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Agricultural History 1998: Vol 72 Index PDF

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Preview Agricultural History 1998: Vol 72 Index

Index to Volume 72 Compiled by Cameron L. Saffell, Carolyn Siemann, Karla Ekquist, and Cherilyn A. Wailey African American Extension Service dustry (1870-1880), 159-82; mules, program. See Agricultural extension perceived similarity to, 381-98; oc work, African American cupations of, 218-19, 280—97 African American Home Demonstration post-World War II expectations, program. See Home demonstration 538; poverty and government pro- work, African American grams, 414—15; proportion of share African Americans: agricultural exten croppers (1900-1960), 273; rice sion work for and by (See Agricul- growers in South Carolina, 200-1; tural extension work, African Amer! stereotype (post—emancipation), 300; can); agricultural independence of landowners and renters, 46, 298 landownership, 249-50; union orga 300; agricultural ladder (See Agri- nization of, 376; voter registration of cultural ladder); black nationalism (1950s), 539 and separatism, 33—34; black ten- Agricultural Adjustment Act (1933) ant’s dependency on whites, 38, 43, 275, 450-51 48; conflicts with white employers, Agricultural Adjustment Administra 337-39; contributions to World War tion: 450—57, 473-74 Il effort, 537; economic self-suffi Agricultural and Police Clubs (Edge- ciency, 314; in Edgefield, South Car- field District, South Carolina): 216 olina (1870-1880), 217—40; exodus Agricultural extension work (U.S.) from tenancy, 51, 54; factors influ- 423, 523-25, 531, 535 encing, 273-76; farm families, 548 Agricultural extension work, African 50: farmers. 35—53. 437—39, 535, American (U.S.): 36, 429-45, 542-43, 546; gains and losses under 455-56, 531, 535-36, 541-49, 551 capitalist agriculture, 160—61; in See also Cooperative Farm Demon- come from Louisiana sugar industry, stration Movement; Negro Coopera- 166—67; laborers, 223-24, 403-5, tive Demonstration Service 414, 448-49; land acquisition by Agricultural extension workers, African 241—44; as landlords, 399-403, American (U.S.) 405-16; landowners, 301, 303-11; 450-57, 525, 53 landowners in Macon County, Ala- 550-51 bama, 37—38, 46—50, 52-53: Agricultural ladder (U.S.): 214, landowners in Georgia, 256—62; leg- 266—68, 271-76 islation preventing renting or owner- Agricultural press: 678, 699-700, 702, ship, 215; liberty, 298; living condi- 705-6 tions of, 544; loss of land holdings, Agricultural societies: 700 241, 253-56; in Louisiana sugar in- Alabama: 523-51; Macon County, Index to Volume 72 Compiled by Cameron L. Saffell, Carolyn Siemann, Karla Ekquist, and Cherilyn A. Wailey African American Extension Service dustry (1870-1880), 159-82; mules, program. See Agricultural extension perceived similarity to, 381-98; oc work, African American cupations of, 218-19, 280—97 African American Home Demonstration post-World War II expectations, program. See Home demonstration 538; poverty and government pro- work, African American grams, 414—15; proportion of share African Americans: agricultural exten croppers (1900-1960), 273; rice sion work for and by (See Agricul- growers in South Carolina, 200-1; tural extension work, African Amer! stereotype (post—emancipation), 300; can); agricultural independence of landowners and renters, 46, 298 landownership, 249-50; union orga 300; agricultural ladder (See Agri- nization of, 376; voter registration of cultural ladder); black nationalism (1950s), 539 and separatism, 33—34; black ten- Agricultural Adjustment Act (1933) ant’s dependency on whites, 38, 43, 275, 450-51 48; conflicts with white employers, Agricultural Adjustment Administra 337-39; contributions to World War tion: 450—57, 473-74 Il effort, 537; economic self-suffi Agricultural and Police Clubs (Edge- ciency, 314; in Edgefield, South Car- field District, South Carolina): 216 olina (1870-1880), 217—40; exodus Agricultural extension work (U.S.) from tenancy, 51, 54; factors influ- 423, 523-25, 531, 535 encing, 273-76; farm families, 548 Agricultural extension work, African 50: farmers. 35—53. 437—39, 535, American (U.S.): 36, 429-45, 542-43, 546; gains and losses under 455-56, 531, 535-36, 541-49, 551 capitalist agriculture, 160—61; in See also Cooperative Farm Demon- come from Louisiana sugar industry, stration Movement; Negro Coopera- 166—67; laborers, 223-24, 403-5, tive Demonstration Service 414, 448-49; land acquisition by Agricultural extension workers, African 241—44; as landlords, 399-403, American (U.S.) 405-16; landowners, 301, 303-11; 450-57, 525, 53 landowners in Macon County, Ala- 550-51 bama, 37—38, 46—50, 52-53: Agricultural ladder (U.S.): 214, landowners in Georgia, 256—62; leg- 266—68, 271-76 islation preventing renting or owner- Agricultural press: 678, 699-700, 702, ship, 215; liberty, 298; living condi- 705-6 tions of, 544; loss of land holdings, Agricultural societies: 700 241, 253-56; in Louisiana sugar in- Alabama: 523-51; Macon County, 799 37—38, 44-45, 49-51, ters to the Southern Mercury, 487-508 635—36 Alabama A&M: 524 Baxter, John O.: Dividing New Mexico's Alabama Polytechnic: 524 Waters, 1700-1912, 607-8 Alston, Lee J., and Kyle D. Kauffman “Bedding out” movement (plants): “Up, Down, and Off the Agricuitural 579-83 Ladder: New Evidence and Implica Beersheba, Kansas: 3 tions of Agricultural Mobility for Benner, Samuel: 563 Blacks in the Postbellum South,” Black codes: 331—32 263-79 Black Labor Movement: 410 Altman, Morris: “Land Tenure, Ethnic Blanco, José Ignacio Jiménez: Privati- ity, and the Condition of Agricultural zacion y appropiacion de tierras mu- Income and Productivity in Mid- nicipales en la Baja Andalucia: Nineteenth-Century Quebec,” 708 Jerez de la Frontera, 1750, 608-10 62 Boll weevil: 50, 495 Andrews, Edward Deming: 555 Bracero program (U.S.): 535 Annuals (Plants) industry (U.S.) Brock, William H.: Justus von Liebig: 574-96. See also Nursery industry The Chemical Gatekeeper, 770-71 Arkansas: African American Extension Bunting, Robert: The Pacific Raincoast: Service Program in, 429-45; Environment and Culture in an Arkansas Negro State Farmers’ As- American Eden, 1778-1900, 106-7 sociation, 434—35; Colored Farmer’s Burton, Orville Vernon: “African Amer- Conferences, 434—36; Elaine Riot ican Status and Identity in a Postbel- (September 1919), 433; flooding in lum Community: An Analysis of the (1927), 441-44; reasons for black Manuscript Census Returns,” migration from, 440-41 213-40 Arkansas Negro State Farmers’ Associa- tion: 434-35 alifornia: Golden Gate Park, 574 Associated Jewish Charities of Chicago ‘ampbell, Thomas Monroe: 35, 39, 19 42-43, 528-30, 533, 544 ‘anada: agricultural census analyzed Bailey, Fred Arthur: William Edward (1851-52), 710-62; economic his- Dodd: The South’s Yeoman Scholar, tory interpretation of land tenure and 605-7 productivity, 709-10, 757-62 Bailey, Liberty Hyde: 578-80, 584, annon, Brian Q.: Remaking the Ameri- 591-96 can Dream: New Deal Rural Reset- Bankhead-Jones Farm Tenant