sale Such ranching began in Texas and gradually moved northward Cowboys drove Texas cattle north to railroad lines in the cities of Dodge City Kansas and Ogallala Nebraska from there cattle were shipped eastward British investors financed many great ranches of the era Overstocking of the range and the terrible Winter of 1886 87 resulted in a disaster with many cattle starved and frozen to death From then on ranchers generally raised feed to ensure they could keep their cattle alive over winter 40 When there was too little rain for row crop farming but enough grass for grazing cattle ranching became dominant Before the railroads arrived in Texas the 1870s cattle drives took large herds from Texas to the railheads in Kansas A few thousand Indians resisted notably the Sioux who were reluctant to settle on reservations However most Indians themselves became ranch hands and cowboys 41 New varieties of wheat flourished in the arid parts of the Great Plains opening much of the Dakotas Montana western Kansas western Nebraska and eastern Colorado Where it was too dry for wheat the settlers turned to cattle ranching 42 South 1860 1940 editAgriculture in the South was oriented toward large scale plantations that produced cotton for export as well as other export products such as tobacco and sugar During the American Civil War the Union blockade shut down 95 percent of the export business Some cotton got out through blockade runners and in conquered areas much was bought by northern speculators for shipment to Europe The great majority of white farmers worked on small subsistence farms that supplied the needs of the family and the local market 43 After the war the world price of cotton plunged the plantations were broken into small farms for the Freedmen and poor whites started growing cotton because they needed the money to pay taxes 44 45 Sharecropping became widespread in the South as a response to economic upheaval caused by the end of slavery during and after Reconstruction 46 47 Sharecropping was a way for very poor farmers both white and black to earn a living from land owned by someone else The landowner provided land housing tools and seed and perhaps a mule and a local merchant provided food and supplies on credit while the sharecropper provided the labor At harvest time the sharecropper kept a share of the crop production from one third to one half with the landowner taking the rest The cropper used his share to pay off his debt to the merchant The system started with blacks when large plantations were subdivided By the 1880s white farmers also became sharecroppers The system was distinct from that of the tenant farmer who rented the land provided his own tools and mule and kept the crop or paid some to the landowner through crop rent Landowners provided more supervision to sharecroppers and less or none to tenant farmers Poverty was inevitable because world cotton prices were low 48 Sawers 2005 shows how southern farmers made the mule their preferred draft animal in the South during the 1860s 1920s primarily because it fit better with the region s geography Mules better withstood the heat of summer and their smaller size and hooves were well suited for such crops as cotton tobacco and sugar The character of soils and climate in the lower South hindered the creation of pastures so the mule breeding industry was concentrated in the border states of Missouri Kentucky and Tennessee Transportation costs combined with topography to influence the prices of mules and horses which in turn affected patterns of mule use The economic and production advantages associated with mules made their use a progressive step for Southern agriculture that endured until the mechanization brought by tractors 49 667 90 Beginning around the mid 20th century Texas began to transform from a rural and agricultural state to one that was urban and industrialized 50 Grange editThe Grange was an organization founded in 1867 for farmers and their wives that was strongest in the Northeast and which promoted the modernization not only of farming practices but also of family and community life It is still in operation 51 nbsp Promotional poster offering a gift for the grangers ca 1873 Membership soared from 1873 200 000 to 1875 858 050 as many of the state and local granges adopted non partisan political resolutions especially regarding the regulation of railroad transportation costs The organization was unusual in that it allowed women and teens as equal members Rapid growth infused the national organization with money from dues and many local granges established consumer cooperatives initially supplied by the Chicago wholesaler Aaron Montgomery Ward Poor fiscal management combined with organizational difficulties resulting from rapid growth led to a massive decline in membership By around the start of the 20th century the Grange rebounded and membership stabilized 52 In the mid 1870s state Granges in the Midwest were successful in passing state laws that regulated the rates they could be charged by railroads and grain warehouses The birth of the federal government s Cooperative Extension Service Rural Free Delivery and the Farm Credit System were largely due to Grange lobbying The peak of their political power was marked by their success in Munn v Illinois which held that the grain warehouses were a private utility in the public interest and therefore could be regulated by public law see references below The Granger Movement During the Progressive Era 1890s 1920s political parties took up Grange causes Consequently local Granges focused more on community service although the State and National Granges remain a political force 53 54 World War I editMain article United States home front during World War I The U S in World War I was a critical supplier to other Allied nations as millions of European farmers were in the army The rapid expansion of the farms coupled with the diffusion of trucks and Model T cars and the tractor allowed the agricultural market to expand to an unprecedented size During World War I prices shot up and farmers borrowed heavily to buy out their neighbors and expand their holdings This gave them very high debts that made them vulnerable to the downturn in farm prices in 1920 Throughout the 1920s and down to 1934 low prices and high debt were major problems for farmers in all regions 55 Beginning with the 1917 US National War Garden Commission the government encouraged Victory gardens agricultural plantings in private yards and public parks for personal use and for the war effort Production from these gardens exceeded 1 2 billion by the end of World War I 56 