204 BIBLIOGRAPHICAL NOTE 



the Patrons of Husbandry (1875), and Ezra S. Carr's 

 The Patrons of Husbandry on the Pacific Coast (1875). 

 Similar works induced by the Alliance movement are : 

 History of the Farmers' Alliance, the Agricultural Wheel, 

 etc., compiled and edited by the St. Louis Journal of 

 Agriculture (1890), Labor and Capital, Containing an 

 Account of the Various Organizations of Farmers, Plant- 

 ers, and Mechanics (1891), edited by Emory A. Allen, 

 W. Scott Morgan's History of the Wheel and Alliance 

 and the Impending Revolution (1891), H. R. Chamber- 

 lain's The Farmers 9 Alliance (1891), The Farmers 9 Alli- 

 ance History and Agricultural Digest (1891), edited by 

 N. A. Dunning, and N. B. Ashby's The Riddle of the 

 Sphinx (1890). Other contemporary books dealing 

 with the evils of which the farmers complained are: 

 D. C. Cloud's Monopolies and the People (1873), Wil- 

 liam A. Peffer's The Farmer's Side (1891), James B. 

 Weaver's A Call to Action (1891), Charles H. Otken's 

 The Ills of the South (1894), Henry D. Lloyd's Wealth 

 against Commonwealth (1894), and William H. Harvey's 

 Coin's Financial School (1894). 



The nearest approach to a comprehensive account 

 of the farmers' movement is contained in Fred E. 

 Haynes's Third Party Movements Since the Civil War, 

 with Special Reference to Iowa (1916) . The first phase of 

 the subject is treated by Solon J. Buck in The Granger 

 Movement (1913), which contains an extensive bibli- 

 ography. Frank L. McVey's The Populist Movement 

 (1896) is valuable principally for its bibliography of 

 contemporary material, especially newspapers and 

 magazine articles. For accounts of agrarian activity 

 in the individual States, the investigator turns to the 



