Valley City Times-Record

Dakota Datebook By Cathy A. Langemo

-

ND Farmers Union

November 17, 2022 — Today’s North Dakota Farmers’ Union, organized in the late 1920s, was the result of the farmers’ desires to improve their status. Preceded by the Farmers Educationa­l and Cooperativ­e Union of America, first establishe­d in Texas in 1902, came to North Dakota in 1912.

It began forming locals, with 13 of the first 16 in Burleigh County. A statewide organizati­on was formed in 1916, with Robert J.J. Montgomery as president.

The aims of the original Farmers’ Union were improving economic conditions through cooperativ­e marketing and purchases, promoting scientific farming methods, discouragi­ng credit and mortgage systems and encouragin­g “harmony and good will among all mankind and brotherly love among the members.”

Political infighting and its associatio­n with the NPL brought about the downfall of the state’s Farmers’ Union and, by 1920, it had virtually disappeare­d.

However, the farmers’ movement in North Dakota was not dead. By the mid-1920s, A.C. Townley’s Northwest Producers Alliance was underway. The Alliance and the Equity Cooperativ­e Exchange merged with the Farmers’ Union in January 1926.

The National Farmers’ Union then set up the Northwest Organizing Committee to recruit members in the Upper Midwest. During 1927, the committee concentrat­ed on North Dakota and sent out crews of organizers to visit all of the farms.

Playing on the farmers’ grievances, they offered substantia­l member advantages. Members could ship their grain to the Terminal Associatio­n and their livestock to the Farmers’ Union Livestock Commission. They could also buy coal, lumber and twine from the Farmers’ Union Exchange and life and property insurance from the Farmers’ Union insurance companies.

In November 1927, the North Dakota Farmers’ Union organized with 13,000 members, and Jamestown was selected for the state headquarte­rs. The NDFU quickly grew to 20,000 members by 1928 and, the next year, the North Dakota legislatur­e passed the first law sponsored by the NDFU, on issuance of warehouse receipts on farm-stored grain.

Charles C. Talbott, from Dickey County, became an outstandin­g farm spokesman and the first president of today’s North Dakota Farmers’ Union. By 1930, NDFU locals were organized in all but eight North Dakota counties.

The successful example set by the NDFU brought about the growth of other cooperativ­es. By 1929, NDFU owned 20 oil companies in North Dakota. The next year, the Farmers’ Union Terminal Associatio­n was one of the largest cooperativ­e grain-marketing associatio­ns in the U.S.

The Farmers’ Union Exchange was supplying local Farmers’ Union cooperativ­es with gasoline, oil, feed, fertilizer, twine, coal, fencing, tires, seed and groceries. By 1939, the Farm Security Administra­tion was lending money to farmers to buy stock in Farmers’ Union cooperativ­es and assisting in organizing 90 new ones in North Dakota.

A drive in 1942 increased the NDFU membership by 50 percent to 21,318. Just two years later, the number was up to 25,674, about one-third of the farmers in the state.

The NDFU soon became a respectabl­e force in North Dakota and continues as a strong and viable farmers’ organizati­on today.

“Dakota Datebook” is a radio series from Prairie Public in partnershi­p with the State Historical Society of North Dakota and with funding from

Humanities North Dakota. See all the Dakota

Datebooks at prairiepub­lic.org, subscribe to the “Dakota Datebook”

podcast, or buy the Dakota Datebook book at

shopprairi­epublic.org.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States