Even before the depression in 1873, national disasters such as prairie fires, hailstorms and droughts had pushed many farms to bankruptcy. Some private charities offered aid and state and territorial legislatures gave small assistance. The U.S. Congress authorized the distribution of $30,000 worth of seed to frontier farmers in 1875, but all this was just a drop in the bucket to the tens of thousands of farmers in need.

A new organization, the National Grange of the Patrons of Husbandry was formed in 1867 to organize farmers into local chapter dedicated to education, culture and socialization. The Grange grew slowly until the 1870s when disasters forced many to find strength in numbers, and the organization became less social and more political. In 1874, the membership stood at 1.5 million.
There was little the Grange could do about natural disasters, but they could influence commodity prices, grain storage price, and interest rates and shipping costs. They went after the railroads for discriminatory pricing and the grain-elevator operators for colluding with the railroads.
Next time...The farmers fight back
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Today in Pioneer History: "On October 15, 1880, the warrior Victorio, one of the greatest Apache military strategists of all time, dies this day, in 1880, in the Tres Castillos Mountains south of El Paso, Texas.
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