Wilson J. Warren provides important answers to that complex question. In this study, he traces the transformation of the red meat industry across the Midwest from the terminal stockyards in Chicago, Kansas City, and Omaha to plants near small towns, particularly in the Great Plains, where cattle and hogs arrive via trucks rather than railroad cars. Warren emphasizes the packers\u27 shift from buying through commission men at terminal markets to direct buying from farmers at plants located close to feed, water, and cheap labor. He also discusses the technical and marketing innovations that substantially changed the meatpacking industry, beginning about 1960, particularly with the introduction of electric knives and the shipment of precut and...
The shift of the U.S. meat packing industry from urban to rural areas has generated controversy rega...
Lamenting the exploitation of meatpackers at the hands of America\u27s multi-billion dollar beef ind...
Review of: "The Yards, a Way of Life: A Story of the Sioux City Stockyards," by Marcia Poole
Stull and Broadway capture fifteen years\u27 experience examining structural shifts and community co...
Stull and Broadway capture fifteen years\u27 experience examining structural shifts and community co...
Stull and Broadway capture fifteen years\u27 experience examining structural shifts and community co...
Review of: Cutting into the Meatpacking Line: Workers and Change in the Rural Midwest. Fink, Debora
Stull and Broadway capture fifteen years\u27 experience examining structural shifts and community co...
This self-proclaimed anthropological and historical study about Midwest wage earners confronts many ...
Review of: Cutting into the Meatpacking Line: Workers and Change in the Rural Midwest. Fink, Debora
Hacking through meatpacking\u27s mass production jungle, historians Shelton Stromquist and Marvin Be...
Hacking through meatpacking\u27s mass production jungle, historians Shelton Stromquist and Marvin Be...
The history of the meat packing industry of the Midwest offers an excellent illustration of the grow...
Review of: "In Meat We Trust: An Unexpected History of Carnivore America" by Wilson J. Warren
From the mid-nineteenth century until today, the beef cattle industry has played a major role in the...
The shift of the U.S. meat packing industry from urban to rural areas has generated controversy rega...
Lamenting the exploitation of meatpackers at the hands of America\u27s multi-billion dollar beef ind...
Review of: "The Yards, a Way of Life: A Story of the Sioux City Stockyards," by Marcia Poole
Stull and Broadway capture fifteen years\u27 experience examining structural shifts and community co...
Stull and Broadway capture fifteen years\u27 experience examining structural shifts and community co...
Stull and Broadway capture fifteen years\u27 experience examining structural shifts and community co...
Review of: Cutting into the Meatpacking Line: Workers and Change in the Rural Midwest. Fink, Debora
Stull and Broadway capture fifteen years\u27 experience examining structural shifts and community co...
This self-proclaimed anthropological and historical study about Midwest wage earners confronts many ...
Review of: Cutting into the Meatpacking Line: Workers and Change in the Rural Midwest. Fink, Debora
Hacking through meatpacking\u27s mass production jungle, historians Shelton Stromquist and Marvin Be...
Hacking through meatpacking\u27s mass production jungle, historians Shelton Stromquist and Marvin Be...
The history of the meat packing industry of the Midwest offers an excellent illustration of the grow...
Review of: "In Meat We Trust: An Unexpected History of Carnivore America" by Wilson J. Warren
From the mid-nineteenth century until today, the beef cattle industry has played a major role in the...
The shift of the U.S. meat packing industry from urban to rural areas has generated controversy rega...
Lamenting the exploitation of meatpackers at the hands of America\u27s multi-billion dollar beef ind...
Review of: "The Yards, a Way of Life: A Story of the Sioux City Stockyards," by Marcia Poole