Select Problems in Historical Interpretation: Government and the American economy, 1870-present |
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Page 166
Part I. A. THE FIRST CONSERVATION MOVEMENT , 1877-1908 From a very early period in the history of the American colonies and states a limited num- ber of people saw the need for conservation , and an even more limited number practiced it ...
Part I. A. THE FIRST CONSERVATION MOVEMENT , 1877-1908 From a very early period in the history of the American colonies and states a limited num- ber of people saw the need for conservation , and an even more limited number practiced it ...
Page 187
THE SECOND CONSERVATION MOVEMENT , 1933 - PRESENT After the Governors ' Conference of 1908 and the report of the Conservation Commission in 1909 , for a period of more than twenty years ' conservation did little more than retain the ...
THE SECOND CONSERVATION MOVEMENT , 1933 - PRESENT After the Governors ' Conference of 1908 and the report of the Conservation Commission in 1909 , for a period of more than twenty years ' conservation did little more than retain the ...
Page 189
In 1935 , acts were adopted to conserve petroleum deposits , to conserve coal deposits ( the Guffey Act ... The importance of the conservation aspect of these measures can easily be overemphasized , for the proponents of the Act were ...
In 1935 , acts were adopted to conserve petroleum deposits , to conserve coal deposits ( the Guffey Act ... The importance of the conservation aspect of these measures can easily be overemphasized , for the proponents of the Act were ...
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Contents
I | 2 |
PHILOSOPHERS OF LAISSEZ FAIRE | 7 |
Attitudes during the Progressive Era | 13 |
Copyright | |
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action administration agricultural American amount asked authority believe Board called capital cars cent Cleveland coal combination commerce Commissioner committee common competition Congress conservation contract corporation cost course court deal demand direct economic effect employees fact farm farmers Federal force give hand important increase individual industry interests issue labor land less major manufacturers materials matter means ment nature necessary never operation organization party persons political possible practices present President Problem production profits protection Pullman question railroad reason received regulation relations representatives result road secure Senator Standard Oil steel strike supply thing tion trade trust union United wages whole workers