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  • The American Agriculture Movement is an organization consisting primarily of small American farmers, and was formed in 1977 in Campo, Colorado by a group of farmers. The farmers attempted to organize a strike in which farmers would no longer buy or sell anything.<br />
<br />
The organization demanded that the federal government establish higher prices of various crops, claiming that they needed "parity" between what they had to spend to grow crops versus revenues received from their crops. One of the slogans of the group was "Parity not Charity", as the farmers demanded that the government ensure that farmers were paid more for their crops. The farmers demanded to make as much profit per acre, adjusted for inflation, as farmers did at the turn of the 20th century.<br />
<br />
On December 10, 1977, approximately 5,000 farmers held a rally in Lincoln, Nebraska, and were joined by Nebraska governor J. James Exon. The farmers all rode their tractors, and soon other farm states had tractor rallies. Gloria Carter Spann, sister of President Jimmy Carter even participated in one rally.<br />
<br />
While the farmers appeared to have widespread sympathy, relatively few farmers actually went on strike and refused to grow crops. The organization therefore decided to have a tractor rally in Washington, DC. In January 1978, nearly 3,000 farmers drove their tractors to Washington, many of them from thousands of miles away.The Carter administration agreed that the Farmers Home Administration would stop all foreclosures, but soon after the rally was over resumed foreclosures of farms with past due loans.
    FARMERS STRIKE 1977 ©KEN HAWKINS-28.tif
  • AAM "Tractorcade" striking farmers park their tractors near the Plains, GA watertower in a demonstration trying to garner the support of then sitting President Jimmy Carter. The American Agriculture Movement is an organization consisting primarily of small American farmers, and was formed in 1977 in Campo, Colorado by a group of farmers. The farmers attempted to organize a strike in which farmers would no longer buy or sell anything.<br />
<br />
The organization demanded that the federal government establish higher prices of various crops, claiming that they needed "parity" between what they had to spend to grow crops versus revenues received from their crops. One of the slogans of the group was "Parity not Charity", as the farmers demanded that the government ensure that farmers were paid more for their crops. The farmers demanded to make as much profit per acre, adjusted for inflation, as farmers did at the turn of the 20th century.<br />
<br />
On December 10, 1977, approximately 5,000 farmers held a rally in Lincoln, Nebraska, and were joined by Nebraska governor J. James Exon. The farmers all rode their tractors, and soon other farm states had tractor rallies. Gloria Carter Spann, sister of President Jimmy Carter even participated in one rally.<br />
<br />
While the farmers appeared to have widespread sympathy, relatively few farmers actually went on strike and refused to grow crops. The organization therefore decided to have a tractor rally in Washington, DC. In January 1978, nearly 3,000 farmers drove their tractors to Washington, many of them from thousands of miles away.The Carter administration agreed that the Farmers Home Administration would stop all foreclosures, but soon after the rally was over resumed foreclosures of farms with past due loans.
    Farmers Strike_Ken Hawkins 002.tif
  • A modern seeder and tractor moves between farm fields.
    Agriculture_Ken Hawkins008.TIF
  • Tractor assembly line.
    Agriculture_Ken Hawkins022.TIF
  • The American Agriculture Movement is an organization consisting primarily of small American farmers, and was formed in 1977 in Campo, Colorado by a group of farmers. The farmers attempted to organize a strike in which farmers would no longer buy or sell anything.<br />
<br />
The organization demanded that the federal government establish higher prices of various crops, claiming that they needed "parity" between what they had to spend to grow crops versus revenues received from their crops. One of the slogans of the group was "Parity not Charity", as the farmers demanded that the government ensure that farmers were paid more for their crops. The farmers demanded to make as much profit per acre, adjusted for inflation, as farmers did at the turn of the 20th century.<br />
<br />
On December 10, 1977, approximately 5,000 farmers held a rally in Lincoln, Nebraska, and were joined by Nebraska governor J. James Exon. The farmers all rode their tractors, and soon other farm states had tractor rallies. Gloria Carter Spann, sister of President Jimmy Carter even participated in one rally.<br />
<br />
While the farmers appeared to have widespread sympathy, relatively few farmers actually went on strike and refused to grow crops. The organization therefore decided to have a tractor rally in Washington, DC. In January 1978, nearly 3,000 farmers drove their tractors to Washington, many of them from thousands of miles away.The Carter administration agreed that the Farmers Home Administration would stop all foreclosures, but soon after the rally was over resumed foreclosures of farms with past due loans. Striking farmers Tractorcade rolls into Georgia's capitol city of Atlanta, surrounding the Georgia state capitol.
