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Emergent Market Agriculture in the US

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Title: Emergent Market Agriculture in the US


1
Emergent Market Agriculture in the US
  • Eco-Ag Program
  • October 10, 2003
  • Chad Kruger

2
  • I. Introduction
  • Important questions to think about as we discuss
    the emergence of market agriculture in the US?
  • Why is the US agricultural system so different
    than agriculture in other parts of the world,
    such as Europe?
  • Why did / does Euro American land use differ so
    greatly from Native American land use?
  • Why are farmers and rural people so marginalized
    and disconnected from each other and the rest of
    society?
  • What precipitated the rapid expansion and
    development of agriculture in the US?

3
  • I. Introduction
  • II. Coming to America
  • A. European Agriculture
  • i. The Village
  • a. structure
  • Role of the Village
  • Organic Community Danbom
  • living forming an integral element of a whole
    having systematic coordination of parts
  • Self-sufficient, subsistence community
  • Society center religion, education, welfare,
    economy
  • Political decision making structure

4
  • I. Introduction
  • II. Coming to America
  • A. European Agriculture
  • i. The Village
  • a. structure
  • b. tenure
  • Village Tenure
  • feudalism, landlords, manors, serfdom
  • common property management, community crop
    planning (diversity for subsistence)
  • private property, limited specialization
  • enclosure

5
  • I. Introduction
  • II. Coming to America
  • A. European Agriculture
  • i. The Village
  • ii. Paradigm Shifts
  • What caused the changes in Europe that lead to
    the colonization of the Americas?
  • Power shifts Magna Carta, The Black Plague,
    Reformation
  • Opening of European culture Crusades, Marco
    Polo, Columbus
  • The New World

6
  • I. Introduction
  • II. Coming to America
  • A. European Agriculture
  • B. Native American Land Use
  • i. The Village
  • a. Mobility
  • The Native American Village
  • Defined by its mobility
  • Settlement of a few hundred people - primarily
    extended families, not a fixed size
  • Seasonality and availability of food sources
  • Dwellings and possessions had to be readily moved
    (or left)

7
  • I. Introduction
  • II. Coming to America
  • A. European Agriculture
  • B. Native American Land Use
  • i. The Village
  • a. Mobility
  • b. land tenure
  • Native American Land Tenure
  • Native Americans had various forms of land tenure
    from private property to multiple-village
    (Tribal) communal lands. As with any other
    society, increasing population densities force
    changes in tenurial systems.

8
  • I. Introduction
  • II. Coming to America
  • A. European Agriculture
  • B. Native American Land Use
  • i. The Village
  • ii. Agriculture
  • Native American Agriculture
  • William Cronon claims that the crucial
    distinction between Indian communities was
    whether or not they had adopted agriculture.

9
  • I. Introduction
  • II. Coming to America
  • A. European Agriculture
  • B. Native American Land Use
  • i. The Village
  • ii. Agriculture
  • a. New England
  • Native American Agriculture
  • For New England Native Americans, the Kennebec
    River seemed to be the dividing line between
    cultivators and more traditional
    hunter-gatherer villages.
  • North of the Kennebec River, Villages moved more
    frequently based on the seasonally available
    diet.
  • South of the Kennebec River, villages moved less
    frequently.
  • Hunger in the winter it was not uncommon for
    Natives to go long stretches of the winter
    without food seemed to have a physical
    resistance to it.
  • Population densities 41/100 sq miles in North
    to 287/100 sq miles in South

10
  • I. Introduction
  • II. Coming to America
  • A. European Agriculture
  • B. Native American Land Use
  • i. The Village
  • ii. Agriculture
  • a. New England
  • b. Footprint
  • Native American Footprint
  • How lightly did Native Americans live in their
    environment?

11
  • I. Introduction
  • II. Coming to America
  • A. European Agriculture
  • B. Native American Land Use
  • i. The Village
  • ii. Agriculture
  • a. New England
  • b. Footprint
  • Native American Footprint
  • Wildlife management practices such as burning
    forests not only concentrates wildlife for
    hunting, but actually promotes wildlife
    populations.
  • Menominee forestry in Wisconsin - we know that
    the Menominee tribe had been actively managing
    their forest for at least 500 years before the
    first white settlers in Wisconsin for multiple
    benefits, such as timber, wildlife, agriculture
    and medicinal plants.
  • Whidbey Island assisted propagation of camas by
    burning prairies, garden beds, etc.