Act tlement in the Mountain West, 104-6 (1937): 506 ‘arlson, Paul H.: Empire Builder in the Barron, Hal S.: Mixed Harvest: The Texas Panhandle: William Henry Second Great Transformation in the Bush, 108-9 Rural North, 1870-1930, 604-5 ‘arver, George Washington: 36 Barthelme, Marion K., ed.: Women in ‘attle industry (India): 68—69, 71, 73 the Texas Populist Movement: Let- ‘hakravarty-Kaul, Minoti: Common 800 / Agricultural History Lands and Customary Law: Institu Cotton industry (India): 55-76 tional Change in North India Over Cotton industry (U.S.): 55, 531-32, 546 the Past Two Centuries, 610-11 Cowan, Ruth Schwartz: A Social History Chicago, Illinois: 4—5 of American Technology 771-73 3 Civilian Conservation Corps: activities Creek Indians: 488-93 in Macon County, Alabama, 496 Clout, Hugh: After the Ruins: Restoring Davis, P. O.: 539-40 the Countryside of Northern France DeArmond-Huksey, Rebecca: Beyond after the Great War, 109-10 Bartholomew: The Portland Area ‘oclanis, Peter A “Food Chains: The History, 611-13 Burdens of the (Re)Past,” 661-74; Dewey, D. M. (Dellon Marcus) “Introduction: African Americans in 687-89, 698-99 Southern Agriculture, 1877-1945,” Downing, Andrew Jackson: 678 135-—39 DuBois, W. E. B.: 526 ‘oclanis, Peter A., and J. C. Marlow: Duncan, Colin A. M.: The Centrality of “Inland Rice Production in the South 4ericulture: Between Humankind Atlantic States: A Picture in Black and the Rest of Nature, 111-12 and White,” 197-212 DuPlessis, Robert: Transitions to Capi ‘olored Farmers Alliance: 410 talism in Early Modern Europe, ‘olored Farmer’s Conferences (Arkan- 636-38 sas): 434-36 Dupre, Daniel S.: Transforming the Cot ‘ommunal living: 552-73 ton Frontier: Madison County, Ala ‘onnor, John M., and William A bama, 1800-1840, 638-39 Schiek: Food Processing: An Indus trial Powerhouse in Transition, 2nd Edgefield, South Carolina: 214-40 ed., 794 Education: 307, 413 ‘ooperative Farm Demonstration Edwards, Laura F.: “The Problem of Movement: 34—53. See also Agri- Dependency: African Americans, cultural extension work, African Labor Relations, and the Law in the American Nineteenth-Century South,” 313-40 ‘ooperative marketing associations Ellenberg, George B.: “African Ameri- (U.S.): 77-99, 463-64 cans, Mules, and the Southern Mind- ‘ooperative purchasing associations scape, 1850-1950,” 381-98 (U.S.): 463-64 Ens, Gerhard J.: Homeland to Hinter ‘orn industry (U.S.): 559-60 land: The Changing Worldo f the ‘osgel, Metin M., and John E. Murray: Red River Métis in the Nineteenth “Market, Religion and Culture in Century, 112-13 Shaker Swine Production, Extension work, Agricultural. See Agri- 1788-1880,” 552-73 cultural extension work “osta-Pierce, Barry: From Farmers to Fishers: Developing Reservoir Famines (India): 67, 76 Aquaculture for People Displaced by Farm Security Administration, USDA Dams, 794 477 Index 801 Farmers: definition of discussed, Gray, Susan E.: The Yankee West: Com- 661-62 munity Life on the Michigan Fron- Farmers’ Improvement Society of tier, 115-17 Texas: 463-64 Great Migration. See Laborers Federal Emergency Relief Act (1935): Greenhouses: 574—96; heating and ven- 475 tilation, 584—96 Ferguson, Karen J.: “Caught in ‘No Grim, Valerie: “African American Land- Man’s Land’: The Negro Coopera- lords in the Rural South, tive Demonstration Service and the 1870-1950: A Profile,” 399-416 Ideology of BookerT . Washington, 1900-1918,” 33-54 Hahamovitch, Cindy: The Fruits of Ferleger, Louis: “The Problem of Their Labor: Atlantic Coast Farm- ‘Labor’ in the