    Farmers Strike_Ken Hawkins 009.tif
  • The American Agriculture Movement is an organization consisting primarily of small American farmers, and was formed in 1977 in Campo, Colorado by a group of farmers. The farmers attempted to organize a strike in which farmers would no longer buy or sell anything.<br />
<br />
The organization demanded that the federal government establish higher prices of various crops, claiming that they needed "parity" between what they had to spend to grow crops versus revenues received from their crops. One of the slogans of the group was "Parity not Charity", as the farmers demanded that the government ensure that farmers were paid more for their crops. The farmers demanded to make as much profit per acre, adjusted for inflation, as farmers did at the turn of the 20th century.<br />
<br />
On December 10, 1977, approximately 5,000 farmers held a rally in Lincoln, Nebraska, and were joined by Nebraska governor J. James Exon. The farmers all rode their tractors, and soon other farm states had tractor rallies. Gloria Carter Spann, sister of President Jimmy Carter even participated in one rally.<br />
<br />
While the farmers appeared to have widespread sympathy, relatively few farmers actually went on strike and refused to grow crops. The organization therefore decided to have a tractor rally in Washington, DC. In January 1978, nearly 3,000 farmers drove their tractors to Washington, many of them from thousands of miles away.The Carter administration agreed that the Farmers Home Administration would stop all foreclosures, but soon after the rally was over resumed foreclosures of farms with past due loans.
    Farmers Strike_Ken Hawkins007.tif
  • The American Agriculture Movement is an organization consisting primarily of small American farmers, and was formed in 1977 in Campo, Colorado by a group of farmers. The farmers attempted to organize a strike in which farmers would no longer buy or sell anything.<br />
<br />
The organization demanded that the federal government establish higher prices of various crops, claiming that they needed "parity" between what they had to spend to grow crops versus revenues received from their crops. One of the slogans of the group was "Parity not Charity", as the farmers demanded that the government ensure that farmers were paid more for their crops. The farmers demanded to make as much profit per acre, adjusted for inflation, as farmers did at the turn of the 20th century.<br />
<br />
On December 10, 1977, approximately 5,000 farmers held a rally in Lincoln, Nebraska, and were joined by Nebraska governor J. James Exon. The farmers all rode their tractors, and soon other farm states had tractor rallies. Gloria Carter Spann, sister of President Jimmy Carter even participated in one rally.<br />
<br />
While the farmers appeared to have widespread sympathy, relatively few farmers actually went on strike and refused to grow crops. The organization therefore decided to have a tractor rally in Washington, DC. In January 1978, nearly 3,000 farmers drove their tractors to Washington, many of them from thousands of miles away.The Carter administration agreed that the Farmers Home Administration would stop all foreclosures, but soon after the rally was over resumed foreclosures of farms with past due loans.
    Farmers Strike_Ken Hawkins 008.tif
  • A modern European farm tractor in a German cornfield outside Wurzburg.
    Agriculture_Ken Hawkins009.TIF
  • A modern farm tractor works a field into the late evening hours.
    Agriculture_Ken Hawkins005.TIF
  • Striking farmers Tractorcade rolls into Georgia's capitol city of Atlanta, surrounding the Georgia state capitol.
    FARMERS STRIKE 1977 ©KEN HAWKINS-8.tif
  • FARMERS STRIKE 1977 ©KEN HAWKINS-23.tif
  • Striking farmers Tractorcade rolls into Georgia's capitol city of Atlanta, surrounding the Georgia state capitol.
    FARMERS STRIKE 1977 ©KEN HAWKINS-18.tif
  • FARMERS STRIKE 1977 ©KEN HAWKINS-2.tif
  • Sugar cane planting in Brazil. Field workers chop stalks of cane, replanting the segments in furrows where they will grow to mature cane plants. Sugarcane, or sugar cane, is one of the several species of tall perennial true grasses of the genus Saccharum, tribe Andropogoneae, native to the warm temperate to tropical regions of South Asia, Melanesia, and used for sugar production.
