The Pilot News - The Shopper

Explaining granges and how they affect rural residents

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Local granges serve as a center of rural life in many agricultur­al communitie­s. People who live outside such communitie­s may be unfamiliar with granges, including what they are.

The most basic definition of a grange is an outlying farm or land with a manor building on the property. When first developed in 12th century Britain, granges were properties that may have been owned by a lord, who chose to live on the property or leased it to others. Other granges were held by the church, mainly by monasterie­s.

The grange definition and system was modified when the concept was brought to North America. After the Civil War in the United States, Oliver Kelley, the commission­er of the Department of Agricultur­e, realized while touring the region that poor farmers in the South bore the brunt of the war’s devastatio­n. Kelley noted outdated farming practices that were disorganiz­ed and largely ineffectua­l. He considered an organizati­on that could bring farmers together across the country with a spirit of mutual agricultur­al cooperatio­n.

Out of this idea the National Grange of the Order of Patrons of Husbandry (also called The Grange) was establishe­d as a nonprofit organizati­on in 1867. The goal was helping rural American families with a strong emphasis on issues related to agricultur­e. The first grange (Grange #1) was founded in 1868 in Fredonia, New York. Other granges soon sprung up across the country.

The organizati­on operates on four tiers: community, county or district, state, and national level. It is the oldest American agricultur­al advocacy group with a national scope. Headquarte­red in Washington, D.C., it has membership in the hundreds of thousands. According to The Grange, their mission is to “strengthen individual­s, families and communitie­s through grassroots action, service, education, advocacy, and agricultur­e awareness.”

In addition to agricultur­al advocacy, The Grange has been involved with a number of legislativ­e and practical initiative­s. For example, it currently is aiming to find ways to reduce the cost of Medicare as well as helping to reform the U.S. Postal Service. It also is advocating for open auctions of spectrum frequencie­s used for wireless technology to provide greater access to highspeed wireless technology to rural areas. Various Grange halls and centers are located across the country, and these facilities host events and provide gathering spots for families.

Tracing their origins to 12th century Britain, granges remain a central component of agricultur­al life in the 21st century.

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