Post-Reconstruction workers and the Making of Migrant Louisiana Sugar Industry,” 140 Poverty, 1870-1945, 613-14 58 Hampton Negro Conference (July Florists (U.S.): 575-78, 589, 596 1899): 465-66 Food: place in history, 662-63 Hargis, Peggy G.: “Beyond the Margin- Forest Service, USDA, 506-7 ality Thesis: The Acquisition and Loss of Land by African Americans Gardening (U.S.): 581, 675, 679-80, in Georgia, 1880-1930,” 241-62 699-700, 704 Haskins v. Royster, 70 N.C. 601 (1874): Gardens: Europe, 581; United States, 324, 335-36, 339 579-83; vegetable, 549 Hebrew Union Agricultural Society: 3 General Education Board (Rockefeller Henderson, Peter: 578-80, 582-83, Trust): 35 587-89, 591-94, 596 Georgia: African Americans in, 241-62, Hicks, Arlingia A.: 532, 539-40 298-312; African American prop- erty ownership by county (1880 Hinton, William: Fanshen: A Documen- 1930), 257-62; Hancock County, tary Revolution in a Chinese Village, 302-12 794-95 Gerrits, G. H.: They Farmed Well: The Hirsch, Baron Marice de: 20—21 Dutch-Canadian Agricultural Com Home demonstration work, African munity in Nova Scotia, 1945—i995, 114-15 548-49 Goddard, Robert: “Agricultural Worker Home Seekers Land Company (Al- as Archetype in West Indian and abama, 1912-1937): 469-70, 494 African American Literature,” Homesteading (U.S.): 8—9 509-20 Horticulture (U.S.): 677-79, 695, 706. Gough, Robert: Farming the Cutover: A See also Gardening Social History of Northern Wiscon- Hsiung, David C.: Two Worlds in the sin, 1900-1940, 639-41 Tennessee Mountains: Exploring the Graham, Sylvester: Grahamism and di- Origins of the Appalachian Stereo- etary theory, 568 types, 615-16 802 / Agricultural History Hyde Jr.. Samuel C.: Pistols and Poli- Blacks in the Postbellum South,” tics: The Dilemma of Democracy in 263-79 Louisiana's Florida Parishes Keating, Pauline B.: Two Revolutions 18/0—1]899, 117-18 Village Reconstruction and the Co operative Movement in Northern Illinois: Chicago, 4—5 Shaanxi, 1934—1945, 641-42 India: Berar, 55—76; landownership, Klein, Kerwin Lee: Frontiers of Histori ~ 61—62 cal Imagination: Narrating the Eu Indianso f North America. See Creek In ropean ( onquest of Native America, dians 1890—/990. 616-18 Industrial and Commercial Workers Knights of Labor: 184 Union (1920s): 376 Knowles, Anne Keliy: Calvinists Incor International Harvester: mechanical cot- porated: Welsh Immigrants on ton picker, 531—32 Ohio's Industrial Frontier, 619 Irrigation: in Berar, India, 71 Kyriakoudes, Louis M.: “Southern Irwin, James R., and Anthony P. O’ Brien Black Rural—Urban Migration in the Where Have All the Sharecroppers Era of the Great Migration: Nash Gone?: Black Occupations in Post ville and Middle Tennessee, 1890 bellum Mississippi,” 280-9 1930,” 341-51 esup, Morris K.: 36 Labor (1 : in greenhouses, -wish Agricultural and Industrial Aid 5 ‘ 595; law, 315-1 society i—3, 14, 16—17, 19-26, 40; out-migration of 31-32 African Americans, 532-34, -wish Agricultural Society 548—49; relations between employ >wish Agriculturalists’ Aid Society of ers and laborers, 315, 317-19, America: 3—32 321-23, 326-33, 337-39; in the ewish Colonization Association South, 341-43, 51, 495 ewish farmers (U.S.): 1—32 Labor unions: 184, Jones, Lu Ann: “In Searcho f Jennie Lamming, George Booth Moton, Field Agent, AAA.” Land policy (Canada): 708-62 446-58 Landownership (U.S.): African Ameri cans, 37—38, 46—53, 217, 241-44, K’ Meyer, Tracy Elaine: /nterracialism 249-50, 253-62, 301-11; character and Christian Community in the istics Of farm owners/operators