    Brazil Sugarcane_Ken Hawkins_009.tif
  • Corn is loaded into a trailer from a combine harvester on a midwestern farm.
    Agriculture_Ken Hawkins0016.TIF
  • FARMERS STRIKE 1977 ©KEN HAWKINS-27.tif
  • FARMERS STRIKE 1977 ©KEN HAWKINS-26.tif
  • FARMERS STRIKE 1977 ©KEN HAWKINS-25.tif
  • FARMERS STRIKE 1977 ©KEN HAWKINS-24.tif
  • FARMERS STRIKE 1977 ©KEN HAWKINS-22.tif
  • Striking farmers Tractorcade rolls into Georgia's capitol city of Atlanta, surrounding the Georgia state capitol.
    FARMERS STRIKE 1977 ©KEN HAWKINS-21.tif
  • Striking farmers Tractorcade rolls into Georgia's capitol city of Atlanta, surrounding the Georgia state capitol.
    FARMERS STRIKE 1977 ©KEN HAWKINS-20.tif
  • Striking farmers Tractorcade rolls into Georgia's capitol city of Atlanta, surrounding the Georgia state capitol.
    FARMERS STRIKE 1977 ©KEN HAWKINS-19.tif
  • FARMERS STRIKE 1977 ©KEN HAWKINS-16.tif
  • Striking farmers Tractorcade rolls into Georgia's capitol city of Atlanta, surrounding the Georgia state capitol.
    FARMERS STRIKE 1977 ©KEN HAWKINS-17.tif
  • FARMERS STRIKE 1977 ©KEN HAWKINS-14.tif
  • FARMERS STRIKE 1977 ©KEN HAWKINS-15.tif
  • FARMERS STRIKE 1977 ©KEN HAWKINS-13.tif
  • Striking farmers Tractorcade rolls into Georgia's capitol city of Atlanta, surrounding the Georgia state capitol.
    FARMERS STRIKE 1977 ©KEN HAWKINS-11.tif
  • FARMERS STRIKE 1977 ©KEN HAWKINS-12.tif
  • Striking farmers Tractorcade rolls into Georgia's capitol city of Atlanta, surrounding the Georgia state capitol.
    FARMERS STRIKE 1977 ©KEN HAWKINS-10.tif
  • Striking farmers Tractorcade rolls into Georgia's capitol city of Atlanta, surrounding the Georgia state capitol.
    FARMERS STRIKE 1977 ©KEN HAWKINS-9.tif
  • Striking farmers Tractorcade rolls into Georgia's capitol city of Atlanta, surrounding the Georgia state capitol.
    FARMERS STRIKE 1977 ©KEN HAWKINS-7.tif
  • Striking farmers Tractorcade rolls into Georgia's capitol city of Atlanta, surrounding the Georgia state capitol.
    FARMERS STRIKE 1977 ©KEN HAWKINS-5.tif
  • Striking farmers Tractorcade rolls into Georgia's capitol city of Atlanta, surrounding the Georgia state capitol.
    FARMERS STRIKE 1977 ©KEN HAWKINS-4.tif
  • Striking farmers Tractorcade rolls into Georgia's capitol city of Atlanta, surrounding the Georgia state capitol.
    FARMERS STRIKE 1977 ©KEN HAWKINS-6.tif
  • FARMERS STRIKE 1977 ©KEN HAWKINS-3.tif
  • Sugar cane planting in Brazil. Field workers chop stalks of cane, replanting the segments in furrows where they will grow to mature cane plants. Sugarcane, or sugar cane, is one of the several species of tall perennial true grasses of the genus Saccharum, tribe Andropogoneae, native to the warm temperate to tropical regions of South Asia, Melanesia, and used for sugar production.
    Brazil Sugarcane_Ken Hawkins_ 10.tif
  • Sugar cane planting in Brazil. Field workers chop stalks of cane, replanting the segments in furrows where they will grow to mature cane plants. Sugarcane, or sugar cane, is one of the several species of tall perennial true grasses of the genus Saccharum, tribe Andropogoneae, native to the warm temperate to tropical regions of South Asia, Melanesia, and used for sugar production.
