Betrayal: Agricultural Politics in the Fifties

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University of Calgary Press, 2004 - 230 pages

Betrayal is an insider's account of the hardscrabble and often heartless prairie farm politics of the 1950s. The son of a CCF member, Herbert Schulz was an early organizer for the Manitoba Federation of Agriculture and later an executive in the Grandview Pool Elevator Association. This compelling memoir weaves together humorous and poignant anecdotes with stories of bitter betrayal.

Speaking from his intimate, and frequently controversial, involvement in farm politics during a critical decade for prairie agriculture, Schulz argues that the demise of the family farm has not been an inevitable side-effect of technology. Rather, many farm families watched their dreams crumble as expected support from trusted politicians failed to materialize. During these years, numerous family farms faded into history, their memory serving as a quaint reminder of what was once a proud tradition.

 

Contents

Introduction
1
1 To the Land of Milk and Honey
5
2 Learning Politics
19
3 Farming in the Fifties
35
4 The Making of the Manitoba Farmers Union
45
5 The Campaign for Cash Advances
67
6 We Win One
87
7 Uncivil War
97
8 Parity Prices
119
9 Victory and Defeat
137
10 Cyclops Triumphant
151
11 The Ides of March
169
12 Denouement
187
Notes
203
Index
223
Copyright

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About the author (2004)

Herbert Schulz is a son of Romanian immigrants. He grew up on the family farm in the Grandview area of west-central Manitoba and ran his own farm from the late 1940s to the early 1960s.

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