A New Generation of Settlers: Revitalizing Rural America

Vision, community building, and entrepreneurial grit are key to successful small towns.
A New Generation of Settlers: Revitalizing Rural America
Singer-songwriter Ian Munsick plays at The Old Saloon in Emigrant, Montana. Danna Larson
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At the height of the farm crisis of the 1980s, Wendell Berry wrote in a new foreword to the “The Unsettling of America”: “Farmers are losing their farms, some are killing themselves, some in the madness of despair are killing other people, and rural economy and rural life are gravely stricken. ... We are closer every day to the final destruction of private ownership not only of small family farms, but of small usable properties of all kinds.”

The great “unsettling” detailed in Berry’s book unfolded as agriculture became industrialized in the 1970s and 1980s and government policy pushed farmers to scale their operations and produce larger yields per acre. As a result of the spiraling cycle of rapid expansion and the implementation of factory-style farming techniques, fewer farmers did more work with greater debt loads. Then, in the 1980s, an increase in interest rates, a drop in exports, and a plummet in land and crop prices pulled the rug out from under the whole unstable system.

Walker Larson
Walker Larson
Author
Before becoming a freelance journalist and culture writer, Walker Larson taught literature and history at a private academy in Wisconsin, where he resides with his wife and daughter. He holds a master’s in English literature and language, and his writing has appeared in The Hemingway Review, Intellectual Takeout, and his Substack, The Hazelnut. He is also the author of two novels, “Hologram” and “Song of Spheres.”