North Dakota: Immigration and Agrarian Discontent
Immigration and Agrarian Discontent
The first cattle ranch in North Dakota was established in 1878. With the construction of railroads in the 1870s and 80s, thousands of European immigrants, principally Scandinavians, Germans, and Czechs, arrived. They worked the land on their own homesteads or on the large Eastern-financed bonanza wheat fields of the low central prairies. Borrowing the idea from Europe, they founded agricultural cooperatives.
Local politics were rapidly reduced to a struggle between the agrarian groups and the corporate interests. Alexander McKenzie of the Northern Pacific was for many years the most important figure in the state. Republicans held the elective offices. Agrarian groups formed the Farmers' Alliance and in 1892, three years after North Dakota had achieved statehood, the Farmers' Alliance combined with the Democrats and Populists to elect Eli Shortridge, a Populist, as governor. Later, when the success of the La Follette Progressives in Wisconsin encouraged the growth of the Republican Progressive movement in North Dakota, a fusion with the Democrats elected “Honest John” Burke as governor for three terms (1906–12).
Sections in this article:
- Introduction
- Present-day North Dakota
- The Nonpartisan League
- Immigration and Agrarian Discontent
- Early Settlers and the Sioux
- Native Americans and the Fur Traders
- Government and Higher Education
- Economy
- Geography
- Facts and Figures
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