Victory gardens were later encouraged during World War II when rationing made for food shortages 1920s edit nbsp A 1919 sheet music coverA popular Tin Pan Alley song of 1919 asked concerning the United States troops returning from World War I How Ya Gonna Keep em Down on the Farm After They ve Seen Paree As the song hints many did not remain down on the farm there was a great migration of youth from farms to nearby towns and smaller cities The average distance moved was only 10 miles 16 km Few went to the cities over 100 000 However agriculture became increasingly mechanized with widespread use of the tractor other heavy equipment and superior techniques disseminated through County Agents who were employed by state agricultural colleges and funded by the Federal government The early 1920s saw a rapid expansion in the American agricultural economy largely due to new technologies and especially mechanization Competition from Europe and Russia had disappeared due to the war and American agricultural goods were being shipped around the world 57 58 The new technologies such as the combine harvester meant that the most efficient farms were larger in size and gradually the small family farm that had long been the model were replaced by larger and more business oriented firms Despite this increase in farm size and capital intensity the great majority of agricultural production continued to be undertaken by family owned enterprises World War I had created an atmosphere of high prices for agricultural products as European nations demand for exports surged Farmers had enjoyed a period of prosperity as U S farm production expanded rapidly to fill the gap left as European belligerents found themselves unable to produce enough food When the war ended supply increased rapidly as Europe s agricultural market rebounded Overproduction led to plummeting prices which led to stagnant market conditions and living standards for farmers in the 1920s Worse hundreds of thousands of farmers had taken out mortgages and loans to buy out their neighbors property and now are unable to meet the financial burden The cause was the collapse of land prices after the wartime bubble when farmers used high prices to buy up neighboring farms at high prices saddling them with heavy debts Farmers however blamed the decline of foreign markets and the effects of the protective tariff 59 Farmers demanded relief as the agricultural depression grew steadily worse in the middle 1920s while the rest of the economy flourished Farmers had a powerful voice in Congress and demanded federal subsidies most notably the McNary Haugen Farm Relief Bill It was passed but vetoed by President Calvin Coolidge 60 Coolidge instead supported the alternative program of Commerce Secretary Herbert Hoover and Agriculture Secretary William M Jardine to modernize farming by bringing in more electricity more efficient equipment better seeds and breeds more rural education and better business practices Hoover advocated the creation of a Federal Farm Board which was dedicated to restriction of crop production to domestic demand behind a tariff wall and maintained that the farmer s ailments were due to defective distribution In 1929 the Hoover plan was adopted 61 1930s editNew Deal farm and rural programs edit Further information Presidency of Franklin D Roosevelt Agriculture nbsp A migrant farm family in California March 1935 Photo by Dorothea Lange President Franklin D Roosevelt a liberal Democrat was keenly interested in farm issues and believed that true prosperity would not return until farming was prosperous 62 63 Many different New Deal programs were directed at farmers 64 65 Farming reached its low point in 1932 but even then millions of unemployed people were returning to the family farm having given up hope for a job in the cities The main New Deal strategy was to reduce the supply of commodities thereby raising the prices a little to the consumer and a great deal to the farmer Marginal farmers produce too little to be helped by the strategy specialized relief programs were developed for them Prosperity largely returned to the farm by 1936 66 Roosevelt s First Hundred Days produced the Farm Security Act to raise farm incomes by raising the prices farmers received which was achieved by reducing total farm output In May 1933 the Agricultural Adjustment Act created the Agricultural Adjustment Administration AAA The act reflected the demands of leaders of major farm organizations especially the Farm Bureau and reflected debates among Roosevelt s farm advisers such as Secretary of Agriculture Henry A Wallace M L Wilson 67 Rexford Tugwell and George Peek 68 The aim of the AAA was to raise prices for commodities through artificial scarcity The AAA used a system of domestic allotments setting total output of corn cotton dairy products hogs rice tobacco and wheat The farmers themselves had a voice in the process of using government to benefit their incomes The AAA paid land owners subsidies for leaving some of their land idle with funds provided by a new tax on food processing The goal was to force up farm prices to the point of parity an index based on 1910 1914 prices To meet 1933 goals 10 million acres 40 000 km2 of growing cotton was plowed up bountiful crops were left to rot and six million piglets were killed and discarded 69 The idea was the less produced the higher the wholesale price and the higher income to the farmer Farm incomes increased significantly in the first three years of the New Deal as prices for commodities rose Food prices remained well below 1929 levels 70 71 The AAA established a long lasting federal role in the planning of the entire agricultural sector of the economy and was the first program on such a scale on behalf of the troubled agricultural economy The original AAA did not provide for any sharecroppers or tenants or farm laborers who might become unemployed but there were other New Deal programs especially for them such as the Farm Security Administration 72 In 1936 the Supreme Court of the United States declared the AAA to be unconstitutional for technical reasons it was replaced by a similar program that did win Court approval Instead of paying farmers for letting fields lie barren the new program instead subsidized them for planting soil enriching crops such as alfalfa that would not be sold on the market Federal regulation of agricultural production has been modified many times since then but together with large subsidies the basic philosophy of subsidizing farmers is still in effect in 2015 73 Rural relief edit nbsp Modern methods had not reached the backwoods such as Wilder