12
  • I. Introduction
  • II. Coming to America
  • A. European Agriculture
  • B. Native American Land Use
  • i. The Village
  • ii. Agriculture
  • a. New England
  • b. Footprint
  • Native American Footprint
  • Is there a common determinant of land use among
    all human societies?
  • Population density?
  • Climate?

13
  • I. Introduction
  • II. Coming to America
  • A. European Agriculture
  • B. Native American Land Use
  • C. Settlement and Colonization
  • i. Reasons for coming to America
  • Reasons for coming to the Americas
  • Commercial exploitation
  • Virginia Company, a stockholder company designed
    to return profit to its shareholders as well as
    to establish a colony in the Americas
  • Religious and political freedom
  • Plymouth Colony 1620 (Pilgrims)
  • Massachusetts Bay Colony (1629-30) Puritans
  • Pennsylvania refuge founded by William Penn for
    Quakers
  • Maryland founded by the Calverts for Catholics
  • Petty Crime (Debt)
  • Option for debtors rather than death or
    incarceration

14
  • I. Introduction
  • II. Coming to America
  • A. European Agriculture
  • B. Native American Land Use
  • C. Settlement and Colonization
  • i. Reasons for coming to America
  • ii. Patterns of settlement
  • Patterns of Settlement
  • Colonies, charters, land grants
  • - Companies are provided large land grants in
    exchange for establishing a colony and exporting
    resources back to England
  • North vs. South
  • Northern settlements tended to be dominated by
    religious communities that were able to
    recreate English society
  • Southern settlements tended to be more spread out
    importance of commercial cultivation of tobacco
    tobacco would wear out the soil after a couple
    of years, so farmers had to continue moving their
    cultivated fields for tobacco English bounty on
    tobacco ensured that it would be cultivated.

15
  • I. Introduction
  • II. Coming to America
  • A. European Agriculture
  • B. Native American Land Use
  • C. Settlement and Colonization
  • i. Reasons for coming to America
  • ii. Patterns of settlement
  • Patterns of Settlement
  • Subsistence vs. commodities
  • Everyone had to be concerned about subsistence
    first. Trade agreements and bounties between
    England and the southern colonies encouraged them
    to invest more in commodity production (tobacco
    and indigo)
  • Depressed commodity prices encouraged southern
    planters to capitalize on indentured servitude
    and African slavery as cheap labor to increase
    the plantation size of commodity production. This
    had a long-term impact of increase landholding.

16
  • I. Introduction
  • II. Coming to America
  • A. European Agriculture
  • B. Native American Land Use
  • C. Settlement and Colonization
  • i. Reasons for coming to America
  • ii. Patterns of settlement
  • Patterns of Settlement
  • Tenurial relationships
  • The question of enclosure. Northern communities
    quickly ran into the same questions of common
    property as they had dealt with in England. The
    answer to many of those problems was to enclose
    property with fencing essentially exerting
    their private property rights
  • The question of inheritance. Northern and
    Southern farmers also had to quickly deal with
    the issue of inheritance. Southern farmers
    practiced primogeniture --- passing lands to the
    oldest son. Other sons either found other
    occupations, became tenants or moved west.
    Northern farmers tended to reform land by
    splitting it for heirs, or picking up stakes and
    moving to new lands. Children also tended to be
    much older before taking over family operations.

17
  • I. Introduction
  • II. Coming to America
  • A. European Agriculture
  • B. Native American Land Use
  • C. Settlement and Colonization
  • i. Reasons for coming to America
  • ii. Patterns of settlement
  • iii. Colonial Influence
  • Colonial Influence
  • Taxes and bounties
  • Markets and trade
  • Specialization in commodity production
  • Indentured Servitude
  • Slavery

18
  • I. Introduction
  • II. Coming to America
  • A. European Agriculture
  • B. Native American Land Use
  • C. Settlement and Colonization
  • III. Moderate Revolutionaries
  • The American Revolution was a revolution of
    moderate ends
  • The goals were political and social liberation,
    not egalitarian democracy

19
  • I. Introduction
  • II. Coming to America
  • A. European Agriculture
  • B. Native American Land Use
  • C. Settlement and Colonization
  • III. Moderate Revolutionaries
  • A. Tea and Taxes
  • Why we drink coffee instead of tea?
  • Boston Tea Party The Sons of Liberty dumped 342
    crates of tea into the Boston Harbor in protest
    of English tea tax.

