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Farmers suffering the effects of drought and depression in the
1930s were looking for relief from what they felt were unfair
prices for their crops, and reform of the entire agricultural and
economic system of which they were the primary part. In the
election campaign of 1932, they heard Franklin D. Roosevelt promise
that if elected he would work for a program to help them. The
vagueness of the president-to-be led a variety of farm groups to
believe that he would support their leaders and programs, but some
groups, such as the Farmers Union, were disappointed and their
organizers criticized various aspects of the New Deal Agricultural
Program. During the dire thirties, new farm groups were formed to
voice their opposition to the program. The ideas of these groups
were resisted by the Department of Agriculture, which fought back
to stifle their opposition and largely won. This work is a history
of seven organizations that opposed Roosevelts agricultural
programs. They are the Missouri Farmers Association, the Farmers
Union, the Farm Holiday Movement, the Farmers Independence Council,
the National Farmers Process Tax Recovery Association, the Corn
Belt Liberty League and the Farmers Guild.
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