Tennessee Tennessee Valley Authority 1942 Many rural people lived in severe poverty especially in the South Major programs addressed to their needs included the Resettlement Administration RA the Rural Electrification Administration REA rural welfare projects sponsored by the WPA NYA Forest Service and CCC including school lunches building new schools opening roads in remote areas reforestation and purchase of marginal lands to enlarge national forests In 1933 the Administration launched the Tennessee Valley Authority a project involving dam construction planning on an unprecedented scale in order to curb flooding generate electricity and modernize the very poor farms in the Tennessee Valley region of the Southern United States 74 75 For the first time there was a national program to help migrant and marginal farmers through programs such as the Resettlement Administration and the Farm Security Administration Their plight gained national attention through the 1939 novel and film The Grapes of Wrath The New Deal thought there were too many farmers and resisted demands of the poor for loans to buy farms 76 However it made a major effort to upgrade the health facilities available to a sickly population 77 Economics and Labor edit In the 1930s during the Great Depression farm labor organized a number of strikes in various states 1933 was a particularly active year with strikes including the California agricultural strikes of 1933 the 1933 Yakima Valley strike in Washington and the 1933 Wisconsin milk strike Agriculture was prosperous during World War II even as rationing and price controls limited the availability of meat and other foods in order to guarantee its availability to the American And Allied armed forces During World War II farmers were not drafted but surplus labor especially in the southern cotton fields voluntarily relocated to war jobs in the cities 78 79 During World War II victory gardens planted at private residences and public parks were an important source of fresh produce These gardens were encouraged by the United States Department of Agriculture Around one third of the vegetables produced by the United States came from victory gardens 80 81 Since 1945 editGovernment policies edit Main article United States farm bill The New Deal era farm programs were continued into the 1940s and 1950s with the goal of supporting the prices received by farmers Typical programs involved farm loans commodity subsidies and price supports 82 The rapid decline in the farm population led to a smaller voice in Congress So the well organized Farm Bureau and other lobbyists worked in the 1970s to appeal to urban Congressman through food stamp programs for the poor By 2000 the food stamp program was the largest component of the farm bill In 2010 the Tea Party movement brought in many Republicans committed to cutting all federal subsidies including those agriculture Meanwhile urban Democrats strongly opposed reductions pointing to the severe hardships caused by the 2008 10 economic recession Though the Agricultural Act of 2014 saw many rural Republican Congressman voting against the program it passed with bipartisan support 83 84 85 Changing technology edit Ammonia from plants built during World War II to make explosives became available for making fertilizers leading to a permanent decline in real fertilizer prices and expanded use 86 The early 1950s was the peak period for tractor sales in the U S as the few remaining mules and work horses were sold for dog food The horsepower of farm machinery underwent a large expansion 87 A successful cotton picking machine was introduced in 1949 The machine could do the work of 50 men picking by hand The great majority of unskilled farm laborers move to urban areas 88 89 Research on plant breeding produced varieties of grain crops that could produce high yields with heavy fertilizer input This resulted in the Green revolution beginning in the 1940s 90 By 2000 yields of corn maize had risen by a factor of over four Wheat and soybean yields also rose significantly 91 92 Economics and labor edit After 1945 a continued annual 2 increase in productivity as opposed to 1 from 1835 1935 93 97 led to further increases in farm size and corresponding reductions in the number of farms 93 99 Many farmers sold out and moved to nearby towns and cities Others switched to part time operation supported by off farm employment The 1960s and 1970s saw major farm worker strikes including the 1965 Delano grape strike and the 1970 Salad Bowl strike In 1975 the California Agricultural Labor Relations Act of 1975 was enacted 94 establishing the right to collective bargaining for farmworkers in California a first in U S history 95 Individuals with prominent roles in farm worker organizing in this period include Cesar Chavez Dolores Huerta Larry Itliong and Philip Vera Cruz Chavez mobilized California workers into the United Farm Workers organization 96 In 1990 undocumented workers made up an estimated 14 percent of the farm workforce By the year 2000 the percentage had grown to over 50 and has remained around 50 in the 2000 2020 period 97 In 2015 grain farmers started taking an extreme step one not widely seen since the 1980s by breaching lease contracts with their landowners reducing the amount of land they sow and risking long legal battles with landlords 98 Technology edit New machinery especially large self propelled combines and mechanical cotton pickers sharply reduced labor requirements in harvesting 93 In addition electric motors and irrigation pumps opened up new ways to be efficient 93 107 Electricity also played a role in making major innovations in animal husbandry possible especially modern milking parlors grain elevators and CAFOs confined animal feeding operations 93 Advances in fertilizers 93 109 12 herbicides 93 109 112 insecticides and fungicides 93 115 16 the use of antibiotics 93 116 17 and growth hormones 93 118 19 Significant advances occurred in plant breeding and animal breeding such as crop hybridization GMOs genetically modified organisms and artificial insemination of livestock Post harvest innovations occurred in food processing and food distribution e g frozen foods 93 Crops editWheat edit Main article Wheat production in the United States Wheat used for white bread pastries pasta and pizza has been the principal cereal crop since the 18th century It was introduced by the first English colonists and quickly became the main cash crop of farmers who sold it to urban populations and exporters In colonial times its culture became concentrated in the Middle Colonies which became known as the bread colonies In the mid 