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Some specimens that I saw Post Date: Sat, 2 Aug 2008 17:15:25 +0000
His history expresses the pioneer point of view and is therefore valuable not only for what he says but for the way in which he says it. Occasional sentences in it give us glimpses of pioneer life which we can get in no other way ; for instance, speaking of the younger Hole-in-the-Day, he says : He had the pleasure of taking off many of their the Sioux's scalps with his own hand, and a very good job he made of it. Some specimens that I saw him bring up at one time included not only the whole scalp, but a pair of ears besides, which, from their appearance, were not accustomed to the use of soap.
Autor of the post: Undefined
If the reader is looking Post Date: Sat, 2 Aug 2008 16:59:18 +0000
The biographies which make up the second volume are based on the statements of the subjects of the sketches, and are, pre- sumably, accurate. They should prove for this reason a mine of information for later workers in this fiel It seems unfortunate that the volume is confined to sketches of living people, and does not include biographies of the pioneers who have passed away. If the reader is looking for a detailed, connected account of the settlement and development of these two counties, he will be disappointe If he expects to find a county history of the familiar commercial type, he will be satisfie In typography, binding, and general make-up the volumes are superior to the general run of works of this character.
Autor of the post: Undefined
, professor of economics Post Date: Sat, 2 Aug 2008 16:46:15 +0000
CHARLES KUHLMANN Early Economic Conditions and the Development of Agriculture in Minnesota (The University of Minnesota, Studies in the Social Sciences, no. By EDWARD VAN DYKE ROBINSON, PH., professor of economics in the University of Minne- sota.
Autor of the post: Undefined
As the work progressed, however Post Date: Sat, 2 Aug 2008 16:34:07 +0000
(Minneapolis, The University of Minnesota, 1915. v, 306 p) Some years ago Professor Robinson, with the assistance of some of his students in the University of Minnesota, began the preparation of a statistical atlas designed to illustrate the develop- ment of agriculture in Minnesota. As the work progressed, however, it seemed desirable to include an interpretation of the facts thus presented in graphic form, and the result is an excel- lent monograph with a profusion of valuable maps, charts, and tables, and a statistical appendix.
Autor of the post: Undefined
The principal reliance throughout Post Date: Sat, 2 Aug 2008 16:16:21 +0000
The first chapter, which presents the physiographic back- ground, and the second, dealing with explorations and the be- ginnings of trade and transportation, are of general intereSt These chapters are illustrated by a valuable series of maps show- ing drainage basins, elevations, forest areas, weather conditions, water routes, military roads, and early railroads. The remainder of the work traces the agricultural development of the state through the periods of pioneer agriculture, 1836-60, specialized wheat farming, 1860-80, and diversified farming, 1880-1900, with a final chapter on recent tendencies. The principal reliance throughout is upon statistics, and the returns of the United States census are carefully analyzed for each decennial perio The figures themselves are given in detail either in text tables or in the appendix, and their significance is brought out graphically by means of the diagrams and maps.
Autor of the post: Undefined
Taken as a whole Post Date: Sat, 2 Aug 2008 15:59:57 +0000
Thus for each census date there are maps depicting, by the dot system, the distribution of population, of the production of different crops, of the various kinds of farm animals, and of the total value of farm products. In each of these maps the county is the unit, and the preface indicates that some difficulty was experienced in determining just what were the county boundaries at the given dates. Taken as a whole, the maps present a moving picture of the progress of population and agricultural development in Minnesota.
Autor of the post: Undefined
Unfortunately no index is provided Post Date: Sat, 2 Aug 2008 15:43:11 +0000
Sources of information are clearly indicated in footnotes, and there is a Bibliographic Note listing about two hundred items and intended to serve merely as a guide to some of the more important and readily accessible materials bearing on the eco- nomic development of the State. The usefulness of this bibliog- raphy would have been greatly enhanced by annotations indicating the character and value of the different works. Unfortunately no index is provided, an omission which is only slightly com- pensated for by the very elaborate analytical contents table.
Autor of the post: Undefined
The same system should Post Date: Sat, 2 Aug 2008 15:30:16 +0000
A comparison of some of the maps discloses discrepancies which a careful checking of the work should have eliminate Thus the population maps on pages 46 and 47 would indicate that a number of counties, notably Pembina, had a larger country than rural population in 1860, although the latter includes the former, and the inhabitants of villages with less than 2,500 popu- lation as well. Again, on one of these two maps, the dots for Brown County are all grouped at the eastern end of the county, probably to indicate the part which was settled, while on the other map they are scattered over the whole area. The same system should have been used in both maps.
Autor of the post: Undefined
All these are minor matters Post Date: Sat, 2 Aug 2008 15:20:10 +0000
The format of the book is unfortunate. Doubtless the oversize pages are necessary for clearness in the maps, but the text should have been arranged in double columns, for the long lines of ten-point print make very difficult reading. All these are minor matters, however, and students of Minnesota history and economics have cause to be grateful to Professor Robinson, whose career was recently closed by death, to his assistants, and to the graduate school of the University of Minnesota, which supplied the funds for the prosecution of the work and for its publication.
Autor of the post: Undefined
, assistant professor of economics, chief Post Date: Sat, 2 Aug 2008 15:09:24 +0000
Social and Economic Survey of a Community in the Red River Valley (The University of Minnesota, Current Problems, no. By Louis DWIGHT HARVELL WELD, PH., assistant professor of economics, chief of the division of research in agricultural economics.
Autor of the post: Undefined
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