Indiana's pioneers came to southern Indiana to turn the dream of an America based on family farming into a reality. The golden age prior to the Civil War led to a post-War preserving of the independent family farmer. Salstrom examines this "independence" and finds the label to be less than adequate. Hoosier farming was an inter-dependent activity leading to a society of borrowing and loaning. When people talk about supporting family farming, as Salstrom notes, the issue is a societal one with a greater population involved than just the farmers themselves.
Preface
Introduction
ONE: Native American Agriculture before European Contact
TWO: Native American Agriculture after European Contact
THREE: Why They Came
FOUR: Where They Stopped and What They Started
FIVE: Origins of the Corn Belt
SIX: Pioneering in Central Indiana
SEVEN: Pioneering in Western Indiana
EIGHT: Pioneering in Northern Indiana
NINE: Solon Robinson, Hoosier Agrarian
TEN: The Competition
ELEVEN: From Pioneering to Persevering
Epilogue: What Was at Stake?
Notes
Works Cited
Index
Paul Salstrom holds a Ph.D. in comparative history from Brandeis University and teaches history at Saint Mary-of-the-Woods College near Terre Haute, Indiana. An authority on the early rural history of Appalachia, he is the author of Appalachia's Path to Dependency (1994).