18th century wheat culture spread to the tidewaters of Maryland and Virginia where George Washington was a prominent grower as he diversified away from tobacco The crop moved west with Ohio as the center in 1840 and Illinois in 1860 99 Illinois replaced its wheat with corn which was used locally to feed hogs The invention of mechanical harvesters drawn first by horses and then tractors made larger farms much more efficient than small ones The farmers had to borrow money to buy land and equipment and had to specialize in wheat which made them highly vulnerable to price fluctuations and gave them an incentive to ask for government help to stabilize or raise prices 100 Wheat farming depended on significant labor input only during planting and especially at harvest time Therefore successful farmers especially on the Great Plains bought up as much land as possible purchased very expensive mechanical equipment and depended on migrating hired laborers at harvesting time The migrant families tended to be social outcasts without local roots and mostly lived near the poverty line except in the harvesting season 101 From 1909 to today North Dakota and Kansas have vied for first place in wheat production followed by Oklahoma and Montana nbsp McCormick reaper and twine binder in 1884In the colonial era wheat was sown by broadcasting reaped by sickles and threshed by flails The kernels were then taken to a grist mill for grinding into flour In 1830 it took four people and two oxen working 10 hours a day to produce 200 bushels 102 New technology greatly increased productivity in the 19th century as sowing with drills replaced broadcasting cradles took the place of sickles and the cradles in turn were replaced by reapers and binders Steam powered threshing machines superseded flails By 1895 in Bonanza farms in the Dakotas it took six people and 36 horses pulling huge harvesters working 10 hours a day to produce 20 000 bushels 102 In the 1930s the gasoline powered combine combined reaping and threshing into one operation that took one person to operate Production grew from 85 million bushels in 1839 500 million in 1880 600 million in 1900 and peaked at 1 0 billion bushels in 1915 Prices fluctuated erratically with a downward trend in the 1890s that caused great distress in the Plains states 103 nbsp A 1928 Wallis tractor made by Massey FergusonThe marketing of wheat was modernized as well as the cost of transportation steadily fell and more and more distant markets opened up Before 1850 the crop was sacked shipped by wagon or canal boat and stored in warehouses With the rapid growth of the nation s railroad network in the 1850s 1870s farmers took their harvest by wagon for sale to the nearest country elevators The wheat moved to terminal elevators where it was sold through grain exchanges to flour millers and exporters Since the elevators and railroads generally had a local monopoly farmers soon had targets besides the weather for their complaints They sometimes accused the elevator men of undergrading shortweighting and excessive dockage Scandinavian immigrants in the Midwest took control over marketing through the organization of cooperatives 104 Varieties edit nbsp The horse powered thresher it removes the inedible chaff from the wheat kernelsFollowing the invention of the steel roller mill in 1878 hard varieties of wheat such as Turkey Red became more popular than soft which had been previously preferred because they were easier for grist mills to grind 105 Wheat production witnessed major changes in varieties and cultural practices since 1870 Thanks to these innovations vast expanses of the wheat belt now support commercial production and yields have resisted the negative impact of insects diseases and weeds Biological innovations contributed roughly half of labor productivity growth between 1839 and 1909 106 In the late 19th century hardy new wheat varieties from the Russian steppes were introduced on the Great Plains by the Volga Germans who settled in North Dakota Kansas Montana and neighboring states 107 Legend credits the miller Bernhard Warkentin 1847 1908 a German Mennonite from Russia for introducing the Turkey red variety from Russia 108 More exactly in the 1880s numerous millers and government agricultural agents worked to create Turkey red and make Kansas the Wheat State 109 The U S Dept of Agriculture and the state experiment stations have developed many new varieties and taught farmers how to plant them 110 Similar varieties now dominate in the arid regions of the Great Plains Exports edit Wheat farmers have always produced a surplus for export The exports were small scale until the 1860s when bad crops in Europe and lower costs due to cheaper railroads and ocean transport opened the European markets to cheap American wheat The British in particular depended on American wheat during the 1860s for a fourth of their food supply making the government reluctant to risk a cutoff if it supported the Confederacy By 1880 150 000 000 bushels were exported to the value of 190 000 000 World War I saw large numbers of young European farmers conscripted into the armies so Allied countries particularly France and Italy depended on American shipments 111 which ranged from 100 000 000 to 260 000 000 bushels a year American farmers reacted to the heavy demand and high prices by expanding their production many taking out mortgages to buy out their neighbors farms This led to a large surplus in the 1920s The resulting low prices prompted growers to seek government support of prices first through the McNary Haugen bills which failed in Congress and later in the New Deal through the Agricultural Adjustment Act of 1933 and its many versions 112 World War II brought an enormous expansion of production topping off at a billion bushels in 1944 During the war and after large scale wheat and flour exports were part of Lend Lease and the foreign assistance programs In 1966 exports reached 860 million bushels of which 570 million were given away as food aid A major drought in the Soviet Union in 1972 led to the sale of 390 million bushels and an agreement was assigned in 1975 under the detente policy to supply the Soviets with grain over a five year period Marketing edit By 1900 private grain exchanges settled the daily prices for North American wheat Santon 2010 explains how the AAA programs set wheat prices in the U S after 1933 and the Canadians established a wheat board to do the same there The Canadian government required prairie farmers to deliver all their grain to the Canadian Wheat Board CWB a single selling desk agency that supplanted private wheat marketing