BOOKS - Jewish Agricultural Utopias in America, 1880-1910
Jewish Agricultural Utopias in America, 1880-1910 - Uri D. Herscher September 1, 1981 PDF  BOOKS
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Jewish Agricultural Utopias in America, 1880-1910
Author: Uri D. Herscher
Year: September 1, 1981
Format: PDF
File size: PDF 26 MB
Language: English

Brook Farm, Oneida, Amana, and Nauvoo are familiar names in American history. Far less familiar are New Od-essa, Bethlehem-Jehudah, Cotopaxi, and Alliance- the Brook Farms and Oneidas of the Jewish people in North America. The wealthy, westernized leaders of late nineteenth-century American Jewry and a number of the immigrating Russian Jews shared an eagerness to and "repeal and " the lengthy socioeconomic history in which European Jews were confined to petty commerce and denied agricultural experience. A small group of immigrant Jews chose to ignore urbanization and industrialization, defy the depression afflicting agriculture in the late 1800s,and devote themselves to experiments in collective farming in America. Some of these idealists were pious; others were agnostics or atheists. Some had the support of American and West European philanthropists; others were willing to go it, alone. But in the farming colonies they founded in Oregon, Colorado, the Dakotas, Michigan, Louisiana, Arkansas, Virginia, and New Jersey, among other places, they were sublimely indifferent to the need for careful planning and thus had limited success. Only in New Jersey, close to markets and supporters in New York and Philadelphia, were colonization efforts combined with agro-industrial enterprises; consequently, these colonies were able to survive for as long as one generation.

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