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U.S. History 1877-Present 3: Pitchforks and Platforms 4617 Views
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Description:
Today's lesson: Farm Co-Ops and The Granger Laws. No relation to Hermione.
Transcript
- 00:04
The world of agriculture kind of got left behind by this new wave [Agriculture in ocean behind technology wave]
- 00:07
of technology sure farmers had new machines like steam and gas powered
- 00:12
tractors but only a few farmers had those mostly big farmers in Great Lakes [Tractors appear in big lakes]
- 00:16
states we had lots of industry and money flowing through them farmers in the
- 00:20
south the plains and the West however were farming in the Stone Age like they
Full Transcript
- 00:26
had woolly mammoths pulling plows and crazy well the South was the worst off [Woolly mammoth pulling plow]
- 00:32
mostly because the south leaders would not industrialize after the war one
- 00:37
because they leaned on the manual labor of sharecroppers instead and two because [Workers raking the soil]
- 00:42
they associated industrialization with those darn northern Yankees and there
- 00:46
was nothing worse than acting like a Yankee and then there were the Great
- 00:52
Plains where there were no big cities in this period and no big business and no [Open plain fields]
- 00:56
banking really just farmers stuck in much the same position as farmers in the
- 01:01
south kind of subsistence living well in the West small farmers were in the same
- 01:05
boat and this boat was not shipshape when the railroads finally crossed the [Man sinking in ocean with boat]
- 01:12
nation and expanded to every region farmers were glad at first the days of
- 01:17
hauling crops to market in a horse-drawn wagon were over they could get their [Horse and wagon appear on farm field]
- 01:21
crops to market much faster with trains which would allow them to ship more
- 01:24
crops than ever but things got ugly fast the railroads were run by big money back
- 01:31
in the Big East and the money guys made mad stacks by [Man with long list of bill]
- 01:35
overcharging farmers for delivery they also forced farmers to agree to all
- 01:39
kinds of binding condition or else and if you think about it if you apply
- 01:44
manual labor against machine labor or machine aided manual labor well you can
- 01:50
harvest a whole lot more crop with man plus machine than just man so you can [Machine with lots of crops]
- 01:55
imagine that the man plus machine people were able to sell corn and wheat and all
- 01:59
that kind of stuff for a whole lot less money than the farmer who's just kind of [Man in grocery store surrounded by veges]
- 02:03
doing it all himself shipping crops by rail actually ended up
- 02:08
driving plenty of farmers into bankruptcy well who could save the [hammer smashes piggy bank]
- 02:12
farmers well themselves together farmers formed
- 02:15
an organization called The Grange yeah it sounds like a nickname for Hermione
- 02:20
Granger but really it was short for the National Grange of the order of the
- 02:25
patrons of husbandry husbandry means raising livestock no one knows why [Woman appears beside a cow]
- 02:31
well the Grange was originally formed in 1867 by a Department of Agricultural
- 02:36
employee named Oliver Kelly he took a little tour of Virginia and was so [Oliver Kelly appears in Virginia]
- 02:40
horrified at how bad farming conditions were that he said I got to do something
- 02:45
Grange members paid dues and the money was used to help them in all kinds of [Coins going into Grange Dues piggy bank]
- 02:49
ways it helped them to get lessons in new better farming techniques and some
- 02:53
technology to buy and share new farm equipment like tractors combines and [Farms R Us store appears]
- 02:57
threshing machines and was also used to help sale them out if one of them hit
- 03:01
hard times or a drought or something well after the panic of 1873 the grains [Man with sack of cash in a drought farmland]
- 03:06
banded together to try to survive the economic downturn that shut off even
- 03:10
more money from farmers the Grange was all about cooperation alone its members
- 03:15
were weak but together they had the dough to buy grain elevators so that the
- 03:19
railroads couldn't charge him a good zillion dollars to use them they also
- 03:23
had the dough to buy warehouses in form cooperative farms as well as mills and [Warehouse and farmland appears under sold sign]
- 03:28
factories where they could manufacture new farm equipment well on top of that
- 03:32
they set up their own grocery and supply stores and to this day there are still [Man in grocery store]
- 03:36
plenty of signs for the old farmers co-ops in the plain state Rangers fought
- 03:41
the railroads by lobbying the federal government for regulation and they were
- 03:44
partly successful in 1876 when the government passed some regulations on [Gavel banged]
- 03:48
railroads that were called yet the Granger laws this is all pretty sweeps
- 03:53
for the grains but in the end their cooperation was there doomed
- 03:56
railroads big business and big banking fought back by accusing the Rangers of
- 04:01
being a bunch of Communists at the same time some of the co-op's Rangers created [People working in a crop field]
- 04:06
went bust ruining the farm family who had invested
- 04:09
in them but the biggest blow came from the [Men surrounded by tomatoes]
- 04:12
farmers themselves they were still over producing using the new farm equipment
- 04:17
and getting lower railroad race just lead farmers to send more crops to [Man covered by crops]
- 04:21
market supply dwarfed demand which is even worse than helping demand because
- 04:29
there were more crops than the farmers could sell the prices went down and
- 04:32
plenty of farmers started going bankrupt and since the Grange had failed to solve
- 04:35
this fundamental problem it went into a tailspin by 1876 the very year its
- 04:40
regulations were gaining traction in Washington the Grange was pretty much [Grange in the water]
- 04:44
washed up which took a while considering you know all the dirt on those farmers [Dirty farmer with mud on hands]
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