This article discusses the situation in the State of Maine in the early 1930. Highlighted are the quickening pace and modernization that came into the agrarian society and the challenge to residents of fast transportation and forced specialized farm production
The transition to capitalism has been one of the most discussed issues in the historiography of the ...
The arrival of the automobile challenged Maine to rethink a road system that dated back to colonial ...
The article reviews the history and impact of, and response to, the Women\u27s Department section of...
The article discusses the impact of the Great Depression on the rural communities of Maine. It also...
Stone walls running incongruously through deep woods; fields and pastures becoming overgrown with br...
A brochure published by the Maine Development Commission in cooperation with the State Department of...
The article discusses the history of Vanceboro, Maine in the period from 1871 to 1900. It explores ...
Back-to-the-landers who relocated to Maine in large numbers during the 1970s often lacked traditiona...
In this comprehensive article on rural economic development, David Vail and Michael Hillard describe...
In this article author Nancy Hatch presents a geographical and historical account of the town of Buc...
This article discusses the theory that previous discussions of the decline of Maine population in th...
During the first third of the twentieth century, the United Sates underwent profound social, technolo...
At the end of World War II, Mainers relied primarily on local sources for food, but now 80 percent o...
In the past, intermarriage, local granges, communal ties, and state agricultural education fostered ...
The dramatic influx of southern New Englanders into the District of Maine in the 1770s is widely rec...
The transition to capitalism has been one of the most discussed issues in the historiography of the ...
The arrival of the automobile challenged Maine to rethink a road system that dated back to colonial ...
The article reviews the history and impact of, and response to, the Women\u27s Department section of...
The article discusses the impact of the Great Depression on the rural communities of Maine. It also...
Stone walls running incongruously through deep woods; fields and pastures becoming overgrown with br...
A brochure published by the Maine Development Commission in cooperation with the State Department of...
The article discusses the history of Vanceboro, Maine in the period from 1871 to 1900. It explores ...
Back-to-the-landers who relocated to Maine in large numbers during the 1970s often lacked traditiona...
In this comprehensive article on rural economic development, David Vail and Michael Hillard describe...
In this article author Nancy Hatch presents a geographical and historical account of the town of Buc...
This article discusses the theory that previous discussions of the decline of Maine population in th...
During the first third of the twentieth century, the United Sates underwent profound social, technolo...
At the end of World War II, Mainers relied primarily on local sources for food, but now 80 percent o...
In the past, intermarriage, local granges, communal ties, and state agricultural education fostered ...
The dramatic influx of southern New Englanders into the District of Maine in the 1770s is widely rec...
The transition to capitalism has been one of the most discussed issues in the historiography of the ...
The arrival of the automobile challenged Maine to rethink a road system that dated back to colonial ...
The article reviews the history and impact of, and response to, the Women\u27s Department section of...