20
  • I. Introduction
  • II. Coming to America
  • A. European Agriculture
  • B. Native American Land Use
  • C. Settlement and Colonization
  • III. Moderate Revolutionaries
  • A. Tea and Taxes
  • B. Militia
  • The minute man militia
  • Farmers were the militia of the colonies. The
    romantic idea of the American aristocracy as the
    soldiers of the Revolutionary War is misleading
    they did have roles, such as George Washington,
    and they did risk life and property but farmers
    were the ones who gave the most. Many of the
    regulars in the Continental Army were sons of
    farmers who would not be inheriting land.
  • How is this different than the military
    garrisons of previous wars?

21
  • I. Introduction
  • II. Coming to America
  • A. European Agriculture
  • B. Native American Land Use
  • C. Settlement and Colonization
  • III. Moderate Revolutionaries
  • A. Tea and Taxes
  • B. Militia
  • C. Reduced Isolation
  • Reduced Isolation and the building of a new
    politics
  • Because villages were not the center of most
    agricultural settlement in the colonies, people
    had become very isolated before the war. The
    opportunity for soldiers to meet people from
    other places helped share ideas and reduce
    insular thinking.
  • The excitement over building a new political
    apparatus fueled the reduction of isolation
    the Shays Rebellion was in fact a rebellion
    against a perceived re-establishment of tyranny.

22
  • I. Introduction
  • II. Coming to America
  • A. European Agriculture
  • B. Native American Land Use
  • C. Settlement and Colonization
  • III. Moderate Revolutionaries
  • A. Tea and Taxes
  • B. Militia
  • C. Reduced Isolation
  • D. Republicanism vs. Federalism
  • Republicanism vs. Federalism
  • Jefferson vs. Madison Hamilton
  • Rural and agricultural interests (civics) vs.
    Commercial and industrial interests

23
  • I. Introduction
  • II. Coming to America
  • A. European Agriculture
  • B. Native American Land Use
  • C. Settlement and Colonization
  • III. Moderate Revolutionaries
  • A. Tea and Taxes
  • B. Militia
  • C. Reduced Isolation
  • D. Republicanism vs. Federalism
  • E. The Constitution
  • i. Agricultural issues
  • The Constitution
  • What were the main issues related to agriculture?
  • Uniformity in economics/trade
  • Currency
  • Rural/agricultural vs. urban/commercial interests

24
  • I. Introduction
  • II. Coming to America
  • A. European Agriculture
  • B. Native American Land Use
  • C. Settlement and Colonization
  • III. Moderate Revolutionaries
  • A. Tea and Taxes
  • B. Militia
  • C. Reduced Isolation
  • D. Republicanism vs. Federalism
  • E. The Constitution
  • i. Agricultural issues
  • ii. Shays Rebellion
  • Shays Rebellion
  • Strange that the ungrateful multitude should
    turn upon the illustrious patriots, who led them
    to seek such happiness John Mallet, a British
    observer.

25
  • I. Introduction
  • II. Coming to America
  • A. European Agriculture
  • B. Native American Land Use
  • C. Settlement and Colonization
  • III. Moderate Revolutionaries
  • A. Tea and Taxes
  • B. Militia
  • C. Reduced Isolation
  • D. Republicanism vs. Federalism
  • E. The Constitution
  • i. Agricultural issues
  • ii. Shays Rebellion
  • Shays Rebellion
  • Demand for specie (currency) to pay debt, created
    a chain of debt from English traders, American
    wholesalers and merchants, farmers
  • Compounded by increasing tax burden

26
  • I. Introduction
  • II. Coming to America
  • A. European Agriculture
  • B. Native American Land Use
  • C. Settlement and Colonization
  • III. Moderate Revolutionaries
  • A. Tea and Taxes
  • B. Militia
  • C. Reduced Isolation
  • D. Republicanism vs. Federalism
  • E. The Constitution
  • i. Agricultural issues
  • ii. Shays Rebellion
  • Shays Rebellion
  • 1782, Samuel Ely led an armed attack on Hampshire
    County Courthouse beginning of Massachusetts
    Regulators
  • Attempted to promote paper money and tender
    legislation
  • Government opted for forceful resistance.
    Anti-Shaysite legislation, suspension of habeas
    corpus. Establishment of Lincolns state army.
    Escalated Shaysite objectives

