Dry Farming in the Northern Great Plains
Years of Readjustment, 1920-1990
Mary W.M. Hargreaves
xiv, 386 pages, 4 maps, 6 x 9
Development of Western Resources
Cloth ISBN 978-0-7006-0553-8, $45.00
Grandiose plans for land retirement
and expanded irrigation have been frequently proposed for the
northern Great Plains, but they have not significantly affected
agricultural practices in the region.
Those major readjustments to farming methods that did occur
in the region evolved out of local initiative in response to
drought and depression during the 1920s. With some refinements
but few amendments, procedures remain basically the same today.
In Dry Farming in the Northern Great Plains, Mary Hargreaves
reviews the changes in agricultural technology and farm management
through the 1920s, the introduction of federal programs as drought
and depression recurred in the 1930s, and the realignment of
concerns from drought to marketing instability during the recovery
years that followed.
Drought remains a perennial problem in the region, which in
this study includes the eastern twothirds of Montana and
the western half of the Dakotas. But instability of marketing
has been a greater concern, according to Hargreaves, and marketing,
not environmental factors, occasioned the land retirement programs
of the 1950s and 1980s.
Despite the economy and practicability of dry farming, the
national agricultural policy of acreage restrictions since the
1930s has promoted the use of costly inputs and enabled higher-cost
producers to continue competitive operation.
"Misconceptions and myths have too frequently entered
into national land-use planning," Hargreaves writes. "There
are still those who see the Plains as a 'Great American Desert';
still those who look to irrigation as the only basis for successful
agriculture there; and still those who cherish the small diversified
homestead operation as the agrarian dream, regardless of the
environment."
Dry farming has proved successful in the northern Great Plains,
Hargreaves contends. That success is measured not only by production
but also by limited erosion. On its record, dry-land agriculture
should not now fall prey to "hyperbole, myth, or politics."
"A superb history. Hargreaves has a keen eye for the
detail necessary to show the complex relationships between the
environment, economics, and governmental policy for farming on
the Northern Great Plains."--R. Douglas Hurt, author
of Agricultural Technology in the Twentieth Century
"A provocative piece of work. Hargreaves is not afraid
to question the established wisdom, but when she does so she
is grounded firmly in the evidence. Indeed, while some may question
her conclusions, none can question her knowledge or her mastery
of the subject. An outstanding work of history and public policy
analysis."--David B. Danbom, author of Our Purpose
Is to Serve: The First Century of the North Dakota Agricultural
Experiment Station
"A fitting sequel to Hargreaves's first book on dry farming
in the northern Great Plains. Again she has delved deeply into
the relevant literature, exploring the effects of technological
advance, policies, climatic factors, and economic variables as
they have affected one of the nation's important and unique farming
areas."--Howard W. Ottoson, coauthor of Land People
in the Northern Plains Transition Area
MARY M. W. HARGREAVES is professor emerita of history
at the University of Kentucky and is a past president of the
Agricultural History Society. She has written extensively on
agricultural history; this book is a sequel to her volume Dry
Farming in the Northern Great Plains, 19001925.
|