ECU Libraries Catalog

Planting the seeds of hope : Indiana County extension agents during the Great Depression and World War II / Frederick Whitford.

Author/creator Whitford, Fred, 1955-
Format Electronic and Book
Publication InfoWest Lafayette, Indiana : Purdue University Press, [2023]
Description745 pages : illustrations ; 25 cm.
Supplemental Content Full text available from Ebook Central - Academic Complete
Subject(s)
Variant title Indiana County extension agents during the Great Depression and World War two
Series The Founders Series.
Founders series. UNAUTHORIZED
Contents Part 1: Pioneering a New Field of Work (1887-1928) -- 1 Neither the Agent nor His Farmer-Constituents Knew Very Much About What to Expect of One Another -- Part 2: Outlasting the Great Depression (1929-1939) -- 2 The Shattering, Sledge Hammer Economic Blows of the Depression -- 3 Building Support Through Advisory Boards -- 4 Does the County Agent Do Anybody or Group of Farmers Any Good or Justify His Expense? -- 5 Live Out of the Garden, the Smoke House, and Cellar -- 6 Cash Is the One Article That Is Scarcest and Hardest to Get -- 7 The Man With the High-Producing Soil, Hen, Cow, and Sow That Kept Operating Expense Down Was Able to Return a Profit -- 8 Farmers Hanging On by a Mere Thread Reached Out for Benefit Payments to Save Their Farms -- Photographs -- 9 Conservation of Soil Is the Solution on Which Will Hang Future Extension Activities -- 10 Erosion Is One of the Major Problems Which Must Be Faced -- 11 Land Use Planning Not Altogether a New Idea -- 12 Extension Work Interrupted by Extreme Droughts and Flood -- 13 There Is Convenience and Satisfaction of Flipping a Switch and Getting Light -- 14 Shall I Sell One Team on a Four-Horse Farm and Buy a Tractor? -- 15 The Average Farmer Has Not Learned the Principles of Economic Uses of Wood Lots -- 16 Hybrid Corn Is With Us to Stay Until Something Is Found to Take Its Place -- 17 The Necessity of Knowing the Soil Before a Good Crop Can Be Produced -- 18 Growing Wheat Is One Thing and Growing Quality Wheat Is Another -- Photographs -- 19 Farmers on the Lookout for Some New or Different Crop That Offers More Promise for Fair Returns
Contents 20 Not More Cows but Fewer and Better Dairy Cows Is the Imperative Need -- 21 Sheep Have a Place on Most Every Farm -- 22 Runts and Diseased Pigs Seldom Lift the Mortgage -- 23 A Bushel Basket of Eggs Brings In as Much Money as 100 Bushels of Corn -- 24 The Life of an Extension Worker Is an Honorable Occupation and an Interesting One -- Photographs -- Part 3: Soldiers of the Soil During World War II (1940-1945) -- 25 Fitting the Extension Program to Wartime Conditions Has Required Some "Give and Take" -- 26 The County Agent Is Expected to Be a Walking Encyclopedia on Government Programs -- 27 Production Goals That Looked Impossible Were Reached -- 28 Higher Hog, Dairy, and Poultry Prices Created an Interest Like Never Before -- 29 For Patriotic Reasons as well as for Profit, Acreage Has Been Expanded -- 30 Tomatoes Have Become a Major Crop -- 31 The Total Increase in Home Production and Consumption Would Be a Staggering Amount of Food -- 32 The Armed Forces Have Taken 1,500 Men, Including Farmers. Why Wouldn't It Create Many Problems? -- 33 All Agricultural Workers Seeking Employment in Industrial Factories Must Have a Statement of Transfer From the County Agent
Bibliography noteIncludes bibliographical references and index.
Access restrictionAvailable only to authorized users.
Technical detailsMode of access: World Wide Web
Genre/formElectronic books.
LCCN 2023931810
ISBN9781612498447 (hardcover)
ISBN(epdf)

Available Items

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