Hostname: page-component-8448b6f56d-gtxcr Total loading time: 0 Render date: 2024-04-24T10:47:14.869Z Has data issue: false hasContentIssue false

Beyond the Threshold: An Analysis of the Characteristics and Behavior of Early Reaper Adopters

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  03 March 2009

Alan L. Olmstead
Affiliation:
Professor of Economics and Director of the Institute of Governmental Affairs at the University of California, Davis, CA 95616.
Paul W. Rhode
Affiliation:
Assistant Professor of Economics at the University of North Carolina, Chapel Hill, NC 27599, and a Visiting Scholar at the Institute of Governmental Affairs.

Abstract

This article analyzes a large quantity of new data documenting the actual characteristics and behavior of early reaper adopters. It shows that a surprisingly large number of small-scale farmers were among the early purchasers and that institutional evolution—the emergence of local markets and cooperative exchanges for reaper services—encouraged rapid diffusion. These findings call into question the standard interpretation of northern farms as self-contained production units and, more specifically, challenge the usefulness of both the farm-specific-threshold model and the family-labor-constraint model.

Type
Articles
Copyright
Copyright © The Economic History Association 1995

Access options

Get access to the full version of this content by using one of the access options below. (Log in options will check for institutional or personal access. Content may require purchase if you do not have access.)

