Hostname: page-component-848d4c4894-x5gtn Total loading time: 0 Render date: 2024-05-21T13:40:48.283Z Has data issue: false hasContentIssue false

Mechanisation and Risk: Kansas Wheat Growers 1915–1930

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  31 October 2008

Extract

After the Civil War, settlers surged into the western two-thirds of Kansas occupying a region which only a few decades previously had been identified as part of the Great American Desert, and therefore too parched for farming. Many of those newly exploiting the virgin soil had learned their farming in a humid climate and were poorly equipped for survival in an arid region. Failure rates were high amongst pioneers who could not withstand the periodic droughts which destroyed not only their crops but also the gardens which were designed to provide vital subsistence foodstuffs. Farms thrived for a few years but then withered in the relentless sun; eventually hard-hit families gave up the struggle and moved on.

Type
Research Article
Copyright
Copyright © Cambridge University Press 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

Allen, H.J., 1927. ‘The new harvest hand’, The American Review of Reviews, 76, 279–85.Google Scholar
Athearn, R.G., 1986. The Mythic West in Twentieth Century America, (Lawrence).Google Scholar
Bell, E.H., Sept. 1942. ‘Culture of a contemporary rural community: Sublette Kansas’ (U.S. Department of Agriculture Rural Life Studies No. 2).Google Scholar
Call, C.E. and Salmon, S.C., July 1918. ‘Growing wheat in Kansas’ (Kansas Agricultural Experiment Station. Bulletin No. 219).Google Scholar
Clark, C.D., and Roberts, R.L., 1936. People of Kansas (Topeka).Google Scholar
Cooper, M.R., and Washburn, R.S., April 1921. ‘Cost of producing wheat’, (U.S. Department of Agriculture, Bulletin No. 943).CrossRefGoogle Scholar
DeCanio, S.J., 1980. ‘Economic losses from forecasting error in agriculture’, Journal of Political Economy, 88, 234–58.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Edwards, A.D., January 1939. ‘Influence of drought and depression on a rural community. A case study of Haskell County Kansas’ (U.S. Department of Agriculture. F.S.A. and Bureau of Agricultural Economics, Social Research Report No.VII).Google Scholar
Elwood, R.B., Arnold, L.E., Schmutz, C.D., and McKibben, E.G., April 1939. ‘Changes in technology and labor requirements in crop production’ (Works Progress Administration, National Research Report No.A-10).Google Scholar
Goodrich, C., Allin, B.W. and Thornthwaite, C.W., 1936. Migration and Economic Opportunity (Philadelphia).Google Scholar
Green, R.M., Nov. 1927. ‘Effects of shortage of farm storage space and inability to get local bank credit on the movement of Kansas wheat to market’ (Kansas Agricultural Experiment Station, Bulletin No. 244).Google Scholar
Grimes, W.E., 1925. ‘Some phases of the hard winter wheat growers problem in readjustment’, Journal of Farm Economics, 7, 196219.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Grimes, W.E., 1929. ‘The effect of the combined harvester-thresher on farming in the wheat growing regionScientific Agriculture, 9, No. 12., 773782.Google Scholar
Grimes, W.E., 1930. ‘Machine Production and the Price of Wheat’, Proceedings of the Second International Conference of Agricultural Economists (Menasha, Wise).Google Scholar
Grimes, W.E., 1931. ‘Social and economic aspects of large-scale farming in the wheat belt’, Journal of Farm Economics, 13, 21–6.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Grimes, W.E., Kifer, R.S., and Hodges, J.A., July 1928. ‘The effect of the combined harvesterthresher on farm organisation in South-Western Kansas and North-Western Oklahoma’ (Kansas Agricultural Experiment Station, Circular No. 142).Google Scholar
Harger, C.M., January 1919. ‘Still going up. Farm values in middle west soared with wages and food’, The Country Gentleman.Google Scholar
Hewes, L., 1973. The Suitcase Farming Frontier: A study in the historical geography of the Central Great Plains (Lincoln).Google Scholar
Hodges, J.A., Elliot, F.F., and Grimes, W.E., August 1930. ‘Types of farming in Kansas’ (Kansas Agricultural Experiment Station, Bulletin No. 251).Google Scholar