in ostwar South: The Story of Edgefield, South Carolina, 228; land Koinonia Farm, 618—19 use in Black Belt South, 487—508 Kahn, Louis 24 Lee, George 514-16 Kansas: Beersheba, 3 Leuchars, Robert B.: 578, 584—87, Kauffman, Kyle D., and Lee J. Alston “Up, Down, and Off the Agricultural Levy, Rabbi Abraham R.: 4, 6, 12—13, Ladder: New Evidence and Implica 15-20, 22-29. See also Jewish Agri- tions of Agricultural Mobility for cultural and Industrial Aid Society; Jewish Agriculturalists’ Aid Society compared with non-French Canadian of America farms (nineteenth century), 713-14; Likaka, Osumaka: Rural Society and impact on tenancy (U.S.), 532, Cotton in Colonial Zaire, 621-22 541-42; in Louisiana sugar industry, Loeb, Adolph: 5, 7, 20-21, 26 141—43, 196; mechanical cotton Louisiana: sugar industry in, 140-58, picker, 531—32; during the New 159-82, 183-96 Deal, 531 Louisiana Sugar Planters’ Association Milk industry (Quebec): 734-37 (1877): goals and tactics of, 184 Mississippi: Tunica County, 290-96; Lyon-Jenness, Chery!: “A Telling Washington County, 290-96 Tirade: What Was the Controversy Mississippi River: Flood of 1927, Surrounding Nineteenth-Century 441-44 Midwestern Tree Agents Really All Mitchell, Don: The Lie of the Land: About?”, 675-707 Migrant Workers and the California Landscape, 625-27 Magoon, Charles E.: The Way It Was Moberg, Mark: Myths of Ethnicity and The Produce Industry in the Early Nation: Immigration, Work, and Years, 1890 to 1930, An Illustrated Identity in the Belize Banana Indus- History, 795 try, 627-29 Marginality thesis: 241-42, 245—48, Moneyhon, Carl H.: Arkansas and the 256-57. See also Agricultural ladder New South, 1874-1929, 642-44 Marlow, J.C , and Peter A. Coclanis Morris, Thomas D.: Southern Slavery “Inland Rice Production in the South and the Law, 1619-1860, 101-2 Atlantic States: A Picture in Black Moton, Jennie Booth: 446-58 and White,” 197-212 Moton, Robert Russa: 475 McClelland, Peter D.: Sowing Moder Mules: as metaphor for African Ameri- nity: America’s First Agricultural cans in the South (U.S.), 381—98; in Revolution, 622-23 the South (U.S.), 382-89, 395-96 McCorkle Jr., James | “Southern Murphy, Lucy Eldersveld, and Wendy Truck Growers’ Associations: Orga Hammand Venet, eds.: Midwestern nization for Profit,” 77—99 Women: Work, Community, and Mclliwraith, T. F.: Looking for Old On Leadership at the Crossroads, tario: Two Centuries of Landscape 777-78 Change, 624-25 Murray, John E., and Metin M. Cosgel: McLellan, Marjorie | Six Generations “Market, Religion, and Culture in Here: A Farm Family Remembers, Shaker Swine Production, 1788 1880,” 552-73 McRae, Andrew: God Speed the Plough: The Representation of Nashville, Tennessee: 343—51 Agrarian England, 1500-1660, National Recovery Administration: 474 118-20 Native Americans. See Creek Indians Mechanization: and agricultural ladder Natives Land Act (South Africa, 1913): (U.S.), 276; of French Canadian 353 804 / Agricultural History Negro Cooperative Demonstration Ser Panic of 1837: 558 vice: 34—54. See also Agricultural Paternalism, South (U.S.): 191, 370—80 extension work, African American; Patterson, D. F.: 532 Cooperative Farm Demonstration Paul, Harry W.: Science, Vine, and Movement; Tuskegee Institute; Wine in Modern France, 1750-1990, Washington, Booker T 120-21 Negro Subsistence Homestead Project: Paxton, Robert O.: French Peasant Fas- 475 cism: Henry Boregéres’s Greenshirts Neolithic Revolution: 664 and the Crises of French Agriculture, New Deal: and agricultural mechaniza- 1929-1939, 