27
  • I. Introduction
  • II. Coming to America
  • A. European Agriculture
  • B. Native American Land Use
  • C. Settlement and Colonization
  • III. Moderate Revolutionaries
  • A. Tea and Taxes
  • B. Militia
  • C. Reduced Isolation
  • D. Republicanism vs. Federalism
  • E. The Constitution
  • i. Agricultural issues
  • ii. Shays Rebellion
  • Shays Rebellion - Violence
  • Battle over federal arsenal at Springfield on
    January 25 Lincoln victory Shaysites plan to
    overthrow MA government - -needed stores from
    Springfield
  • February 4th, Lincolns army attacks and scatters
    Shaysites at Petersham. 2000 Shaysites fled to
    Vermont.
  • Shaysite raids continued against merchants and
    government supporters through June 1787.

28
  • I. Introduction
  • II. Coming to America
  • A. European Agriculture
  • B. Native American Land Use
  • C. Settlement and Colonization
  • III. Moderate Revolutionaries
  • A. Tea and Taxes
  • B. Militia
  • C. Reduced Isolation
  • D. Republicanism vs. Federalism
  • E. The Constitution
  • i. Agricultural issues
  • ii. Shays Rebellion
  • Shays Rebellion - Resolution
  • June new elections half of MA government
    replaced, but continued Anti-Shay legislation.
    Surrounding states supported MA government -
    -anti-Shaysite.
  • No British support for Shaysites.
  • Migration and resettlement in the west.
  • Economic recovery exports outweighed imports in
    1787.

29
  • I. Introduction
  • II. Coming to America
  • A. European Agriculture
  • B. Native American Land Use
  • C. Settlement and Colonization
  • III. Moderate Revolutionaries
  • A. Tea and Taxes
  • B. Militia
  • C. Reduced Isolation
  • D. Republicanism vs. Federalism
  • E. The Constitution
  • i. Agricultural issues
  • ii. Shays Rebellion
  • Shays Rebellion
  • Implications for Constitution
  • Shaysites (anti-federalist) opposed the adoption
    of a federal constitution
  • for throwing the whole power of the federal
    government into the hands of those who are in the
    mercantile interest and for the landed, which is
    the greatest interest of this country, to lie
    unrepresented, forlorn, and without hope. -
    Cornelius

30
  • I. Introduction
  • II. Coming to America
  • A. European Agriculture
  • B. Native American Land Use
  • C. Settlement and Colonization
  • III. Moderate Revolutionaries
  • A. Tea and Taxes
  • B. Militia
  • C. Reduced Isolation
  • D. Republicanism vs. Federalism
  • E. The Constitution
  • IV. Agricultural Development
  • What precipitated agricultural development and
    expansion in the US?

31
  • I. Introduction
  • II. Coming to America
  • A. European Agriculture
  • B. Native American Land Use
  • C. Settlement and Colonization
  • III. Moderate Revolutionaries
  • A. Tea and Taxes
  • B. Militia
  • C. Reduced Isolation
  • D. Republicanism vs. Federalism
  • E. The Constitution
  • IV. Agricultural Development
  • A. Government promotion
  • Government promotion of agricultural development
  • Promotion of trade debtor nation
  • agricultural products were the only positive
    balance of trade product from the young nation
  • Purchase of land
  • The Louisiana Purchase, California, annexing
    Texas, purchase of Florida, etc.
  • Promotion of settlement Basic Land Ordinance of
    1785
  • This is the Township, Range and Section Ordinance
    that created a systematic method for allocating
    land for settlement.

32
  • I. Introduction
  • II. Coming to America
  • A. European Agriculture
  • B. Native American Land Use
  • C. Settlement and Colonization
  • III. Moderate Revolutionaries
  • A. Tea and Taxes
  • B. Militia
  • C. Reduced Isolation
  • D. Republicanism vs. Federalism
  • E. The Constitution
  • IV. Agricultural Development
  • A. Government promotion
  • B. Expansion
  • Expansion into new lands
  • speculation and the development of a land market
  • Danbom makes the statement that good or bad,
    speculators were inevitable. . . Why is this the
    case?
  • Functional land markets require information
    sharing speculators (realtors, etc.) are part
    of that information sharing apparatus.
  • The Indian Question
  • Westward expansion of Europeans and the
    European world view necessitated the removal or
    at least the assimilation of Native American
    Populations.

