Transforming rural life : dairying families and agricultural change, 1820-1885

Bibliographic Information

Transforming rural life : dairying families and agricultural change, 1820-1885

Sally McMurry

(Revisiting rural America / Pete Daniel and Deborah K. Fitzgerald, series editors)

Johns Hopkins University Press, 1995

  • : hbk

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Includes bibliographical references (p. [237]-280) and index

Description and Table of Contents

Description

One of the many changes that transformed 19th-century agrarian life was the shift in the dairy industry from home to factory butter- and cheesemaking. In the early 19th century virtually all such work took place on the family farm. But after about 1860, production began to move from farms to local "crossroads factories." In this book Sally McMurry takes a new look at the underlying causes of this development and its implications for the dairying families who were the mainstays of northeastern agriculture. McMurry's work emphasizes the role of social systems, cultural values, material culture, and family dynamics. She argues that a key factor in the change was simply the resistance of women to the burden of home cheesemaking (many households produced thousands of pounds every season). When the technology and economic conditions permitted, the transition to factory production took place quickly, not because farm families made more money, but because taking the milk to factories helped resolve and domestic tensions. As a result, patterns of life began to change, freeing women for new tasks, encouraging increased reliance on the market economy and new cash crops, and emphasizing wage work, which in turn affected the reorganization of the domestic economy.

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