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The Farmer’s Revolt
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The Farmer’s Revolt. Farmers Organize Agriculture’s Decline 1860: 50% of wealth and 30% of national income 1910: 20% of wealth and 18% of income Agriculture’s.

Dec 16, 2015

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Page 1: The Farmer’s Revolt. Farmers Organize Agriculture’s Decline 1860: 50% of wealth and 30% of national income 1910: 20% of wealth and 18% of income Agriculture’s.

The Farmer’s Revolt

Page 2: The Farmer’s Revolt. Farmers Organize Agriculture’s Decline 1860: 50% of wealth and 30% of national income 1910: 20% of wealth and 18% of income Agriculture’s.
Page 3: The Farmer’s Revolt. Farmers Organize Agriculture’s Decline 1860: 50% of wealth and 30% of national income 1910: 20% of wealth and 18% of income Agriculture’s.

Farmers OrganizeAgriculture’s Decline• 1860: 50% of wealth and 30% of national income• 1910: 20% of wealth and 18% of income

Agriculture’s Response• 1867 Nat’l Grange of the Patrons of Husbandry • 1860 – 1870s Grange Movement

– Cooperatives, rural mail delivery, farm credit, temperance, direct election of Senators, social events

• 1877 Charles Macune of Texas, and the Farmers’ Alliance– 1.5 million white farmers– 1 million black farmers– Sub-treasury plan

Page 4: The Farmer’s Revolt. Farmers Organize Agriculture’s Decline 1860: 50% of wealth and 30% of national income 1910: 20% of wealth and 18% of income Agriculture’s.
Page 5: The Farmer’s Revolt. Farmers Organize Agriculture’s Decline 1860: 50% of wealth and 30% of national income 1910: 20% of wealth and 18% of income Agriculture’s.
Page 6: The Farmer’s Revolt. Farmers Organize Agriculture’s Decline 1860: 50% of wealth and 30% of national income 1910: 20% of wealth and 18% of income Agriculture’s.

Mary Lease

“Wall Street owns the country. It is no longer a government of the people, by the people and for the people, but a government of Wall Street, by Wall Street, and for Wall Street.”

Farmers should “raise less corn and more hell.”

Page 7: The Farmer’s Revolt. Farmers Organize Agriculture’s Decline 1860: 50% of wealth and 30% of national income 1910: 20% of wealth and 18% of income Agriculture’s.
Page 8: The Farmer’s Revolt. Farmers Organize Agriculture’s Decline 1860: 50% of wealth and 30% of national income 1910: 20% of wealth and 18% of income Agriculture’s.

People’s Party is Born

• 1891 People’s Party formed in Nebraska. Nicknamed the Populist Party.

• Omaha Platform, 1892– Labor Theory of Value (Marxist concept)– Silver/Bimetallic Coinage (inflationary)– Income Tax (progressive, not regressive)– Sub-treasury/Public Warehousing (public subsidy)– Public ownership of railroads (socialism?)

Page 9: The Farmer’s Revolt. Farmers Organize Agriculture’s Decline 1860: 50% of wealth and 30% of national income 1910: 20% of wealth and 18% of income Agriculture’s.

Tom Watson

“You are kept apart that you may be separately fleeced of your earnings. You are made to hate each other because upon that hatred is rested the keystone of the arch of financial despotism which enslaves you both.”

Page 10: The Farmer’s Revolt. Farmers Organize Agriculture’s Decline 1860: 50% of wealth and 30% of national income 1910: 20% of wealth and 18% of income Agriculture’s.

Election 1892: President Cleveland (Again!)

Page 11: The Farmer’s Revolt. Farmers Organize Agriculture’s Decline 1860: 50% of wealth and 30% of national income 1910: 20% of wealth and 18% of income Agriculture’s.

Populists in the Election of 1892

Grover Cleveland (D): 46% 5.6 million 277 EC

Benjamin Harrison (R): 43% 5.2 million 145 EC

James Weaver (P): 9% 1 million 22

Page 12: The Farmer’s Revolt. Farmers Organize Agriculture’s Decline 1860: 50% of wealth and 30% of national income 1910: 20% of wealth and 18% of income Agriculture’s.

Election NumbersCleveland (D)

In 88: 5.50 million in pop vote, 168 in Electoral CollegeIn 92: 5.55 million in pop vote, 277 in Electoral College

Harrison (R)In 88: 5.4 million in pop vote, 233 in Electoral CollegeIn 92: 5.2 million in pop vote, 145 in Electoral College

Weaver (P)In 92: 1 million in pop vote, 22 in Electoral College

So? Electorate grows, but northern Republican voters in rural, farming areas go Populist while southern Democratic votes in rural, farming areas remain loyal to Democratic party.

Lesson for Populism? Seek Southern Democrat farm voters for 1896.

Page 13: The Farmer’s Revolt. Farmers Organize Agriculture’s Decline 1860: 50% of wealth and 30% of national income 1910: 20% of wealth and 18% of income Agriculture’s.

1896

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Ydrq2-j92cUMcKinley Bryan

Page 14: The Farmer’s Revolt. Farmers Organize Agriculture’s Decline 1860: 50% of wealth and 30% of national income 1910: 20% of wealth and 18% of income Agriculture’s.
Page 15: The Farmer’s Revolt. Farmers Organize Agriculture’s Decline 1860: 50% of wealth and 30% of national income 1910: 20% of wealth and 18% of income Agriculture’s.
Page 16: The Farmer’s Revolt. Farmers Organize Agriculture’s Decline 1860: 50% of wealth and 30% of national income 1910: 20% of wealth and 18% of income Agriculture’s.
Page 17: The Farmer’s Revolt. Farmers Organize Agriculture’s Decline 1860: 50% of wealth and 30% of national income 1910: 20% of wealth and 18% of income Agriculture’s.

Election: A Year of Realignment

McKinley (R): 7.1 million51%271 EC

Bryan (D/P): 6.5 million47%176

Economic woes of the 1895 recession ended, worker strife in declined, farmer suffering abated, McKinley advocated stronger American involvement in Pacific as patriotic mission, many Populists (especially in North) rejected an alliance with the Democratic Party.

Page 18: The Farmer’s Revolt. Farmers Organize Agriculture’s Decline 1860: 50% of wealth and 30% of national income 1910: 20% of wealth and 18% of income Agriculture’s.
Page 19: The Farmer’s Revolt. Farmers Organize Agriculture’s Decline 1860: 50% of wealth and 30% of national income 1910: 20% of wealth and 18% of income Agriculture’s.

“Hayseed” Socialism?

Why did Populism fail at the electoral level?Why did worker struggles and farmer struggles

result in defeat, particularly in comparison to farmer-labor alliances in other nations?

Why no socialism in the USA?Legacies of Populism?Role of Third Parties in US system- Populism,

Progressivism, Socialist, Libertarian, Reform, Green, etc?