Hoover, L.M., August 1957. ‘Kansas agriculture after 100 years’ (Kansas State College of Agriculture and Applied Science, Bulletin No. 392).Google Scholar
Hoover, L.M., and McCoy, J.H., January 1955. ‘Economic factors that affect wheat in Kansas’, (Kansas Agricultural Experiment Station, Bulletin No. 369).Google Scholar
Horton, D.C., Larsen, H.C. and Wall, N.J., 1942. ‘Farm-mortgage credit facilities in the United States’ (U.S. Department of Agriculture, Miscellaneous Publication No. 478).Google Scholar
Howe, H., January 1930. ‘Farm land values in Kansas’ (Kansas Agricultural Experiment Station, Circular 158).Google Scholar
Hunger, E.A., 19291930. ‘Kansas outstanding leader in use of combine’, (Kansas State Board of Agriculture, 27th Biennial Report).Google Scholar
Johnson, E.C., October 1918. ‘Handling the 1918 wheat harvest in Kansas’ (U.S. Department of Agriculture, Circular No.121).Google Scholar
Johnson, H.T., 19731974. ‘Post war optimism and the rural financial crisis of the 1920sExplorations in Economic History, 11, 173–92.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Kansas City Star, 1916, February 13Google Scholar
Kansas State Board of Agriculture, Biennial Reports.Google Scholar
Kansas State Board of Agriculture, 1921. Wheat in Kansas (Report for Quarter ending September 1920, vol. XXXIX, No. 155, Topeka).Google Scholar
Kansas State Board of Agriculture, June 1957. Price Patterns! Prices received by Kansas farmers. 1910–1955 (Manhattan, Kansas).Google Scholar
Lescohier, D.D., April 1922. ‘Harvest labor problems in the wheat belt’ (U.S. Department of Agriculture, Bulletin No. 1020).Google Scholar
Lescohier, D.D., April 1924a. ‘Conditions affecting the demand for harvest labor in the wheat belt’, U.S. Department of Agriculture, Bulletin No. 1230).Google Scholar
Lescohier, D. D., May 1924b. ‘Sources of supply and conditions of employment of harvest labor in the wheat belt’ (U.S. Department of Agriculture, Bulletin No. 1211).CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Lindert, P., 1988. ‘Long-run trends in American farmland values’, Agricultural History, 62, 4585.Google Scholar
Literary Digest, 25 September 1920. ‘Machinery ousting the harvest hand’, 28–9.Google Scholar
Parker, W.J. and DeCanio, S.J., 1982. ‘Two Hidden Sources of Productivity Growth’, Agricultural History, 56, 654–62.Google Scholar
Pressly, T. J. and Scofield, W. H., 1965. Farm Real Estate Values in the United States by Counties, 1850–1959 (Seattle).Google Scholar
Reynoldson, L. A., Kifer, R. S., Martin, J. H., and Humphries, W. R., February 1928. ‘The combined harvester-thresher on the Great Plains’ (U.S. Department of Agriculture, Technical Bulletin No. 70, Washington DC).Google Scholar
Rhoades, E. L., 19191920. ‘Harvest labour’, (Kansas State Board of Agriculture, 22nd Biennial Report).Google Scholar
Salmon, S. C. and Throckmorton, R. I., July 1929, ‘Wheat production in Kansas’, (Kansas Agricultural Experiment Station, Bulletin 248).Google Scholar
Sanders, W. H., 19191920. ‘Some new farm machines’ (Kansas State Board of Agriculture, 22nd Biennial Report).Google Scholar
Tapp, J. W. and Grimes, W. E., November 1924. ‘More profit for the wheat farmers of Central Kansas’ (U.S. Dept of Agriculture, Farmers Bulletin No. 1440, Washington DC).Google Scholar
Topeka Capital, 1917, November 21.Google Scholar
Umberger, H., and Rhoades, E. L., March 1921. Kansas Handbook of Harvest Labor (Kansas State Agricultural College, Extension Circular No. 23).Google Scholar
U.S. Department of Agriculture, Yearbook (Annual).Google Scholar
U.S. Department of Agriculture, December 1930. ‘Farm real estate situation 1929–30 (Circular No. 150).Google Scholar
Walker, H. B., and Rhoades, E. L., September 1920. ‘The combine harvester in Kansas’ (Report of Kansas State Board of Agriculture. XXXI, No. 155).Google Scholar
Wallace, L. E., September 1920. ‘Moving the farm close to town’ (Report of the Kansas State Board of Agriculture.Google Scholar
Worster, D., 1979. Dust Bowl: The Southern Great Plains in the 1930s (New York).Google Scholar