778-80 tion, 531; influence of subsidy pay- Peterson, Arthur G.: obituary, 601 ments in Louisiana sugar industry, Phillips, Carla Rahn, and William D 196; programs in Macon County, Al- Phillips Jr.: Spain’s Golden Fleece abama, 473-75. See also specific Wool Production and the Wool Trade New Deal programs and legislation from the Middle Ages to the Nine- - New South: characteristics of, 184 teenth Century, 629-30 Nieman, Donald G., ed.: Freedom, Plantation «vstem (U.S.): laws con- Racism and Reconstruction: Col- tributing to break-up of, 222-23 lected Writings of LaWanda Cox, Plants: ornamental, 704--5; sellers of 644-45 [“plant peddlers”] (See Nursery Novelists: writing about African Ameri- agents). See also Annuals (Plants) can laborers, 514—19 industry Nursery agents (U.S.): 675-707 Poland-China swine: 557 Nursery industry (U.S.): 680-91, Political organizations: African Ameri- 696-702, 706-7; impact of increas- cans participation in, 410 ing popularity of horticulture, 680 Pork industry (U.S.): by the Shakers, Nutrition: 548-49 552-73 Postwar Planning Commission, U.S O’Brien, Anthony Patrick, and James R (World War II): 534 Irwin: “Where Have All the Share- Prairie Farms Cooperative Association croppers Gone?: Black Occupations 482-83 in Postbellum Mississippi,” 280-97 Prairie Farms project (Alabama, 1936) Ochiltree, lan D.: “*A Just and Self-Re- 470, 476-86 specting System’?: Black Indepen- Preemption Act of 1834: 490-91 dence, Sharecropping, and Paternal- Prince, Hugh: Wetlands of the American istic Relations in the American Midwest: A Historical Geography of South and South Africa,” 352-80 Changing Attitudes, 780-81 Otis, J. R.: 539-40 Promiseland, South Carolina: 402 Out-migration (U.S.): 532-34, 549 Quebec: 708—62 Pam, Judge Hugo: 5, 7. See also Jewish Agriculturalists’ Aid Society of Racism: in agricultural extension work, America 524, 538; anti-semitism, 7; assign- 805 ment of black agents, 538; in New Rosenwald, Julius: 16 Deal programs, 411; in U.S. South Rothenberg, Winifred B.: 552, 562, 565 (post-World War II), 537 38; role of Rowland, Lawrence S., Alexander prejudice in Louisiana sugar indus- Moore, and George C. Rogers Jr.: try, 186; in Tennessee Valley Author The History of Beaufort County, ity, 423-28; Thomas Campbell and South Carolina. Volume I, 1514- black migration, 533 1861, 103-4 Ray, H. C.: 429-45 Rural Reform movement: 40-41, Reese, Linda Williams: Women of Okla- 496-98 homa, 1890-1920, 630-32 Reidy, Joseph P.: “Mules and Machines San Francisco, California: 574 and Men: Field Labor on Louisiana Satya, Laxman D.: “Colonial Encroach- Sugar Plantations, 1887-1915,” ment and Popular Resistance: Land 183-96 Survey and Settlement Operations in Resettlement Administration: activities Berar (Central India), 1861-1877,” in Macon County, Alabama, 496 55-76 502; Cumberland Homesteads pro- Schloff, Linda Mack: “And Prairie ject (Tennessee), 424; Land Utiliza Dogs Weren't Kosher”: Jewish tion Division, 470; Prairie Farms Women in the Upper Midwest Since project (Alabama), 475—86; work in 1855, 125-26 the Tennessee Valley, 423~—24 Schultz, Mark R.: “The Dream Real- Rice industry (South Atlantic): 199-205 ized? African American Landowner- Rice industry (U.S.): 197-201, 205-12 ship in Central Georgia Between Re- Rikoon, J. Sanford: “The Jewish Agri- construction and World War Two,” culturalists’ Aid Society of America 298-312 Philanthropy, Ethnicity, and Agricul Schultz, Theodore W.: obituary, 602-3 ture in the Heartland,” 1—32 Schwalm, Leslie A.: A Hard Fight