A SUMMARY OF RECENT PROGRESS
In some respects the most notable
recent advance in rural matters consists in the improved
means of communication in rural districts. The
country is relatively isolated, and it is this isolation
in its extreme forms that is the bane of country living.
Undue conservatism, lack of conformity to progressive
views, undue prominence of class feeling, and a tendency
to be less alert are things that grow out of this isolation;
but better means of communication decrease these difficulties,
and the last few years have seen a remarkable advance
in this respect. For instance, the rural free
mail delivery system is only ten years old, and yet
today there are more than twenty-five thousand routes
of this character in the United States serving possibly
twenty million people with daily mail, a great proportion
of whom before had very irregular mail service.
Results are patent and marked. Time is saved in
going for mail; market reports come daily; farmers
are more prompt in their business dealings; roads
are kept in better shape; there is an increased circulation
of papers and magazines. Thus the farmer is in
closer touch with affairs and much more alert to business
opportunities, to political activities, and to social
movements. The circulation of daily papers in
country districts has increased at a marvelous rate.
The amount of letter-writing has increased. Rural
delivery of mail arouses the spirit of “being
in the world.” Its results have been almost
revolutionary.
So, too, the rural telephone.
Recent investigation in the states of Ohio, Michigan,
and Indiana showed that out of 200,000 subscribers
to the independent telephone companies of those states
about one-sixth were in farm homes. A few years
ago, hardly a telephone could be found in a farmer’s
family. This business is constantly increasing.
The established telephone companies are pushing their
work into the country districts, small local exchanges
are being formed, and soon the farmers, in the North
at least, will be almost as well served by the telephone
as are people of the smaller cities.
Interurban electric railways are being
built very rapidly and their advantage to the farmer
is obvious. It is doubtful if their effect has
been quite so far-reaching as some have suggested.
At present they very largely parallel existing steam
railways, and while they give better freight and passenger
service and assist materially in diminishing rural
isolation in the areas which they traverse, their influence
does not extend very far from the line itself, and
they reach relatively small areas of the country.
However, their value to the farmer is very large,
and, as they increase in number and in efficiency of
service, they will become a powerful factor in rural
progress.
The good-roads movement is beginning
to take on large proportions. It is, however,
a complicated question. To make first-class roads
is a costly business, and while a few such roads are
of great value in a general social way, they do not
quite make general country conditions ideal.
To accomplish this, every road in the country should
be a good road the year through, and this is an ideal
very difficult of realization. However, in general,
the roads are improving and as rapidly as the wealth
of the country will permit the road system of the United
States will be developed. Of course, good roads
are a prime requisite for rural betterment.
In general, it may be said that during
the past decade the improvement of means of communication
in rural districts has gone forward at a marvelously
rapid pace. Nor is it exaggerating to say that
the movements named are re-creating farm life.
During this same period, there has
been an almost equally wonderful advance in the means
of agricultural education. Just twenty years ago
the experiment-station system of this country was established.
It took ten years for the stations to organize their
work and to gain the confidence of the farmers.
At present however, they are looked upon with great
favor by the farming class and are doing a magnificent
work. Their function is that of research chiefly,
although they attempt some control service, such as
inspection of fertilizers, stock foods, etc.
In research they aim both to study the more intricate
scientific questions that relate to agriculture and
to carry on experiments that are of more obvious and
more immediate practical application to existing conditions
in the various states. There is one of these stations
in each state and territory, besides a number of stations
supported by state funds. The Department of Agriculture
at Washington has also developed during the last ten
years until it is performing very large service for
agriculture. Its annual expenditures aggregate
eight or ten million dollars, and it has in its employment
hundreds of experts carrying on laboratory and field
research, scouring the world for plants and seeds
that may be of economic value, and assisting to control
plant and animal diseases. It is also distributing
a vast amount of practical information, put in readable
form and adapted to the average farmer. Its work
of seeking to extend the markets of our agricultural
products is one of its notable successes.
Agricultural schools have been talked
about for a century, and during the early part of
the last century several were started. The first
permanent agricultural college was opened in 1857,
in Michigan. The Morrill Act of 1862 gave rise
to a system of such colleges and today there will
be found one in every state and territory, besides
several for the colored people of the South.
Up to 1890, these colleges had been not wholly satisfactory
and the farming class was not patronizing very fully
their agricultural courses. The fault belonged
both to the college and to the farmers. The farmers
were skeptical of the value of agricultural education,
and the colleges were often out of sympathy with the
real needs of the farmers, and in fact found it difficult
to break away from the pedagogical ideals of the old
educational regime. Since 1890, however, there
has been a complete change of sentiment in this respect,
particularly in the Middle West. There the “land-grant”
colleges, whether separate colleges or whether organized
as colleges of state universities, are securing magnificent
buildings for agriculture, are offering fully equipped
courses, and are enrolling as students some of the
best men in college, whom they are educating not only
for agricultural teachers and experimenters but also
for practical farmers. Of course, there are many
grave problems connected with this subject, many farmers
who do not yet respond to the call for educated agriculturists,
and some colleges that do not yet appreciate their
opportunity. But the change for the better has
been so marked that all agricultural educators are
extremely optimistic.
One of the most difficult and most
important phases of agricultural education is that
of a secondary grade. The great proportion of
educated farmers will probably be trained for their
business in secondary schools. This problem is
being approached from many standpoints. The University
of Minnesota established, some fourteen years ago,
a school of agriculture, which now enrols several
hundred pupils of both sexes. Wisconsin is trying
the experiment of two county schools of agriculture.
Occasionally the public high school will be found offering
a course in agriculture. Several states are experimenting
in one or more of these lines, and during the next
few years we shall see a large development of this
phase of agricultural education.