References

REFERENCES

Aldrich, Levi Burrell, Diary, Mss, Minnesota Historical Society, Minneapolis, MN.Google Scholar
Ankli, Robert E., “The Coming of the Reaper,” in Uselding, P., ed., Business and Economic History: Papers Presented to the Twenty-Second Annual Meeting of the Business History Conference, 2nd series 5 (1976), pp. 124.Google Scholar
Ankli, Robert E., Gross Farm Revenues in Pre–Civil War Illinois (New York, 1977).Google Scholar
Atack, Jeremy, and Bateman, Fred, To Their Own Soil: Agriculture in the Antebellum North (Ames, IA, 1987).Google Scholar
Atack, Jeremy, and Bateman, Fred, “Yankee Farming and Settlement in the Old Northwest: A Comparative Analysis,” in Klingaman, David C. and Vedder, Richard K., eds., Essays on the Economy of the Old Northwest (Athens, OH, 1987), pp. 77102.Google Scholar
Atack, Jeremy, and Passell, Peter, A New Economic View of American History from Colonial Times to 1940 (2nd ed., New York, 1994).Google Scholar
Bateman, Fred, and Foust, James D., Agricultural and Demographic Records of 21,118 Rural Households Selected from the 1860 Manuscript Censuses, Magnetic Tape, Indiana University, Bloomington, 1973.Google Scholar
Binnie-Clark, Georgina, Wheat and Women (Toronto, 1979).Google Scholar
Bogue, Allan G., From Prairie to Corn Belt: Farming on the Illinois and Iowa Prairies in the Nineteenth Century (Chicago, 1963).Google Scholar
Bogue, Margaret B., Patterns from the Sod: Land Use and Tenure in the Grand Prairie, 1850–1900 (Springfield, IL, 1959).Google Scholar
Brewer, William H., “Report on the Cereal Production of the United States,” Bureau, U.S. Census, Tenth Census: Agriculture, 1880 (Washington, DC, 1883).Google Scholar
Buley, R. Carlyle, The Old Northwest: Pioneer Period, 1815–1840, 2 vols. (Bloomington, IN, 1951).Google Scholar
Christie, Alexander Smith, Farm Diary of Alexander Smith Christie, 18601864, Mss, Christie Family Papers, vol. 30, Minnesota Historical Society, Minneapolis, MN.Google Scholar
Colman, Gould P., “Innovation and Diffusion in Agriculture,” Agricultural History, 42 (07 1968), pp. 173–87.Google Scholar
Covert, James R., Seedtime and Harvest: Cereals, Flax, Cotton, and Tobacco, USDA, Bureau of Statistics Bulletin No. 85 (Washington, DC, 1912).Google Scholar
David, Paul A., “The Mechanization of Reaping in the Ante-Bellum Midwest,” in Rosovsky, Henry, ed., Industrialization in Two Systems: Essays in Honor of Alexander Gerschenkron (New York, 1966), pp. 339.Google Scholar
David, Paul A., “The Landscape and the Machine: Technical Interrelatedness, Land Tenure and Mechanization of the Corn Harvest in Victorian Britain,” In McCloskey, Donald, ed., Essays on a Mature Economy: Britain after 1840 (Princeton, 1971), pp. 145204.Google Scholar
Davis, Lance E., “‘And It Will Never Be Literature’: The New Economic History: A Critique,” Explorations in Entrepreneurial History, 2nd series 1 (Fall 1968), pp. 7592.Google Scholar
Dawley, Allen W., Diary, and Memoranda, , 18651866, Mss, Minnesota Historical Society, Minneapolis, MN.Google Scholar
De Kalb, County [Illinois] Clerk's Office, Deed Books, Sycamore, IL. (various).Google Scholar
Drury, Marion R., Reminiscences of Early Days in Iowa (Toledo, IA, 1931).Google Scholar
Faragher, John Mack, Sugar Creek: Life on the Illinois Prairie (New Haven, CT, 1986).Google Scholar
Farseth, Pauline, and Blegen, Theodore C., eds. and trans., Frontier Mother: The Letters of Gro Svendsen (New York, 1979).Google Scholar
Fleisig, Haywood, “Slavery, the Supply of Agricultural Labor, and the Industrialization of the South,” this Journal, 36 (09 1976), pp. 572–97.Google Scholar
Fletcher, Calvin, Diary of Calvin Fletcher 1853–56 (Indianapolis, IN, 1972), vol. 5.Google Scholar
Graves, Abraham D., Mss, Diary, Northwestern University Library, Special Collections, Evanston, IL.Google Scholar
“Harvest Builders, 1864,” McCormick Company Records, Production Reports, Miscellaneous Data, 4x, Box 4, Wisconsin Historical Society, Madison, WI.Google Scholar
Headlee, Sue, The Political Economy of the Farm Family: The Agrarian Roots of American Capitalism (New York, 1991).Google Scholar
Hutchinson, William T., Cyrus Hall McCormick: Seed-Time, 1809–1856 (New York, 1930), vol. 1.Google Scholar
Illinois State Auditor, Biennial Report of the Auditor of Public Accounts of the State of Illinois to the Twenty-Third General Assembly (Springfield, IL, 1863).Google Scholar
Isern, Thomas D., Custom Combining on the Great Plains: A History (Norman, OK, 1981).Google Scholar
Isern, Thomas D., Bull Thresher and Bindlestiffs: Harvesting and Threshing on the North American Plains (Lawrence, KS, 1990).Google Scholar
Jones, Lewis, “The Mechanization of Reaping and Mowing in American Agriculture, 1833–1870: Comment,” this Journal, 37 (06 1977), pp. 451–55.Google Scholar
Kuuse, Jan, Interaction Between Agriculture and Industry: Case Studies of Farm Mechanization and Industrialization in Sweden and the United States, 1830–1930 (Uppsala, Sweden, 1974).Google Scholar
Lamb, Daniel W., “Map of DeKalb County, 1860,” De Kalb County Clerk's Office, Sycamore, IL.Google Scholar
Larpenteur, , Auguste, Diary, 18561865, Mss, Minnesota Historical Society, Minneapolis, MN.Google Scholar
Lawrence, Barbara, and Branz, Nedra, eds., The Flagg Correspondence: Selected Letters, 1816–1854 (Carbondale, IL, 1986).Google Scholar
