蓬勃发展的割据:1916-1928年威斯康星森林的炸药运动

Q2 Arts and Humanities
J. Kates
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摘要

到1910年,木材公司已经剥离了五大湖各州的白松,留下了一片4000万英亩的土地,后来被称为“割地”。商业利益集团、大学科学家和州政府积极努力,将这块土地重新开发用于作物农业。一个关键的挑战是清除土地上的树桩。特别是在第一次世界大战之后,爆炸物被吹捧为一种现成的手段,可以将砍伐的灌木丛土地转化为作物面积,从而为农民建立即时的权益。这项研究的重点是威斯康星州,该州的土地清理行动影响最为深远。从1919年到1928年,威斯康星大学农业学院向农民分发了近1900万磅的战争剩余炸药。密歇根州、明尼苏达州以及美国南部和西部各州也采取了同样的行动,全国总收入超过6300万英镑。一场大规模的公共关系运动敦促耕地工人尽可能多地开垦土地,各级记者都签署了推广割地农业的协议。然而,爆炸物在未经训练的人手中往往是危险的,人们所希望的农业繁荣从未实现。20世纪20年代,随着作物价格暴跌,次边缘英亩的土地被停产,“土地清理”的风气被多方面的“土地利用”所取代
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
Booming the Cutover: The Campaign for Explosives in the Wisconsin Forest, 1916–1928
abstract:By 1910 lumber companies had stripped the Great Lakes states of their white pines, leaving behind a forty-million-acre expanse that came to be known as the "cutover." Business interests, university scientists, and state governments worked aggressively to redevelop this land for crop agriculture. A key challenge was ridding the land of stumps. Especially after the First World War, explosives were touted as a ready means of converting cutover scrub land to crop acreage, thus building instant equity for the farmer. This study focuses on Wisconsin, whose drive for land clearing was the most far-reaching. From 1919 to 1928 the University of Wisconsin College of Agriculture distributed nearly nineteen million pounds of war-surplus explosives to farmers. Michigan, Minnesota, and states in the American South and West did likewise, for a nationwide total exceeding sixty-three million pounds. A massive public relations campaign urged plowmen to clear as many acres as possible, and journalists at all levels signed on to promote cutover farming. However, explosives often proved dangerous in untrained hands, and the hoped-for agricultural bonanza never materialized. As crop prices slumped in the 1920s, submarginal acres were taken out of production, and the ethos of "land clearing" was replaced with one of multifaceted "land use."
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来源期刊
Historical Geography
Historical Geography Arts and Humanities-History
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