    Brazil Sugarcane_Ken Hawkins_001.tif
  • Sugar cane planting in Brazil. Field workers chop stalks of cane, replanting the segments in furrows where they will grow to mature cane plants. Sugarcane, or sugar cane, is one of the several species of tall perennial true grasses of the genus Saccharum, tribe Andropogoneae, native to the warm temperate to tropical regions of South Asia, Melanesia, and used for sugar production.
    Brazil Sugarcane_Ken Hawkins_010.tif
  • Sugar cane planting in Brazil. Field workers chop stalks of cane, replanting the segments in furrows where they will grow to mature cane plants. Sugarcane, or sugar cane, is one of the several species of tall perennial true grasses of the genus Saccharum, tribe Andropogoneae, native to the warm temperate to tropical regions of South Asia, Melanesia, and used for sugar production.
    Brazil Sugarcane_Ken Hawkins_008.tif
  • Sugar cane planting in Brazil. Field workers chop stalks of cane, replanting the segments in furrows where they will grow to mature cane plants. Sugarcane, or sugar cane, is one of the several species of tall perennial true grasses of the genus Saccharum, tribe Andropogoneae, native to the warm temperate to tropical regions of South Asia, Melanesia, and used for sugar production.
    Brazil Sugarcane_Ken Hawkins_004.tif
  • Sugar cane planting in Brazil. Field workers chop stalks of cane, replanting the segments in furrows where they will grow to mature cane plants. Sugarcane, or sugar cane, is one of the several species of tall perennial true grasses of the genus Saccharum, tribe Andropogoneae, native to the warm temperate to tropical regions of South Asia, Melanesia, and used for sugar production.
    Brazil Sugarcane_Ken Hawkins_003.tif
  • Sugar cane planting in Brazil. Field workers chop stalks of cane, replanting the segments in furrows where they will grow to mature cane plants. Sugarcane, or sugar cane, is one of the several species of tall perennial true grasses of the genus Saccharum, tribe Andropogoneae, native to the warm temperate to tropical regions of South Asia, Melanesia, and used for sugar production.
    Brazil Sugarcane_Ken Hawkins_002.tif
  • Sugar cane planting in Brazil. Field workers chop stalks of cane, replanting the segments in furrows where they will grow to mature cane plants. Sugarcane, or sugar cane, is one of the several species of tall perennial true grasses of the genus Saccharum, tribe Andropogoneae, native to the warm temperate to tropical regions of South Asia, Melanesia, and used for sugar production.
    Brazil Sugarcane_Ken Hawkins_007.tif
  • Sugar cane planting in Brazil. Field workers chop stalks of cane, replanting the segments in furrows where they will grow to mature cane plants. Sugarcane, or sugar cane, is one of the several species of tall perennial true grasses of the genus Saccharum, tribe Andropogoneae, native to the warm temperate to tropical regions of South Asia, Melanesia, and used for sugar production.
    Brazil Sugarcane_ Ken Hawkins_006.ti
  • Sugar cane planting in Brazil. Field workers chop stalks of cane, replanting the segments in furrows where they will grow to mature cane plants. Sugarcane, or sugar cane, is one of the several species of tall perennial true grasses of the genus Saccharum, tribe Andropogoneae, native to the warm temperate to tropical regions of South Asia, Melanesia, and used for sugar production.
    Brazil Sugarcane_Ken Hawkins_005.tif
  • Aerial of a mature cornfield.
    Agriculture_Ken Hawkins0010.TIF
  • Combine Harvesting Corn in the Midwestern US
    Agriculture_Ken Hawkins021.TIF
  • A farmer directs harvested corn loading into a trailer.
    Agriculture_Ken Hawkins004.TIF
  • Striking farmers Tractorcade rolls into Georgia's capitol city of Atlanta, surrounding the Georgia state capitol.
    FARMERS STRIKE 1977 ©KEN HAWKINS-1.tif
  • A combine harvester cuts corn stalks on a midwestern US farm.
    Agriculture_Ken Hawkins007.TIF

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