Loehr, Rodney C., “Farmers' Diaries: Their Interest and Value as Historical Sources,” Agricultural History, 12 (01 1938), pp. 313–25.Google Scholar
Loehr, Rodney C., ed., Minnesota Farmers' Diaries: William R. Brown 1845–46; Mitchell Y. Jackson, 1852–63 (St. Paul, MN, 1939).Google Scholar
McCormick Harvesting Machine Company Papers, Mss, Series 3X, microfile edition, 1990, “Reaper Sales” and “Reaper Orders,” Wisconsin State Historical Society, Madison, WI.Google Scholar
Marsh, Charles W., Recollections: 1837–1910 (Chicago, 1910).Google Scholar
Marsh, Frank Lewis, Prairie Tree: Early Days on the Northern Illinois Prairie (New York, 1978).Google Scholar
Mills, Abel, “Autobiography of Abel Mills,” Journal of the Illinois State Historical Society, 19:1/2 (1926).Google Scholar
Munro, Brown, Diary, Mss, Microfilm, Illinois State Historical Society Library, Springfield, IL.Google Scholar
John, Nickerson Quincy Adams Papers, Mss, Minnesota Historical Society, Minneapolis, MN.Google Scholar
Olmstead, Alan L., “The Mechanization of Reaping and Mowing in American Agriculture, 1833–1870,” this Journal, 35 (06 1975), pp. 327–52.Google Scholar
Olmstead, Alan L., “The Civil War as a Catalyst of Technological Change in Agriculture,” in Uselding, P., ed., Business and Economic History: Papers Presented to the Twenty-Second Annual Meeting of the Business History Conference, 2nd series 5 (1976), pp. 3650.Google Scholar
Olmstead, Alan L., “The Diffusion of the Reaper: One More Time!” this Journal, 39 (06 1979) pp. 475–76.Google Scholar
Olmstead, Alan L., and Rhode, Paul W., “The Diffusion of Reapers in Illinois in 1849 and 1859,” University of California, Davis, Agricultural History Center, Working Paper (07 1994).Google Scholar
Paine, Clarence S., ed., “The Diaries of a Nebraska Farmer, 1876–1877,” Agricultural History, 22 (01 1948), pp. 130.Google Scholar
Pomfret, Richard, “The Mechanization of Reaping in Nineteenth-Century Ontario: A Case Study of the Pace and Causes of the Diffusion of Embodied Technical Change,” this Journal, 36 (06 1976), pp. 399415.Google Scholar
Rikoon, Sanford, Threshing in the Midwest, 1820–1940: A Study of Traditional Culture and Technological Change (Bloomington, IN, 1988).Google Scholar
Rogers, Everett M., Diffusion of Innovations, (3rd ed., New York, 1983).Google Scholar
Rogin, Leo, The Introduction of Farm Machinery in its Relation to the Productivity of Labor in the Agriculture of the United States During the Nineteenth Century (Berkeley, CA, 1931).Google Scholar
Ross, Earle D., ed., Diary of Benjamin F. Gue in Rural New York and Pioneer Iowa, 1847–56 (Ames, IA, 1962).Google Scholar
Ruede, Howard [letters], in Ise, John, ed., Sod-House Days: Letters from a Kansas Homesteader, 1877–78 (New York, 1937).Google Scholar
Schafer, Joseph, A History of Agriculture in Wisconsin (Madison, WI, 1922).Google Scholar
Schmidt, Hubert G., Agriculture in New Jersey: A Three Hundred Year History (New Brunswick, NJ, 1973).Google Scholar
Schob, David E., Hired Hands and Plowboys: Farm Labor in the Midwest, 1815–60 (Urbana, IL, 1975).Google Scholar
Scott, Matthew T., Collection, Memorandum Book and Index, 18561858, Mss, Microfilm, Collection of Regional History, Cornell University, Ithaca, NY.Google Scholar
Stout, Philemon Jr., Diaries, Mss, Illinois State Historical Society Library, Springfield, IL.Google Scholar
Taylor, George R., The Transportation Revolution: 1815–1860, Vol. IV: The Economic History of the United States (White Plains, NY, 1951).Google Scholar
Temin, Peter, Causal Factors in American Economic Growth in the Nineteenth Century (London, 1975).CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Trautmann, Fredric, ed., “Eight Weeks on a St. Clair County Farm in 1851: Letters by a Young German,” Journal of the Illinois Historical Society, 75 (Autumn 1982), p. 172.Google Scholar
“Trials of Mowers and Reapers,” Transactions of the Illinois State Agricultural Society, 1856–57, 2 (Springfield, IL, 1857), pp. 116–24.Google Scholar
U.S. Census Office, Seventh Census, 1850. Statistical View of the United States, Compendium of the Seventh Census (Washington, DC, 1854).Google Scholar
U.S. Census Office, Illinois 1850 Agricultural Schedules (Microfilm of unpublished manuscript census), Washington, DC, n.d.Google Scholar
U.S. Census Office, Eighth Census, 1860, Agriculture of the United States in 1860 (Washington, DC, 1864).Google Scholar
U.S. Census Office, Illinois 1860 Agricultural Schedules (Microfilm of unpublished manuscript census), Washington, DC, n.d.Google Scholar
U.S. Census Office, Illinois 1860 Population Schedules (Microfilm of unpublished manuscript census), Washington, DC, n.d.Google Scholar
U.S. Census Office, Minnesota 1860 Agricultural Schedules (Microfilm of unpublished manuscript census), Washington, DC, n.d.Google Scholar
Wheeler, Cyrenus Jr., The Inventors and Inventions of Cayuga County, N. Y. (Auburn, NY, 1882).Google Scholar
Wood, Dave, Wisconsin Diary, (USA, 1979).Google Scholar
Wright, Gavin, The Political Economy of the Cotton South: Households, Markets, and Wealth in the Nineteenth Century (New York, 1978).Google Scholar
Young, John., Diary, Mss, Illinois State Historical Society, Springfield, IL.Google Scholar