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Journal Article
Agricultural History (2011) 85 (1): 136–137.
Published: 01 January 2011
...Ryan Poe Pfeiffer Country: The Tenant Farms and Business Activities of Paul Pfeiffer in Clay County, Arkansas: 1902–1954 . By Sherry Laymon . Little Rock : Butler Center of Books , 2009 . 224 pp., $19.95 , paperback, ISBN 978-0-9800897-7-6 . © the Agricultural History Society...
Journal Article
Agricultural History (2013) 87 (1): 118–119.
Published: 01 January 2013
...Greta Marchesi Forced to Abandon Our Fields: The 1914 Clay Southworth Gila River Pima Interviews . By David H. DeJong . Salt Lake City : University of Utah Press , 2011 . 192 pp., $34.95 , paperback, ISBN 978-1-60781-095-7 . © the Agricultural History Society, 2013 2013...
Journal Article
Agricultural History (2008) 82 (4): 445–467.
Published: 01 October 2008
Journal Article
Agricultural History (2000) 74 (4): 723–758.
Published: 01 October 2000
... the flood plain with materials from the uplands and continually replenished the nutrients. Clay, silt particles, and organic matter held the bases in a chemical bond, with the organic matter supplying nitrogen. (The capacity of clay to hold both nutrients and water on its surfaces can be understood...
Journal Article
Agricultural History (2009) 83 (1): 103–105.
Published: 01 January 2009
... Kentucky. She began work on the papers as an associate editor in 1952 and later became co-editor with her good friend James Hopkins and in 1974became editorand co-directorof theproject.She continuedworking with the Clay Papers until 1979 and during her tenure six of the ten vol umes of The Papers of Henry...
Journal Article
Agricultural History (2011) 85 (4): 540–559.
Published: 01 October 2011
..., Kansas, Oklahoma, and Texas Fall Soil Groups 1 = Deep granular loams, silt loams, clay loams, and silty clay loams with heavy, cloddy subsoils. Surface very susceptible to wind erosion; subsoil resistant. Used mostly for small grains. 2 = Granular to cloddy loams, silt loams, clay loams, and silty clay...
Journal Article
Agricultural History (2005) 79 (2): 233–234.
Published: 01 April 2005
...Tash Smith Ecological Agrarian: Agriculture’s First Evolution in 10,000 Years . J. Bishop Grewell , Clay J. Landry and Greg Conko . Copyright 2005 Agricultural History Society 2005 Book Reviews / 233 Recently, agencies and organizations ranging from the National Parks Ser? vice...
Journal Article
Agricultural History (2011) 85 (1): 135–136.
Published: 01 January 2011
..., retired Pfeiffer Country:The Tenant Farms and Business Activities of Paul Pfeiffer in Clay County, Arkansas: 1902 1954. By Sherry Laymon. Little Rock: Butler Center of Books, 2009. 224 pp., $19.95, paperback, ISBN 978-09800897-7-6. Recent work on the history of northeast Arkansas has shown that a handful...
Journal Article
Agricultural History (2021) 95 (4): 609–632.
Published: 01 October 2021
.... Lucius Clay, soon to be appointed military governor of the US zone, wrote to fellow general John Henry Hilldring in May 1945, To me, being hard on Germany does not call for unnecessary destruction of economy. It can be accomplished over a long period of time only if we permit Germany a reasonably...
Journal Article
Agricultural History (2009) 83 (2): 263–264.
Published: 01 April 2009
...George B. Ellenberg The Horse in the City: Living Machines in the Nineteenth Century . Clay McShane and Joel A. Tarr . © 2009 Agricultural History Society 2009 2009 Book Reviews renderedobsolescenta modelofeconomicorganizationthathadservedthe familywellformorethana hundredyears...
Journal Article
Agricultural History (2021) 95 (1): 172–173.
Published: 01 January 2021
... of Oak Grove Lutheran School, the Clay County Farm Bureau, the Clay County Republican party, the Northwest Farm Managers Association, the Minnesota Historical Society, and the Minnesota Humanities Commission. Drache s self-assurance, certainty, and feistiness charmed some and alienated others. Within...
Journal Article
Agricultural History (2002) 76 (4): 741–742.
Published: 01 October 2002
... laborers had to travel miles to work on estates. The real agricultural revolution took place in the fens of Lincolnshire, Cambridgeshire, and Yorkshire, and on the heavy clays of East Anglia and the Home Counties, although these were not the wastelands often repre- sented. Primarily pasture...
Journal Article
Agricultural History (2001) 75 (2): 251–252.
Published: 01 April 2001
...Phillip L. Frana The Formative Years of Plant Pathology in the United States . C. Lee Campbell , Paul D. Peterson and Clay S. Griffith . Copyright 2001 Agricultural History Society 2001 Book Reviews / 251 The Formative Years of Plant Pathology in the United States. Edited by C...
Journal Article
Agricultural History (2005) 79 (2): 232–233.
Published: 01 April 2005
... is indeed as Lough suggests, as a companion when one visits these sites or contemplates one's relationship with a place that holds special meaning. Modupe Labode Colorado Historical Society Ecological Agrarian: Agriculture's First Evolution in 10,000 Years. By J. Bishop Grewell and Clay J. Landry with Greg...
Journal Article
Agricultural History (2011) 85 (1): 137–138.
Published: 01 January 2011
... Reviews Unfortunately, Laymon awkwardly straddles the line between genealogy and history. Context is important to her approach, but so are the detailed back stories of every Pfeiffer brother, some of whose actions had little or nothing to do with Clay County. Also troubling, Laymon never offers...
Journal Article
Agricultural History (2002) 76 (4): 742–744.
Published: 01 October 2002
... laborers had to travel miles to work on estates. The real agricultural revolution took place in the fens of Lincolnshire, Cambridgeshire, and Yorkshire, and on the heavy clays of East Anglia and the Home Counties, although these were not the wastelands often repre- sented. Primarily pasture...
Journal Article
Agricultural History (2013) 87 (1): 116–118.
Published: 01 January 2013
... 1945, but its basic framework is difficult to 117 Agricultural History Winter accept. Cotton has indeed come a long way, but it has much further to go before its stigma is justifiably gone. Jason Manthorne University of Georgia Forced to Abandon Our Fields: The 1914 Clay Southworth Gila River Pima...
Journal Article
Agricultural History (2018) 92 (4): 615–617.
Published: 01 October 2018
... such as incorrectly stating that in 1859 . . . Henry Clay argued against British interference in American trade despite Clay s death seven years prior, misquoting a 2015 monograph as a nineteenth century source, mischaracterizing the geography of hemp production by referring to thousands of nonexistent plantations...
Journal Article
Agricultural History (2023) 97 (4): 638–642.
Published: 01 November 2023
... are the benefits of this style of building? How did you come to learn about natural building? The natural building process involves mixing together ratios of materials like earthen clay, sand, water, and straw. Mixing can be done with a concrete mixer, or by hand (or foot!). Structures are usually built...
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Journal Article
Agricultural History (2005) 79 (3): 298–320.
Published: 01 July 2005
... , Nov. 15 , 1955 "Hold 9 in Forks Street Battle," Fargo Forum , Oct. 3 , 1955 10 "Jury in Shooting Holds Boy’s Father Negligent," Fargo Forum , July 20 , 1955 "Charge Filed in Shooting of Clay Boy," Fargo Forum , July 21 , 1955 "Paul Martinez Placed in Catholic Home," Fargo Forum...