One of the most interesting movements
in agricultural education has been an attempt to introduce
nature-study and even the elements of agriculture
into the country schools. Cornell University has
taken the lead in advocating “nature-study”
purely, for the schools; and the University of Missouri
has perhaps been the leader in advocating that the
work be made even more definite and practical, and
that the country pupils shall be taught, during their
early years even, “the elements of agriculture.”
Both plans are being worked out with a fair degree
of success, and many other states are carrying out
the work in some form or other. Of course the
idea is not a new one, but its present practical application
is a timely one, and it will not be long before this
branch of agricultural education will become a prominent
factor in rural betterment.
A most suggestive phase of agricultural
education is college extension work. University
extension has had a rather meteoric career in this
country, in so far as it has been connected with educational
institutions; although the extension idea is spreading
rapidly and is being worked out through home study
and correspondence courses of all sorts. But
I think there is scarcely any field in which the real
college extension idea is today being more successfully
applied than in agriculture. The work started
with farmers’ institutes, which were instituted
about twenty-five years ago and which have been adopted
in practically all the states of the Union. It
has broadened within ten years, until now it is carried
on not only by farmers’ institutes, but through
home-correspondence courses, the introduction of millions
of pamphlets into farm homes, demonstrations in spraying,
butter-making, soil testing, milk testing, and so
on.
Ontario presents a good illustration
of how a new agriculture can be created, in a dozen
years, by co-operating methods of agricultural education.
Her provincial department of agriculture, her experiment
station, her agricultural college, her various forms
of extension work, and her various societies of agriculturists
have all worked together with an unusual degree of
harmony for the deliberate purpose of inducing Canadian
agriculturists to produce the things that will bring
the most profit. The results have been most astonishing
and most gratifying.
The recent progress in the organization
of farmers has been less marked than has been the
development of rural communication and agricultural
education. Organization is a prime requisite for
farmers. They feel this truth themselves.
For the last forty years, many attempts some
large, some small, some successful, some great failures have
been made to this end. The problem is an extremely
difficult one. Business co-operation among farmers
is especially difficult and, while co-operation has
developed quite largely so much so that
the Department of Agriculture was able to report,
a year ago, a list of five thousand co-operative societies
of various kinds among farmers still it
cannot be said that the farmers are co-operating industrially
in a relatively large way. They have, however,
a multitude of associations and societies. They
have also the Grange, which is the most successful
of all the general organizations of farmers in the
country. Contrary to public belief, the Grange
is not defunct, but has been growing at a very rapid
pace during the last few years and has a large influence
especially in the East and Middle West. It has
practically no existence in the far West and in the
South. It has a national organization, however,
representing some twenty-six states. Its influence
in Congress is said to be marked. The local Granges
are doing a very large work, socially, educationally,
and sometimes financially. The Grange seems to
understand itself now. Its ideals have been worked
out pretty carefully, and its future growth is quite
certain.
We have suggested that the significant
rural social movements of the past few years have
been the improvement of rural communication, the wonderful
development of agricultural education, and the fairly
satisfactory development of organization among farmers.
It seems also apparent that there is a fourth line
of development that might be mentioned as being significant,
and it may be expressed in a somewhat general statement
that the interest in agricultural questions has increased
in a very marked way. There is undoubtedly a new
emphasis upon country life generally. The people
of the cities have been going to the country more
than ever before. A walk, the length of Beacon
Street in Boston, at any time from the middle of June
to late autumn, convinces one that the majority of
the people are somewhere in the country. All
over the North, city people are making country homes
for at least a portion of the year. There is
also a growing interest in the farm and farm problems
among the general public. Just now the country
schools are attracting special attention from the
educators so much so that the late President
Harper stated, not long ago, that the rural-school
question is the coming question in education.
Even the country church is being made a subject of
discussion in religious circles. It is conceded
that agriculture presents “problems.”
And while the throbbing, busy, intense life of the
city brings perplexing questions to our civilization,
our people are coming to realize that the agricultural
population and the agricultural industry are still
tremendous factors in our national life and success,
and that both social and industrial conditions in
the country are such that there also are grave questions
to be settled.
In view of the facts which have been
given, I think if one were asked to give a direct
answer to the question, Is the farmer keeping up? one
could reply, Yes. In some sections of the country,
the farmers have not responded to these forward movements.
The countryman is naturally conservative. Not
only that, but there are some serious questions that
he has to meet in his business and in his life.
He finds it extremely and increasingly difficult to
get adequate labor. He has not been able to take
sufficient advantage of the power of co-operation.
The industrial and social development of the city
has lured away his children. And yet one cannot
help feeling that these really remarkable advances
of the past decade are prophetic of a steady improvement
in rural conditions, of a larger development of rural
life, of a greater prosperity for agriculture.
With regard to the future, it seems
to me that, on the social side, the progress of the
next few years is to be along the lines, indicated
above, which have characterized the past ten or a dozen
years. Still further improved means of communication
will tend to banish isolation and its drawbacks.
Realization of the benefits of organization and ability
to co-operate will vastly strengthen class power.
The means of agricultural education will be developed
very rapidly, with the ideal in mind of being able
to furnish some sort of agricultural training for
every individual who lives upon the farm. The
country question, as a whole, will attract increasing
attention. Gradually it will be seen that the
rural problem is one of the greatest interest to all
our citizens. The spirit of co-operation will
grow until not only the farmers themselves unite for
their own class interests but the various social agencies industrial,
religious, educational ministering to rural
betterment will find themselves also co-operating.
Thus, it seems to me, the outlook for the future is
full of hope. A genuine forward movement for
rural betterment has had its beginning, is now gathering
volume, and will soon attain very large proportions.