Artigo Revisado por pares

"Every Farmer Should Be Awakened": Liberty Hyde Bailey's Vision of Agricultural Extension Work

2006; Duke University Press; Volume: 80; Issue: 2 Linguagem: Inglês

10.1525/ah.2006.80.2.190

ISSN

1533-8290

Autores

Scott J. Peters,

Tópico(s)

American History and Culture

Resumo

Historians have portrayed the formative period of agricultural extension work in the United States as a search for the best method of convincing farmers to change their farming practices in order to improve agricultural efficiency, productivity, and profitability. However, one ofthe key leaders in extension's formative period, Cornell University's Liberty Hyde Bailey, articulated a dif? ferent vision of extension's central purpose and promise. Drawing on his writings during the years in which he led the development ofCornelVs exten? sion program (1894-1902), this article argues that Bailey's vision of agricul? tural extension work was centered on the provision of education aimed at awakening farmers to a new point ofview on life. The new point ofview com? bined sympathy with nature, a love of country life, and a scientific attitude, expressed by a habit of careful observation and experimentation. The main purpose of awakening farmers to this point of view was not to develop a more efficient, productive, and profitable agriculture, but to advance the larger cultural ideals of a self-sustaining agriculture and personal happiness. The account of Bailey's vision provided in this article suggests the need to reconsider the story ofthe origins and early development of American agricultural extension work.

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