33
  • I. Introduction
  • II. Coming to America
  • A. European Agriculture
  • B. Native American Land Use
  • C. Settlement and Colonization
  • III. Moderate Revolutionaries
  • A. Tea and Taxes
  • B. Militia
  • C. Reduced Isolation
  • D. Republicanism vs. Federalism
  • E. The Constitution
  • IV. Agricultural Development
  • A. Government promotion
  • B. Expansion
  • Expansion into new lands
  • Frontier life
  • Subsistence first . . . market second the
    desire for ownership of land was a driving factor
    in westward expansion cant be disassociated
    with the desire to market agricultural products
  • Transportation/Markets
  • Rivers and canals were the routes, greatly
    improved by the Louisiana Purchase (New Orleans)
    and the removal of hostile Native Americans
  • Flatboats were replaced by the Steam Boat which
    could travel upriver as well as downriver

34
  • I. Introduction
  • II. Coming to America
  • A. European Agriculture
  • B. Native American Land Use
  • C. Settlement and Colonization
  • III. Moderate Revolutionaries
  • A. Tea and Taxes
  • B. Militia
  • C. Reduced Isolation
  • D. Republicanism vs. Federalism
  • E. The Constitution
  • IV. Agricultural Development
  • A. Government promotion
  • B. Expansion
  • Expansion into new lands
  • Changing structure and character of rural
    communities
  • The introduction of US currency after the
    Constitution, enabled formal markets for credit
    and commodity trade. What does currency do to a
    society?
  • Establishment of Commodity Centers
  • Manufacturing in Pennsylvania and the Northeast
  • New York City became the capital
  • Cincinnati became the pork capital
  • St. Louis became the Gateway to the West
  • Kansas City became the destination for cattle
    drives
  • Chicago would ultimately become the beef
    slaughter capital

35
  • I. Introduction
  • II. Coming to America
  • A. European Agriculture
  • B. Native American Land Use
  • C. Settlement and Colonization
  • III. Moderate Revolutionaries
  • A. Tea and Taxes
  • B. Militia
  • C. Reduced Isolation
  • D. Republicanism vs. Federalism
  • E. The Constitution
  • IV. Agricultural Development
  • A. Government promotion
  • B. Expansion
  • Expansion into new lands
  • Shift from Rural to Urban
  • In spite of the availability of land, and the
    number of people settling in the west, the shift
    to an urban population began in earnest.
  • Manufacturing job opportunities, limited
    agricultural opportunities in the Northeast,
    civic opportunities encouraged people to leave
    the farm and move to the cities.

36
  • I. Introduction
  • II. Coming to America
  • A. European Agriculture
  • B. Native American Land Use
  • C. Settlement and Colonization
  • III. Moderate Revolutionaries
  • A. Tea and Taxes
  • B. Militia
  • C. Reduced Isolation
  • D. Republicanism vs. Federalism
  • E. The Constitution
  • IV. Agricultural Development
  • A. Government promotion
  • B. Expansion
  • C. Technological Innovation
  • Technological Innovations
  • Cotton Gin Eli Whitney 1793
  • 1793, 180,000 pounds of cotton/year
  • 1810, 93,000,000 pounds of cotton/year
  • One person could clean 1 pound of cotton/day,
    with Whitneys cotton Gin, one person could clean
    50 pounds of cotton/day
  • Cotton Gin made cotton a profitable commodity
    land and labor westward expansion and slavery

37
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38
  • I. Introduction
  • II. Coming to America
  • A. European Agriculture
  • B. Native American Land Use
  • C. Settlement and Colonization
  • III. Moderate Revolutionaries
  • A. Tea and Taxes
  • B. Militia
  • C. Reduced Isolation
  • D. Republicanism vs. Federalism
  • E. The Constitution
  • IV. Agricultural Development
  • A. Government promotion
  • B. Expansion
  • C. Technological Innovation
  • Technological Innovations
  • McCormicks Reaper 1834
  • One person could cut between one and three acres
    of grain/day, the reaper enabled them to cut
    between 12 and 15 acres/day

