Broome County Farm Home Bureau News PDF Download

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Farm Bureau News

Farm Bureau News
Author:
Publisher:
Total Pages: 198
Release: 1915
Genre:
ISBN:

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Extension Service News

Extension Service News
Author:
Publisher:
Total Pages: 284
Release: 1918
Genre: Agricultural extension work
ISBN:

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Home Bureau Federation News

Home Bureau Federation News
Author:
Publisher:
Total Pages: 418
Release: 1951
Genre: Agricultural extension work
ISBN:

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Putting the Barn Before the House

Putting the Barn Before the House
Author: Nancy Grey Osterud
Publisher: Cornell University Press
Total Pages: 293
Release: 2012-04-15
Genre: History
ISBN: 0801464641

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Putting the Barn Before the House features the voices and viewpoints of women born before World War I who lived on family farms in south-central New York. As she did in her previous book, Bonds of Community, for an earlier period in history, Grey Osterud explores the flexible and varied ways that families shared labor and highlights the strategies of mutuality that women adopted to ensure they had a say in family decision making. Sharing and exchanging work also linked neighboring households and knit the community together. Indeed, the culture of cooperation that women espoused laid the basis for the formation of cooperatives that enabled these dairy farmers to contest the power of agribusiness and obtain better returns for their labor. Osterud recounts this story through the words of the women and men who lived it and carefully explores their views about gender, labor, and power, which offered an alternative to the ideas that prevailed in American society. Most women saw "putting the barn before the house"—investing capital and labor in productive operations rather than spending money on consumer goods or devoting time to mere housework—as a necessary and rational course for families who were determined to make a living on the land and, if possible, to pass on viable farms to the next generation. Some women preferred working outdoors to what seemed to them the thankless tasks of urban housewives, while others worked off the farm to support the family. Husbands and wives, as well as parents and children, debated what was best and negotiated over how to allocate their limited labor and capital and plan for an uncertain future. Osterud tells the story of an agricultural community in transition amid an industrializing age with care and skill.