in western Canada Meanwhile the United States government subsidized farm incomes with domestic use taxes and import tariffs but otherwise preserved private wheat marketing 113 Cotton edit Main article Cotton production in the United States In the colonial era small amounts of high quality long staple cotton were produced in the Sea Islands off the coast of South Carolina Inland only short staple cotton could be grown but it was full of seeds and very hard to process into fiber The invention of the cotton gin in the late 1790s for the first time made short staple cotton usable It was generally produced on plantations ranging from South Carolina westward with the work done by slaves Simultaneously the rapid growth of the industrial revolution in Britain focused on textiles created a major demand for the fiber Cotton quickly exhausts the soil so planters used their large profits to buy fresh land to the west and purchase more slaves from the border states to operate their new plantations After 1810 the emerging textile mills in New England also produced a heavy demand By 1820 over 250 000 bales of 500 pounds each were exported to Europe with a value of 22 million By 1840 exports reached 1 5 million bales valued at 64 million two thirds of all American exports Cotton prices kept going up as the South remained the main supplier in the world In 1860 the US shipped 3 5 million bales worth 192 million 114 115 After the American Civil War cotton production expanded to small farms operated by white and black tenant farmers and sharecroppers 102 76 117 The quantity exported held steady at 3 000 000 bales but prices on the world market fell 116 Although there was some work involved in planting the seeds and cultivating or holding out the weeds the critical labor input for cotton was in the picking How much a cotton operation could produce depended on how many hands men women and children were available Finally in the 1950s new mechanical harvesters allowed a handful of workers to pick as much as 100 had done before The result was a large scale exodus of the white and black cotton farmers from the south By the 1970s most cotton was grown in large automated farms in the Southwest 117 118 See also editAgriculture in the United States Cotton production in the United States Corn production in the United StatesReferences edit US Bureau of the Census Statistical Abstract of the United States 2010 2010 Table 800 Mary Caroline Crawford 1970 In the days of the Pilgrim Fathers p 114 Jack P Greene Rosemary Brana Shute and Randy J Sparks eds Money Trade and Power The Evolution of Colonial South Carolina s Plantation Society Univ of South Carolina Press 2021 Gary M Walton James F Shepherd 1979 The Economic Rise of Early America Cambridge UP p 42 Richard H Shryock British versus German traditions in colonial agriculture Mississippi Valley Historical Review 1939 26 1 pp 39 54 in JSTOR James T Lemon The agricultural practices of national groups in eighteenth century southeastern Pennsylvania Geographical Review 1966 467 496 in JSTOR James L Roark et al 2012 The American Promise Volume I To 1877 A History of the United States Bedford St Martin s p 134 ISBN 9781457605611 Curtis P Nettels The Emergence of a National Economy 1775 1815 1962 Paul W Gates The Farmers Age Agriculture 1815 1860 1960 Sam Bowers Hilliard Hog Meat and Hoecake Food Supply in the Old South 1840 1860 2014 John Solomon Otto The Southern Frontiers 1607 1860 The Agricultural Evolution of the Colonial and Antebellum South 1989 Joseph Carlyle Sitterson Sugar country the cane sugar industry in the South 1753 1950 1953 Percy W Bidwell The Agricultural Revolution in New England American Historical Review 1921 26 4 pp 683 702 in JSTOR Charles H Ambler and Festus P Summers West Virginia the mountain state 1958 p 55 Theodore Roosevelt 1905 The Winning of the West Current Literature pp 46 John R Van Atta Securing the West Politics Public Lands and the Fate of the Old Republic 1785 1850 Johns Hopkins University Press 2014 Ray Allen Billington and Martin Ridge Westward Expansion 5th ed 1982 pp 203 328 747 66 Louis Morton Hacker Western Land Hunger and the War of 1812 A Conjecture Mississippi Valley Historical Review 1924 10 4 pp 365 95 quote on pp 369 71 in JSTOR Hacker Western Land Hunger and the War of 1812 Fred A Shannon The farmer s last frontier agriculture 1860 1897 1945 complete text online Historical Statistics 1975 p 437 series K1 K16 Leland H Jenks Railroads as an Economic Force in American Development Journal of Economic History 4 1 1944 1 20 JSTOR 2113700 Shannon Farmers Last Frontier pp 51 75 Robert L Tontz Origin of the Base Period Concept of Parity A Significant Value Judgment in Agricultural Policy Agricultural History 1958 3 13 in JSTOR Annette Atkins Harvest of Grief Grasshopper Plagues and Public Assistance in Minnesota 1873 78 2003 Richard White 1991 It s Your Misfortune and None of My Own A New History of the American West U of Oklahoma Press p 147 ISBN 9780806125671 R Douglas Hurt et al Agricultural Technology in the Dust Bowl 1932 40 Great Plains Environment and Culture 1979 pp 139 56 R Louis Baumhardt Dust bowl era Encyclopedia of water science 2003 187 191 online Deborah Fink Agrarian Women Wives and Mothers in Rural Nebraska 1880 1940 1992 Chad Montrie Men Alone Cannot Settle a Country Domesticating Nature in the Kansas Nebraska Grasslands Great Plains Quarterly Fall 2005 Vol 25 Issue 4 pp 245 58 Karl Ronning Quilting in Webster County Nebraska 1880 1920 Uncoverings 1992 Vol 13 pp 169 91 Nathan B Sanderson More Than a Potluck Nebraska History Fall 2008 89 3 pp 120 31 Sullivan Andrew Bringing buckeye chickens to Dryden Ithaca Times Retrieved 2022 09 08 Sullivan Andrew Dryden Agway local organizations donate buckeye chicks to T burg youth Ithaca Times Retrieved 2022 09 08 Ekarius Carol 2016 07 18 Storey s Illustrated Guide to Poultry Breeds Chickens Ducks Geese Turkeys Emus Guinea Fowl Ostriches Partridges Peafowl Pheasants Quails Swans Storey Publishing LLC ISBN 978 1 61212 843 6 Poultry Success A D Hosterman Company 1917 Hatchery Sponsored by Melissahof 2022 06 13 Know how your eggs got laid Buckrail Jackson Hole news Retrieved 2022 09 08 Sparling Nina 2016 09 07 Protecting Disappearing Livestock Breeds Food Tank Retrieved 2022 09 08 Why we should protect disappearing livestock breeds Christian Science Monitor 2016 09 08 ISSN 0882 7729 Retrieved 2022 09 08 Ray H Mattison The Hard Winter and the Range Cattle Business The Montana Magazine of History 1951 1 4 5 21 Peter Iverson When Indians Became Cowboys Native Peoples and Cattle Ranching in the American West U of Oklahoma Press 1997 William