39
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40
  • I. Introduction
  • II. Coming to America
  • A. European Agriculture
  • B. Native American Land Use
  • C. Settlement and Colonization
  • III. Moderate Revolutionaries
  • A. Tea and Taxes
  • B. Militia
  • C. Reduced Isolation
  • D. Republicanism vs. Federalism
  • E. The Constitution
  • IV. Agricultural Development
  • A. Government promotion
  • B. Expansion
  • C. Technological Innovation
  • Technological Innovations
  • Steamboat
  • Fultons Clermont 1807 150 mile trip from NYC
    to Albany

41
  • I. Introduction
  • II. Coming to America
  • A. European Agriculture
  • B. Native American Land Use
  • C. Settlement and Colonization
  • III. Moderate Revolutionaries
  • A. Tea and Taxes
  • B. Militia
  • C. Reduced Isolation
  • D. Republicanism vs. Federalism
  • E. The Constitution
  • IV. Agricultural Development
  • A. Government promotion
  • B. Expansion
  • C. Technological Innovation
  • D. Rural Institutions
  • Rural Institutions
  • Nuclear Family
  • Family farm not village based ag like Europe,
    tenurial relationships
  • Family as the central institution of society
  • Neighbors
  • Dependence on neighbors, many of them related
  • Barn Raising
  • Church
  • Moral center of community
  • Social center of community (weddings, potlucks,
    celebrations)

42
  • I. Introduction
  • II. Coming to America
  • A. European Agriculture
  • B. Native American Land Use
  • C. Settlement and Colonization
  • III. Moderate Revolutionaries
  • A. Tea and Taxes
  • B. Militia
  • C. Reduced Isolation
  • D. Republicanism vs. Federalism
  • E. The Constitution
  • IV. Agricultural Development
  • A. Government promotion
  • B. Expansion
  • C. Technological Innovation
  • D. Rural Institutions
  • Rural Institutions
  • Shools
  • Farmers tended to come together to finance
    schools, set curriculum, schedules
  • Ethnicity
  • Considerably influential in settlement patterns
  • Norwegians in Minnesota, Germans in Wisconsin,
    etc.
  • Slavery
  • South of the Mason-Dixon line
  • Addition of new states to the union

43
  • I. Introduction
  • II. Coming to America
  • A. European Agriculture
  • B. Native American Land Use
  • C. Settlement and Colonization
  • III. Moderate Revolutionaries
  • A. Tea and Taxes
  • B. Militia
  • C. Reduced Isolation
  • D. Republicanism vs. Federalism
  • E. The Constitution
  • IV. Agricultural Development
  • A. Government promotion
  • B. Expansion
  • C. Technological Innovation
  • D. Rural Institutions
  • What impacts did the Civil War have on
    agriculture in the US?

44
  • I. Introduction
  • II. Coming to America
  • A. European Agriculture
  • B. Native American Land Use
  • C. Settlement and Colonization
  • III. Moderate Revolutionaries
  • A. Tea and Taxes
  • B. Militia
  • C. Reduced Isolation
  • D. Republicanism vs. Federalism
  • E. The Constitution
  • IV. Agricultural Development
  • A. Government promotion
  • B. Expansion
  • C. Technological Innovation
  • D. Rural Institutions
  • Impacts of the Civil War
  • Forced Structural Change (labor loss, production
    needs)
  • Sons and fathers left to join the army
  • Women took over farm operations and labor
  • Slave labor became more difficult to manage
  • Technology change, particularly in the North
    enabled more people to leave for the army
  • Increased need for production to feed the
    armies, to export for currency

45
  • I. Introduction
  • II. Coming to America
  • A. European Agriculture
  • B. Native American Land Use
  • C. Settlement and Colonization
  • III. Moderate Revolutionaries
  • A. Tea and Taxes
  • B. Militia
  • C. Reduced Isolation
  • D. Republicanism vs. Federalism
  • E. The Constitution
  • IV. Agricultural Development
  • A. Government promotion
  • B. Expansion
  • C. Technological Innovation
  • D. Rural Institutions
  • Impacts of the Civil War
  • Transportation improvements
  • Railroads!! Railroads, bridges, etc. built to
    support the war effort

46
  • I. Introduction
  • II. Coming to America
  • A. European Agriculture
  • B. Native American Land Use
  • C. Settlement and Colonization
  • III. Moderate Revolutionaries
  • A. Tea and Taxes
  • B. Militia
  • C. Reduced Isolation
  • D. Republicanism vs. Federalism
  • E. The Constitution
  • IV. Agricultural Development
  • A. Government promotion
  • B. Expansion
  • C. Technological Innovation
  • D. Rural Institutions
  • Impacts of the Civil War
  • Diminishing markets for Southern Commodities
  • European countries already looking elsewhere for
    tobacco and cotton reaction to slavery ---
    England and France had already outlawed slavery
    and were trying to reduce their dependence on
    southern cotton/tobacco
  • Inconsistent cotton supply to England/France
    compelled those countries to look to Africa and
    India for supplies

