Making the corn belt : a geographical history of middle-western agriculture

Bibliographic Information

Making the corn belt : a geographical history of middle-western agriculture

John C. Hudson

(Midwestern history and culture)

Indiana University Press, c1994

Available at  / 10 libraries

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Note

Includes bibliographical references (p. 211-246) and index

Description and Table of Contents

Description

"John Hudson's accomplishment looms large...This is a book of great substance that will likely stand as a classic." - John Jakle. Stretching from the Rockies to the Appalachians, the Corn Belt is America's heartland. "Making the Corn Belt" traces the geographical and agricultural evolution of this region, whose agriculture is based on the tradition of corn-feeding meat animals. This use of corn emerged in the westward movement of Euro-American farming people from the Upland South to the Ohio Valley and the Mississippi Valley. Corn Belt agriculture, however, spread more slowly northward than it did westward, partly because of the patterns of migration established in the spread of the frontier. By the Civil War, however, this distinctive cultural region was divided socially and politically. "Making the Corn Belt" traces these evolving regional-agricultural themes and carries them into the age of rapid technological change in the 1930s. This volume presents the most complete and up-to-date account of the origin and growth of America's heartland.

Table of Contents

Preface 1. Corn Belt Geography 2. Making the Land 3. Finding the Land 4. Zea Mays 5. The Feedlot 6. Razorbacks and Poland-Chinas 7. The First Corn Belt 8. Corn Belt Sectionalism 9. Specialization and Westward Expansion 10. New Crops and Northward Expansion 11. West to the Plains 12. The Corn Business Notes Index

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