Cronon Nature s metropolis Chicago and the Great West 1991 p 214 R Douglas Hurt Agriculture and the Confederacy Policy Productivity and Power in the Civil War South 2015 ch 1 Roger L Ransom and Richard Sutch One kind of freedom The economic consequences of emancipation 2001 ch 1 Charles S Aiken The cotton plantation South since the Civil War 2003 ch 1 Sharon Monteith ed 2013 The Cambridge Companion to the Literature of the American South Cambridge U P p 94 ISBN 9781107036789 Joseph D Reid Sharecropping as an understandable market response The post bellum South Journal of Economic History 1973 33 1 pp 106 30 in JSTOR Roger L Ransom and Richard Sutch One kind of freedom The economic consequences of emancipation Cambridge UP 2001 Larry Sawers The Mule the South and Economic Progress Social Science History 2005 28 4 Calvert Robert A Texas Since World War II Texas State Historical Association Retrieved January 19 2017 Solon Justus Buck The Granger movement A Study of Agricultural Organization and its Political Economic and Social Manifestations 1870 1880 1913 full text online D Sven Nordin Rich Harvest A History of the Grange 1867 1900 1974 Nordin Rich Harvest A History of the Grange 1867 1900 1974 Solon J Buck The Granger Movement A Study of Agricultural Organization and Its Political Economic and Social Manifestations 1870 1880 Harvard UP 1913 online Lee J Alston Farm foreclosures in the United States during the interwar period Journal of Economic History 43 4 1983 885 903 Eyle Alexandra Charles Lathrop Pack Timberman Forest Conservationist and Pioneer in Forest Education Syracuse UP 1994 p 142 Wilson Gee The place of agriculture in American life 1930 online edition George Soule Prosperity Decade From War to Depression 1917 1929 1947 pp 77 78 229 251 online Theodore Saloutos and John Hicks Twentieth Century Populism Agricultural Discontent in the Middle West 1900 1939 1951 pp 321 41 Theodore Saloutos and John Hicks Twentieth Century Populism Agricultural Discontent in the Middle West 1900 1939 1951 pp 372 403 Gary H Koerselman Secretary Hoover and National Farm Policy Problems of Leadership Agricultural History 1977 51 2 378 95 Roger Biles A New Deal for the American people 1991 pp 57 77 Anthony J Badger The New Deal the depression years 1933 1940 1989 pp 147 89 Broadus Mitchell The Depression Decade From New Era Through New Deal 1929 41 From New Era Through New Deal 1929 41 1947 pp 179 227 online Theodore Saloutos The American Farmer and the New Deal 1982 Peter Fearon War prosperity and depression the US economy 1917 45 1987 pp 176 94 See M L Wilson Collection 1935 1960 Archived 2011 07 20 at the Wayback Machine Arthur Schlesinger Jr The Coming of the New Deal 1958 pp 27 84 Ronald L Heinemann Depression and New Deal in Virginia 1983 p 107 Anthony Badger The New Deal The Depression Years 1933 1940 2002 pp 89 153 57 Statistical Abstract 1940 online Charles Kenneth Roberts Farm Security Administration and Rural Rehabilitation in the South University of Tennessee Press 2015 James L Novak James W Pease and Larry D Sanders Agricultural Policy in the United States Evolution and Economics Routledge 2015 Roger Biles The South and the New Deal 2006 Ronald C Tobey Technology as freedom The New Deal and the electrical modernization of the American home 1996 Rexford G Tugwell The resettlement idea Agricultural History 1959 pp 159 64 in JSTOR Michael R Grey New Deal Medicine The Rural Health Programs of the Farm Security Administration 2002 Fearon War prosperity and depression the US economy 1917 45 1987 pp 266 72 Walter W Wilcox Farmer in the Second World War 1947 Kallen Stuart A 2000 The War at Home San Diego Lucent Books ISBN 1 56006 531 1 see for detail Carl Zulauf and David Orden 80 Years of Farm Bills Evolutionary Reform Choices 2016 online Christopher Bosso Framing the Farm Bill Interests Ideology and Agricultural Act of 2014 2017 Carl Zulauf and David Orden The US Agricultural Act of 2014 Overview and Analysis International Food Policy Research Institute discussion paper 01393 2014 online David Orden and Carl Zulauf Political economy of the 2014 farm bill American Journal of Agricultural Economics 97 5 2015 1298 311 online Alexander J Field A Great Leap Forward 1930s Depression and U S Economic Growth 2011 pp 22 23 White William J Economic History of Tractors in the United States Archived from the original on 2013 10 24 Rifkin Jeremy 1995 The End of Work The Decline of the Global Labor Force and the Dawn of the Post Market Era Putnam Publishing Group ISBN 0 87477 779 8 CARPE DIEM U S Corn Yields Have Increased Six Times Since the 1930s and Are Estimated to Double by 2030 Smil Vaclav 2004 Enriching the Earth Fritz Haber Carl Bosch and the Transformation of World Food Production MIT Press ISBN 0262693135 USDA Statistics Archived from the original on 2017 09 12 Retrieved 2017 03 08 Purdue University Dept Agronomy a b c d e f g h i j k Conkin Paul 2008 Revolution Down on the Farm The Transformation of American Agriculture since 1929 first ed University Press of Kentucky ISBN 978 0813173153 Governor Signs Historic Farm Labor Legislation Los Angeles Times June 5 1975 Hurt R Douglas American Agriculture A Brief History Lafayette Ind Purdue University Press 2002 ISBN 1 55753 281 8 Stephen H Sosnick Hired Hands Seasonal Farm Workers In The United States 1978 pp 301 02 Economic Research Service Farm Labor USDA Economic Research Service USDA Retrieved 3 November 2021 Jo Winterbottom and P J Huffstutter 23 February 2015 Rent walkouts point to strains in U S farm economy Reuters Retrieved 24 February 2015 Paul W Gates The Farmers Age Agriculture 1815 1860 1960 pp 156 59 183 86 Peter Fearon Mechanisation and Risk Kansas Wheat Growers 1915 1930 Rural History Oct 1995 Vol 6 Issue 2 pp 229 50 Toby Higbie Indispensable Outcasts Harvest Laborers in the Wheat Belt of the Middle West 1890 1925 Labor History Fall 1997 Vol 38 4 pp 393 412 a b c Shannon The Farmers Last Frontier p 410 Bureau of the Census Historical Statistics of the United States Colonial Times to 1970 1976 series K 507 08 Shannon The Farmers Last Frontier pp 179 83 Karl S Quisenberry and L P Reitz Turkey wheat The cornerstone of an empire Agricultural History 48 1 1974 98 110 online Archived 2017 03 08 at the Wayback Machine Alan L Olmstead and Paul W Rhode The Red Queen and the Hard Reds Productivity Growth in American Wheat 1800 1940 Journal of Economic History Dec 2002 Vol 62 Issue 4 pp 929 66 David Moon In the Russians steppes the introduction of Russian wheat on the Great Plains of the United States of America Journal of Global History July 2008 Vol 3 Issue 2 pp 203 25 Karen Penner Bernhard Warkentin