This monograph thoroughly addresses a topic more narrow than its title implies. Its core is an agricultural history of Swedes, Russian-Mennonites, and French-Canadians in central Kansas from 1875 to 1925. McQuillan reasons that ethnic groups\u27 value systems can be discerned by studying the outcomes of their everyday decisions. Hence he focuses on the rich Kansas agricultural manuscript census schedules to discern how the three groups of immigrants adapted to the arid, often mercurial physical environment in which they found themselves and to the host culture which threatened to swallow up their ethnic distinctiveness. This, then, is a history of ethnic agriculture and ethnic persistence, both measured largely by agricultural outputs
Review of: Mixed Harvest: The Second Great Transformation in the Rural North, 1870-1930. Barron, Hal...
This is the first detailed examination of conditions in Kansas Territory in almost forty years. Alth...
Review of: First Majority - Last Minority: The Transforming of Rural Life in America. Shover, John L
This monograph thoroughly addresses a topic more narrow than its title implies. Its core is an agric...
Review of: Prevailing over Time: Ethnic Adjustment on the Kansas Prairies, 1875-1925. McQuillan, D. ...
Prevailing Over Time is an exploration of the development of Swedish, Russian Mennonite, and French ...
Plains Folk essentially completes its 1983 predecessor, Prairie Mosaic, authored by sociologist Will...
Ethnicity on the Great Plains is a collection of essays based on a conference sponsored by the Cente...
Kansas was born in the bloody prelude to the Civil War, a contested territory between North and Sout...
Review of: Immigrants in the Ozarks: A Study in Ethnic Geography. Gerlach, Russel L
Loewen and Friesen trace the origins of public concern about the adverse influence of immigrants in ...
Mixed Harvest is a good title for a book that documents the complexity of interests involved in twen...
Review of: Quantitative Studies in Agrarian History. Rothstein, Morton and Field, Daniel, ed
Review of: Making the Corn Belt: A Geographical History of Middle-Western Agriculture. Hudson, John ...
Review of: The End of Indian Kansas: A Study of Cultural Revolution, 1854-71. Miner, H. Craig and Un...
Review of: Mixed Harvest: The Second Great Transformation in the Rural North, 1870-1930. Barron, Hal...
This is the first detailed examination of conditions in Kansas Territory in almost forty years. Alth...
Review of: First Majority - Last Minority: The Transforming of Rural Life in America. Shover, John L
This monograph thoroughly addresses a topic more narrow than its title implies. Its core is an agric...
Review of: Prevailing over Time: Ethnic Adjustment on the Kansas Prairies, 1875-1925. McQuillan, D. ...
Prevailing Over Time is an exploration of the development of Swedish, Russian Mennonite, and French ...
Plains Folk essentially completes its 1983 predecessor, Prairie Mosaic, authored by sociologist Will...
Ethnicity on the Great Plains is a collection of essays based on a conference sponsored by the Cente...
Kansas was born in the bloody prelude to the Civil War, a contested territory between North and Sout...
Review of: Immigrants in the Ozarks: A Study in Ethnic Geography. Gerlach, Russel L
Loewen and Friesen trace the origins of public concern about the adverse influence of immigrants in ...
Mixed Harvest is a good title for a book that documents the complexity of interests involved in twen...
Review of: Quantitative Studies in Agrarian History. Rothstein, Morton and Field, Daniel, ed
Review of: Making the Corn Belt: A Geographical History of Middle-Western Agriculture. Hudson, John ...
Review of: The End of Indian Kansas: A Study of Cultural Revolution, 1854-71. Miner, H. Craig and Un...
Review of: Mixed Harvest: The Second Great Transformation in the Rural North, 1870-1930. Barron, Hal...
This is the first detailed examination of conditions in Kansas Territory in almost forty years. Alth...
Review of: First Majority - Last Minority: The Transforming of Rural Life in America. Shover, John L