For Robb, Peter, ed.: Meanings of Agricul We: Women’s Transition from Slav- ture: Essays in South Asian History ery to Freedom in South Carolina, and Economics, 122-23 645-47 Robbins, William G.: Landscapes of Seigniorial land tenure (Quebec): Promise: The Oregon Story, 1800 708—62 1940, 781-83 Selvon, Samuel: 517-19 Robertson, Ian Ross: The Tenant League Shaker communities (U.S.): 552-73 of Prince Edward Isivnd, 1864 Sharecropping (South Africa): 352—80 1867: Leasehold Tenure in the New Sharecropping (U.S.): impact of mecha- World, 123-24 nization on, 541-42; legal defini- Robinson, Leonard: | tions (See also Labor: law); share- Rockefeller, John D.: 35 cropper distinguished from share Rodrigue, John C.: “*The Great Law of tenant, 287—88; in South, 221-22, Demand and Supply’: The Contest 268 over Wages in Louisiana’s Sugar Re Sharp, Paul F.: The Agrarian Revolt in gion, 1870-1880,” 159-82 Western Canada: A Survey Showing 806 / Agricultural History American Parallels, 796 County, 205-12; Promiseland, Shideler, James H.: obituary, 601 402-3 Shindo, Charles J.: Dust Bowl Migrants Southern Improvement Company (AI- in the American Imagination abarma, 1901—1919): 49, 465-67 632 4232 494 hoptaugh, Terry L.: Roots of Success Southern Tenant Farmers’ Union: 410, History of the Red River Valley Sug- 451 arbeet Growers, 633-35 Spear, Thomas: Mountain Farmers Short, Brian: Land and Society in Ed Moral Economies of Land and Agri wardian Britain, 773-75 cultural Development in Arusha and Sitton, Thad, and Dan K. Utley: From Meru, 652-53 Can See to Can't: Texas Cotton Stewart, Mart A What Nature Suffers Farmers on the Southern Prairies, to Groe Life, Labor, and Land 647-49 scape on the Georgia Coast, 1680 Slatta, Richard W.: Comparing Cow 1920, 128-29 boys and Frontiers, 649-50 Storey, William Kelleher: Science and Smith-Lever Act (1914): 525 Power in Colonial Mauritius Smith, Mark M.: Mastered by the 783-84 Clock: Time, Slavery, and Freedom Stromquist, Shelton, and Marvin in the American South, 650—52 Bergman, eds.: Unionizing the Jun Smithcors, J. Fred, and Ann Smithcors, gles: Labor and Community in the comps.: Five Centuries of Veterinary Twentieth-Century Meatpacking In Medicine: A Short-Title Catalog of dustry, 654-55 the Washington State University Vet- Sugar industry (Louisiana): 140-58, erinary History Collection, 796 159-82, 183-96 Soil Conservation and Domestic Allot Sugar industry (U.S.): “Sugar War” of ment Act (1936): 275 1887, 182 ~y Soil Conservation Service, USDA: 477 Sugar planters (Louisiana): 177-82 Soils: in Berar, India, 63, 68—69 Sulzberger, Cyrus: 24 15 South (U.S.): diversification of white “Surviving the Dust Bowl,” 767—69 and black farms, 543—44; economic Swine: breeds used by Shakers, 557; impact on southern blacks (post- Shaker creation of Poland-China World War II), 541—42; paternalism hogs, 557. See also Pork industry in (See Paternalism, South); share- cropping in (See Sharecropping); Taft, Levi R.: 578-79, 585, 591-92, Tuskegee National Forest as exam- 594-96 ple of landownership and land use in Tenancy (U.S.): African American ten- the Black Belt South, 487—88; white ants, 38—54, 217, 222; economic economic control of blacks (post- goals of, 216-17; farmer and farm Civil War), 38, 54 laborer tenants contrasted, 221; im- South Africa: 352-80 pact of mechanization on tenant South Carolina: Edgefield, 214-40; farmers, 541-42; legal definitions Marion County, 206; Orangeburg (See also Labor: law); lien laws,

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