THE ALLIANCE
The Alliance fought for an 8-hour workday. This group wanted local banks to control money instead of national banks. The farmers of the Alliance believed if they worked together, they could make farming more successful. They tried to open their own store that sold goods to farmers at reduced prices. Members also opened their own mills so farmers could get their products ready to sell without spending a lot of money. The group also tried to use their power to change laws. The group worked together, but slowly fell apart.
THE GRANGE
In 1867, Oliver Hudson Kelley thought an organization could help farmers improve their lives. He thought farmers should form fraternal orders (clubs for men with common interests). In 1868, Oliver started a club for farmers. He called it the Grange. The word "grange" come from the Latin and old English words "grain" and "granary," a place to store grain. The farmers created Granger Laws to fight unfair charges by railroads. They also pushed for state laws that supported steady wheat prices, fair mortgage pricing, and low freight, or cargo prices. The Grange helped the farmers to buy things like grain elevators, cotton or tobacco warehouses, and steamboat lines.
the grange organized a political party.
Buy me one!
Bilton Grange's motto is 'Iron Sharpenth Iron'.
. Military alliances were made to get back lost territories; countries joined together for mutual military help. In 1882, Germany, Austria, Hungary, and Italy formed the Triple Alliance. A Triple Entente was agreed among France, Great Britain, and Russia in 1907. Their agreements divided Western Europe-the Triple Alliance against the Triple Entente.
The motto of RGS The Grange is 'From tiny acorns to great oaks'.
Farmers Alliance Southern Farmers Alliance The Grange
he founded the grange movement in the 1800s
efrwv
Congress of Vienna
The Farmers' Alliance was designed to promote higher commodity prices through collective action by groups of individual farmers. It grew out of the Grange Movement.
the grange organized a political party.
In the 1870s, US farmer's wives and their husbands joined the Patrons of Husbandry, the Grange, which sponsored dances,fairs, and lecturers who talked on just about any subject. It was a social organization for farmers. In the 1880s, new groups like the Grange mushroomed all over the nation. The largest became the Southern Alliance. Both the Grange and the Alliance were supposed to be nonpolitical and were dedicated to taking women from their "enslaved role" into full participation in the agrarian movement with men. The Grange soon began to get political. It attacked the railroads for exploiting farmers, and elected politicians sympathetic to farmers who worked to regulate fares. The Supreme Court struck down the "Granger Laws" which were used to regulate the railroads, and the Grange and Alliance fell apart. Co-ops began to take the place of the Grange, and began to operated on a nonprofit basis, allowing farmers to pool their resources to purchase items more cheaply and to operate Credit Unions (membership of farmers) that acted like banks but more sympathetic to the farmers plight.
Triple alliance
the impact was the farmers now had something they could fight the goverment with to get what they needed. which cause others to join the alliance. which caused an impact on the goverment.
Workers who did physical work outside of offices were called "blue collar workers" .... Another way the Grange tried to help farmers to solve their problems was to get ... The Alliances were different because they were more aggressive.
In the 1870s, US farmer's wives and their husbands joined the Patrons of Husbandry, the Grange, which sponsored dances, fairs and lecturers who talked on just about any subject. It was a social organization for farmers. In the 1880s, new groups like the Grange mushroomed all over the nation. The largest became the Southern Alliance. Both the Grange and the Alliance were supposed to be non-political and were dedicated to taking women from their "enslaved role" into full participation in the agrarian movement with men. The Grange soon began to get political. It attacked the railroads for exploiting farmers, and elected politicians sympathetic to farmers who worked to regulate fares. The Supreme Court struck down the "Granger Laws" which were used to regulate the railroads, and the Grange and Alliance fell apart. Co-ops began to take the place of the Grange, and began to operated on a nonprofit basis, allowing farmers to pool their resources to purchase items more cheaply and to operate Credit Unions (membership of farmers) that acted like banks but more sympathetic to the farmers plight.
how was the wave of U.S immigration in the late 1800s different from the previous wave of immigration in the mid-1800s?