Agrarian Nation

Respect For The Past. Wisdom For The Present. Hope For The Future.

26 March 2011

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Welcome To Agrarian Nation

How did people in rural New England live and work before electricity and tractors arrived on the scene? This web site will seek to answer that question by looking at the old agricultural writings of 1825 to 1900.

Join me on a historical journey of discovery into America's agrarian past. We will get advice from the old-timers about the art of farming, gardening, and living a good life.

Like archeologists studying an ancient culture, we will look at excerpts from original-source documents (primarily almanacs and agricultural journals) to better understand how people thought and lived their lives in pre-grid America.

Herrick Kimball
hckimball@bci.net


Weekly postings here have been suspended. Enjoy the great information chronicled in the archives of this web site. And please stop by my new Agriphemera web site for more old-time agrarian insights.

"Stande in the waies and beholde, and aske for the olde way, which is the good way and walke therein, and yee shall finde rest for your soules."

Jeremiah 6:16
1599 Geneva Bible


The future is written in the past.

—Lord Acton


Cultural
Archaeologists
.
That's what we are here at Agrarian Nation. We're digging for clues in the old agricultural writings. We're learning about how life once was (and how it may be again)!

Agrarian Nation Editor
Writes New York Times Op-Ed

Agrarian Nation Editor<br>Writes New York Times Op-Ed
Wherein he proposes "The Jeffersonian Solution" to America's present and future problems (click the picture to read the article)

Walter Prescott Webb
1888—1963

Walter Prescott Webb<br>1888—1963
This man is the official historian of Agrarian Nation. Click his picture to read about his "Boom Hypothesis of Modern History." It is the most insightful and pertinent historical analysis of our times that you will ever read. Webb's Boom Hypothesis explains a lot about why we are having the problems we are having in the world today.... and what lies ahead.

"Populations must increase rapidly, more rapidly than in former times, and ere long the most valuable of arts will be the art of deriving a comfortable subsistence from the smallest area of soil. No community whose members possess this art can ever be the victim of oppression in any of its forms. Such community will be alike independent of crowned kings, money kings and land kings."

—Abraham Lincoln (1859)


"The class of citizens who provide at once their own food and raiment, may be viewed as the most truly independent. It follows, the greater the proportion of this class to the whole society, the more free, the more independent, and the more happy must be the society itself."

—James Madison


"From the beginning it was always possible to find farmers who were intuitively suspicious of the industrialization of agriculture. Perhaps they objected to the increased authority of suppliers and experts. Perhaps they felt the discord between machinery and living creatures. Perhaps they had a rational fear of toxic chemicals. Perhaps they disliked paying cash for energy and fertility that they had previously received in kind from their farms and their good work. Among at least a few, for whatever reasons, there was a persistent distrust."

—Wendell Berry

Tales From The Green Valley

Tales From The Green Valley
One Year on a 1620 Farm in England.
This is an excellent historical film series from the BBC. (Click the picture for details and online episode links)

This field, which when the owner took it over eight years previously was barren, now was bursting with life. As I passed alongside of it on the cart, getting a good view of it as a whole, I often thought of the latent power that lay there till released and channelled by man. Nothing to see on that former dry and barren field, save tangled yellowish grass: yet holding within it the force to throw upward what I now beheld. A farmer is a liberator of the energy in the earth, ceaselessly creating what is good, and adding on a vast scale to the beauty of the world.
.....

John Stewart Collis
The Worm Forgives The Plough


"Agriculture is the most healthful, most useful, and most noble employment of man."

—George Washington

This web site is brought to you by Planet Whizbang. Click the beet...

This web site is brought to you by Planet Whizbang. Click the beet...
...to visit Planet Whizbang

The Widsom Of Grant Gibbs

The Widsom Of Grant Gibbs
Grant Gibbs is a small-scale, sustainable farmer out in Washington state. He's a smart guy. Click the picture to learn about Grant Gibbs and how he farms.

Agrarian Nation Followers



"Through World War II, farm life in my region (and, I think, nearly everywhere) rested solidly upon the garden, dairy, poultry flock, and meat animals that fed the farm’s family. Especially in hard times farm families, and their farms, survived by means of their subsistence economy. The industrial program, on the contrary, suggested that it was “uneconomic” for a farm family to produce its own food; the effort and the land would be better applied to commercial production. The result is utterly strange in human experience: farm families that buy everything they eat at the store."


Wendell Berry
(Renewing Husbandry)


"There seem to be but three ways for a nation to acquire wealth. The first is by war... This is robbery. The second by commerce, which is generally cheating. The third by agriculture, the only honest way, wherein man receives a real increase of the seed thrown into the ground, in a kind of continual miracle, wrought by the hand of God in his favour, as a reward for his innocent life and his virtuous industry."

—Benjamin Franklin


"…the American countryside is now in the early stages of ferment. Old dreams and old ways, mixed with new tools, techniques, and opportunities, have given fresh life to the agrarian spirit. A way of life preserved through the twentieth century by sectarian religious groups such as the Old Order Amish has found new energy and new recruits in the opening years of the third Millennium."

—Allan C. Carlson
(Agrarianism Reborn)



A love for the soil and all the pursuits of outdoor life is one of the most healthful signs in a people. Our broad and diversified land affords abundant opportunity for the gratification of every rural taste, and those who form such tastes will never complain that life is losing its zest. Other pleasures pall with time and are satiated. We outgrow them. But every spring is a new revelation, every summer a fresh, original chapter of experience, and every autumn a fruition of hopes as well as of seeds and buds. Nothing can conduce more to happiness and prosperity than multitudes of rural homes. In such abodes you will not find Socialists, Nihilists, and other hare-brained reformers who seek to improve the world by ignoring nature and common sense. Possession of the soil makes a man conservative, while he, at the same time, is conserved.

E.P. Roe


History, culture and current events come together in this compelling book by agrarian iconoclast, Michael Bunker. Surviving Off Off-Grid dovetails nicely with Agrarian Nation because it speaks of rediscovering the pre-grid ways of life and applying them to the way we live now. I consider this book a pertinent companion book to Agrarian Nation. Check out the reviews at Amazon.com and get yourself a copy.
Surviving Off Off-Grid: Decolonizing the Industrial Mind
(also available on Kindle)

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