Kansas Miller and Promoter Of Turkey Red Wheat Journal of the American Historical Society of Germans from Russia Fall 2007 Vol 30 Issue 3 pp 27 34 Norman E Saul Myth and History Turkey Red Wheat and the Kansas Miracle Heritage of the Great Plains Summer 1989 Vol 22 3 pp 1 13 Bonnie Lynn Sherow Beyond Winter Wheat The USDA Extension Service and Kansas Wheat Production In The Twentieth Century Kansas History March 2000 Vol 23 Issue 1 pp 100 11 Hardach Gerd The First World War 1914 1918 University of California Press 1977 pp 124 130 36 Bureau of the Census Historical Statistics of the United States Colonial Times to 1970 1976 series U 279 80 Joseph M Santos Going Against the Grain Why Do Canada and the United States Market Wheat So Differently American Review of Canadian Studies Spring 2010 Vol 40 Issue 1 pp 104 17 Paul W Gates The Farmers Age Agriculture 1815 1860 1960 pp 7 10 134 55 Sven Beckert Emancipation and empire Reconstructing the worldwide web of cotton production in the age of the American Civil War American Historical Review 109 5 2004 1405 1438 online Bureau of the Census Historical Statistics of the United States series U 275 76 Stephen Yafa Cotton The Biography of a Revolutionary Fiber 2004 D Clayton Brown King Cotton in Modern America A Cultural Political and Economic History since 1945 2010 Bibliography editSurveys edit Cochrane Willard W The Development of American Agriculture A Historical Analysis 1993 Danbom David B Born in the Country A History of Rural America 1997 Fite Gilbert C American Farmers The New Minority Indiana U Press 1981 online Goreham Gary Encyclopedia of rural America Grey House Publishing 2 vol 2008 232 essays Gras Norman A history of agriculture in Europe and America 1925 online edition Hart John Fraser The Changing Scale of American Agriculture U of Virginia Press 2004 320 pp Hurt R Douglas American Agriculture A Brief History 2002 Mundlak Yair Economic Growth Lessons from Two Centuries of American Agriculture Journal of Economic Literature 2005 43 4 989 1024 JSTOR 4129381 Ogle Maureen In meat we trust An unexpected history of carnivore America 2013 Robert Joseph C The story of tobacco in America 1949 online edition Russell Howard A Long Deep Furrow Three Centuries of Farming In New England 1981 online Schafer Joseph The social history of American agriculture 1936 online edition Schapsmeier Edward L and Frederick H Schapsmeier Encyclopedia of American agricultural history 1975 online Schlebecker John T Whereby we thrive A history of American farming 1607 1972 1972 online Skaggs Jimmy M Prime cut Livestock raising and meatpacking in the United States 1607 1983 Texas A amp M UP 1986 Taylor Carl C The farmers movement 1620 1920 1953 online edition Walker Melissa and James C Cobb eds The New Encyclopedia of Southern Culture vol 11 Agriculture and Industry University of North Carolina Press 2008 354 pp ISBN 978 0 8078 5909 4Before 1775 edit Anderson Virginia DeJohn Thomas Minor s World Agrarian Life in Seventeenth Century New England Agricultural History 82 Fall 2008 496 518 Bidwell Percy and Falconer John I History of Agriculture in the Northern United States 1620 1860 1941 online Galenson David The Settlement and Growth of the Colonies in Stanley L Engerman and Robert E Gallman eds The Cambridge Economic History of the United States Volume I The Colonial Era 1996 Kulikoff Allan From British Peasants to Colonial American Farmers 1992 online Kulikoff Allan Tobacco and slaves the development of southern cultures in the Chesapeake 1680 1800 1986 online McCusker John J ed Economy of British America 1607 1789 1991 540pp online Russell Howard A Long Deep Furrow Three Centuries of Farming In New England 1981 Weeden William Babcock Economic and Social History of New England 1620 1789 1891 964 pages online edition1775 1860 edit North edit Bidwell Percy and Falconer John I History of Agriculture in the Northern United States 1620 1860 1941 online Gates Paul W The Farmers Age Agriculture 1815 1860 1960 onlineSouth edit Craven Avery Odelle Soil exhaustion as a factor in the agricultural history of Virginia and Maryland 1606 1860 1926 online edition Gray Lewis Cecil History of Agriculture in the Southern United States to 1860 2 vol 1933 classic in depth history online edition Genovese Eugene Roll Jordan Roll 1967 the history of plantation slavery Olmstead Alan L and Paul W Rhode Biological Innovation and Productivity Growth in the Antebellum Cotton Economy Journal of Economic History 68 Dec 2008 1123 71 Phillips Ulrich B The Economic Cost of Slaveholding in the Cotton Belt Political Science Quarterly 20 2 Jun 1905 pp 257 75 in JSTOR Phillips Ulrich B The Origin and Growth of the Southern Black Belts American Historical Review 11 July 1906 798 816 in JSTOR Phillips Ulrich B The Decadence of the Plantation System Annals of the American Academy of Political and Social Sciences 35 January 1910 37 41 in JSTOR Phillips Ulrich B Plantations with Slave Labor and Free American Historical Review 30 July 1925 738 53 in JSTOR1860 present national edit Cyclopedia of American agriculture a popular survey of agricultural conditions ed by L H Bailey 4 vol 1907 1909 online edition highly useful compendium Bosso Christopher J Framing the Farm Bill Interests Ideology and Agricultural Act of 2014 University Press of Kansas 2017 Brunner Edmund de Schweinitz Rural social trends 1933 online edition Conkin Paul K A Revolution Down on the Farm The Transformation of American Agriculture since 1929 2009 excerpt and text search Dean Virgil W An Opportunity Lost The Truman Administration and the Farm Policy Debate U of Missouri Press 2006 275 pp Friedberger Mark Farm Families and Change in 20th Century America 2014 Gardner Bruce L Changing Economic Perspectives on the Farm Problem Journal of Economic Literature 1992 30 1 62 101 in JSTOR Gardner Bruce L American Agriculture in the Twentieth Century How it Flourished and What it Cost Harvard UP 2002 Gates Paul W Agriculture and the Civil War 1985 online Gee Wilson The place of agriculture in American life 1930 online edition Lord Russell The Wallaces of Iowa 1947 online edition Lyon Jenness Cheryl Planting a seed the nineteenth century horticultural boom in America Business History Review 78 3 2004 381 421 Mayer Oscar Gottfried America s meat packing industry a brief survey of its development and economics 1939 online edition McCormick Cyrus The century of the reaper an account of Cyrus Hall McCormick the inventor 1931 online edition Mullendore William Clinton History of the United States Food Administration 1917 1919 1941 online edition Nourse Edwin Griswold Three years of the Agricultural Adjustment