What were farmers' problems, and how did they attempt to solve them during the Gilded Age?

What will be an ideal response?


The simplest answer is that farmers faced declining prices. Better students will point to causal factors such as overproduction and monopolies. Most students will see individual parts of the farmers' strategies: building cooperatives and lobbying for government help. But the best students will put these developments in a larger context. Farmers challenged several prevailing assumptions. They rejected assumptions about the nature of money and pushed for greenbacks. They rejected the assumption of competition and built cooperatives. They rejected the assumptions of party loyalty and built the Granger and Populist parties. The best students will see the inherently radical nature of farmers' activities.

History

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Who wrote Observations Topographical, Moral & Physiological, Made in a Journey Through Part of the Low-Countries, Germany, Italy and France?

a) John Ray b) Philip Skippon Consider This: Which of these men pioneered naming and describing plants in their own right, rather than by their human uses? See 3.8: Narrative: Science on Tour. c) Francis Willughby Consider This: Which of these men pioneered naming and describing plants in their own right, rather than by their human uses? See 3.8: Narrative: Science on Tour. d) Nathaniel Bacon Consider This: Which of these men pioneered naming and describing plants in their own right, rather than by their human uses? See 3.8: Narrative: Science on Tour.

History

__________ inspired Parliament to pass the Navigation Act of 1660

A) A major recession in Britain B) Growing seaborne trade C) Increased piracy and smuggling D) Declining exports

History

Who organized the March on Washington Movement of the 1940s?

a. A. Philip Randolph b. Adam Clayton Powell, Jr. c. Martin Luther King, Jr. d. Marcus Garvey

History

What was Gamal Abdel Nasser's vision for the Arab world? What was his view of the cold war?

What will be an ideal response?

History