47
  • I. Introduction
  • II. Coming to America
  • A. European Agriculture
  • B. Native American Land Use
  • C. Settlement and Colonization
  • III. Moderate Revolutionaries
  • A. Tea and Taxes
  • B. Militia
  • C. Reduced Isolation
  • D. Republicanism vs. Federalism
  • E. The Constitution
  • IV. Agricultural Development
  • A. Government promotion
  • B. Expansion
  • C. Technological Innovation
  • D. Rural Institutions
  • Impacts of the Civil War
  • Union Military victories
  • Vicksburg and New Orleans Union controlled the
    Mississippi enabled products from the west to
    reach the North
  • Union blockade of the South disrupted southern
    trade with Europe
  • Devastating marches through the South Sherman
    Atlanta, Sherridan Shenendoah Valley, Wilson
    Alabama not only the military campaigns, but
    the looters that followed. Plantations,
    factories, crops, infrastructure destoryed

48
  • I. Introduction
  • II. Coming to America
  • A. European Agriculture
  • B. Native American Land Use
  • C. Settlement and Colonization
  • III. Moderate Revolutionaries
  • A. Tea and Taxes
  • B. Militia
  • C. Reduced Isolation
  • D. Republicanism vs. Federalism
  • E. The Constitution
  • IV. Agricultural Development
  • A. Government promotion
  • B. Expansion
  • C. Technological Innovation
  • D. Rural Institutions
  • Slavery
  • Slavery was already in jeopardy . . . European
    terms of trade
  • Emancipation Proclamation galvanizing the North
    behind Lincoln, solidifying shaky war support

49
  • I. Introduction
  • II. Coming to America
  • A. European Agriculture
  • B. Native American Land Use
  • C. Settlement and Colonization
  • III. Moderate Revolutionaries
  • A. Tea and Taxes
  • B. Militia
  • C. Reduced Isolation
  • D. Republicanism vs. Federalism
  • E. The Constitution
  • IV. Agricultural Development
  • A. Government promotion
  • B. Expansion
  • C. Technological Innovation
  • D. Rural Institutions
  • Changing Perspectives
  • Reconstruction and agricultural change in the
    South
  • What to do after slavery?
  • Sharecropping
  • Rebuilding infrastructure
  • Westward Expansion
  • What to do with veterans?
  • Focus on recovery and expansion as a means of
    putting the war behind
  • Institutional formation
  • Establishment of the primary agricultural laws
    and institutions that we have today.

50
  • I. Introduction
  • II. Coming to America
  • A. European Agriculture
  • B. Native American Land Use
  • C. Settlement and Colonization
  • III. Moderate Revolutionaries
  • A. Tea and Taxes
  • B. Militia
  • C. Reduced Isolation
  • D. Republicanism vs. Federalism
  • E. The Constitution
  • IV. Agricultural Development
  • A. Government promotion
  • B. Expansion
  • C. Technological Innovation
  • D. Rural Institutions
  • Conclusion
  • Colonialization, settlement and expansion of
    agriculture in the US have largely been impacted
    by a set of social, political, and economic
    ideologies and institutions
  • Rural/agrarian vs. urban/commercial interests
  • Government promotion of expansion
  • Rural institutions
  • Technological change

51
  • Study Questions
  • Explain whether you think it is possible to
    deduce that there are common (universal)
    determinants of land use among all human
    societies and what some determinants might be.
  • Throughout modern history there have been
    indications of an urban-rural bias, such as the
    issues that gave rise to organized
    action/violence in the Shays Rebellion. Do you
    agree that urban-rural bias is a legitimate
    problem? Why do you think that there has been
    limited organized action by farmers/rural
    citizens in the US since the Shays Rebellion?
  • In the book Elements of Confederate Defeat, five
    Civil War historians argue that while the
    Confederate states lost the military campaign and
    the institution of slavery, they in fact achieved
    more of their war aims (ie. reasons for going
    to war) than did the Union states. Is this a fair
    assessment in relation to agriculture?
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