Administration 1937 online edition Perren Richard Farmers and Consumers under Strain Allied Meat Supplies in the First World War Agricultural History Review Oxford 53 part II 2005 212 28 Sanderson Ezra Dwight Research memorandum on rural life in the depression 1937 online edition Schultz Theodore W Agriculture in an Unstable Economy 1945 by Nobel prize winning conservative online edition Shannon Fred Albert Farmer s Last Frontier Agriculture 1860 1897 1945 online edition comprehensive survey Wilcox Walter W The farmer in the second world war 1947 online edition Zulauf Carl and David Orden 80 Years of Farm Bills Evolutionary Reform Choices 2016 31 4 pp 1 7 online1860 present regional studies edit Cyclopedia of American agriculture a popular survey of agricultural conditions ed by L H Bailey 4 vol 1907 1909 online edition highly useful compendium Black John D The Rural Economy of New England A regional study 1950 online edition Cannon Brian Q Homesteading Remembered A Sesquicentennial Perspective Agricultural History 87 Winter 2013 1 29 Clawson Marion The Western range livestock industry 1950 online edition Dale Edward Everett The range cattle industry 1930 online edition Danbom David B Sod Busting How families made farms on the 19th century Plains 2014 Fite Gilbert C The Farmers Frontier 1865 1900 1966 the west Friedberger Mark The Transformation of the Rural Midwest 1945 1985 Old Northwest 1992 Vol 16 Issue 1 pp 13 36 Friedberger Mark W Handing Down the Home Place Farm Inheritance Strategies in Iowa Annals of Iowa 47 6 1984 518 36 online Friedberger Mark The Farm Family and the Inheritance Process Evidence from the Corn Belt 1870 1950 Agricultural History 57 1 1983 1 13 uses Iowa census and sales data Friedberger Mark Shake Out Iowa Farm Families in the 1980s 1989 Fry John J Good Farming Clear Thinking Right Living Midwestern Farm Newspapers Social Reform and Rural Readers in the Early Twentieth Century Agricultural History 2004 34 49 Gisolfi Monica Richmond From Crop Lien to Contract Farming The Roots of Agribusiness in the American South 1929 1939 Agricultural History 80 Spring 2006 167 89 Hahn Barbara Paradox of Precision Bright Tobacco as Technology Transfer 1880 1937 Agricultural History 82 Spring 2008 220 35 Hurt R Douglas The Agricultural and Rural History of Kansas Kansas History 2004 27 3 194 217 ISSN 0149 9114 Fulltext in Ebsco Larson Henrietta M The wheat market and the farmer in Minnesota 1858 1900 1926 online edition MacCurdy Rahno Mabel The history of the California Fruit Growers Exchange 1925 online edition Miner Horace Mitchell Culture and agriculture an anthropological study of a corn belt county 1949 online edition Nordin Dennis S and Scott Roy V From Prairie Farmer to Entrepreneur The Transformation of Midwestern Agriculture Indiana U Press 2005 356 pp Sackman Douglas Cazaux Orange Empire California and the Fruits of Eden 2005 Saloutos Theodore Southern Agriculture and the Problems of Readjustment 1865 1877 Agricultural history April 1956 Vol 30 2 58 76 online edition Sawers Larry The Mule the South and Economic Progress Social Science History 2004 28 4 667 90 ISSN 0145 5532 Fulltext in Project Muse and EbscoEnvironmental issues edit Craven Avery Odelle Soil Exhaustion as a Factor in the Agricultural History of Virginia and Maryland 1606 1860 1925 Cronon William Changes in the Land Revised Edition Indians Colonists and the Ecology of New England 2nd ed 2003 excerpt and text search Cunfer Geoff On the Great Plains Agriculture and Environment 2005 240 pp McLeman Robert Migration Out of 1930s Rural Eastern Oklahoma Insights for Climate Change Research Great Plains Quarterly 26 Winter 2006 27 40 Majewski John and Viken Tchakerian The Environmental Origins of Shifting Cultivation Climate Soils and Disease in the Nineteenth Century U S South Agricultural History 81 Fall 2007 522 49 Melosi Martin V and Charles Reagan Wilson eds The New Encyclopedia of Southern Culture Volume 8 Environment v 8 2007 Miner Craig Next Year Country Dust to Dust in Western Kansas 1890 1940 2006 371 pp ISBN 0 7006 1476 1 Silver Timothy A New Face on the Countryside Indians Colonists and Slaves in South Atlantic Forests 1500 1800 1990 excerpt and text search Urban Michael A An Uninhabited Waste Transforming the Grand Prairie in Nineteenth Century Illinois U S A Journal of Historical Geography 31 Oct 2005 647 65 Historiography edit Atack Jeremy A Nineteenth century Resource for Agricultural History Research in the Twenty first Century Agricultural History 2004 78 4 389 412 ISSN 0002 1482 Fulltext in University of California Journals and Ebsco Large database of individual farmers from manuscript census Bogue Allan G Tilling Agricultural History with Paul Wallace Gates and James C Malin Agricultural History 2006 80 4 436 60 ISSN 0002 1482 Fulltext in Ebsco Edwards Everett Eugene 1970 A bibliography of the history of agriculture in the United States ISBN 978 0 8337 1002 4 Levins Richard A Willard Cochrane and the American Family Farm University of Nebraska Press 2000 88p Peters Scott J Every Farmer Should Be Awakened Liberty Hyde Bailey s Vision of Agricultural Extension Work Agricultural History 2006 190 219 online dead link Primary sources edit Bruchey Stuart ed Cotton in the Growth of the American Economy 1790 1860 1967 Carter Susan at al eds The Historical Statistics of the United States Cambridge U P 2006 6 vol online in many academic libraries 105 tables on agriculture Phillips Ulrich B ed Plantation and Frontier Documents 1649 1863 Illustrative of Industrial History in the Colonial and Antebellum South Collected from MSS and Other Rare Sources 2 Volumes 1909 online vol 1 and online vol 2 Rasmussen Wayne D ed Agriculture in the United States a documentary history 4 vol Random House 1975 3661pp vol 4 online Schmidt Louis Bernard ed Readings in the economic history of American agriculture 1925 online edition Sorokin Pitirim et al eds A Systematic Sourcebook in Rural Sociology 3 vol 1930 2000 pages of primary sources and commentary worldwide coverageExternal links editAgricultural History a leading scholarly journal Agricultural History Society 331 historic photographs of American farmlands farmers farm operations and rural areas These are pre 1923 and out of copyright Online Libraries of Historical Agricultural Texts and Images Archived 2015 04 02 at the Wayback Machine USDA Alternative Farming Systems Information Center Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title History of agriculture in the United States amp oldid 1207413759 Cotton, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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