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Cotton-Holiday

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Agrigulture policy proposal by Huey Long
ASouth Carolina cotton field in 1932
This article is part of
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Huey Long




TheCotton-Holiday was a 1931 proposal by Louisiana Governor and US Senator-electHuey Long to alleviate a surplus of cotton. The holiday would have banned cotton production in 1932, decreasing supply and raising prices. It has been credited as the first suggestion ofartificial scarcity as a solution to theGreat Depression.

Background

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See also:Great Depression in the United States § Unregulated growth

A record 1931 cotton crop of over 15.5 million bales, over two million higher than projected, resulted in a plunge in prices of agricultural commodities.[1] At its lowest since 1905, the price of cotton was less than the cost of production.[2][3] In atelegram to the governors of fourteen cotton-producing states, theFederal Farm Board (FFB) chairman recommended that farmers be forced to plow over every third row of cotton, destroying some 4 million bales of the 1931 crop.[4] The advice was widely criticized.[5]

Unlike other industries, cotton had not experienced massive prosperity in the 1920s, worsening the impact of theGreat Depression.[6]

Proposal

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Long proposed that the states mandate a "cotton holiday" in 1932, in which not a single bale of cotton would be produced.[5] Long wired his proposal to the other governors and invited them to discuss the proposal at the New Orleans Cotton Conference.[7] To protect domestic prices, Long further proposed that the holiday be imposed internationally, in which some nations, such as Egypt, expressed interest.[8] The 1931 convention was attended by delegates from every major cotton-producing state.[9] After defeating a countering Texas plan of only 50% reduction, the delegates agreed to codify Long's proposal into law on the caveat that they not come into effect until states producing three-quarters of US cotton passed such laws.[10]

As the proposer, Louisiana unanimously passed the legislation.[11] Conservative Texan governorRoss S. Sterling, whose state was the largest producer of cotton, condemned the law as radical.[12] When the Texas legislature voted against the measure, the holiday movement collapsed.[13]Long alleged that "Texas legislators were bought to kill the cotton-holiday plan like you'd buy a slot machine."[14]

Texas instead passed the Texas Cotton Acreage Control Law, which stated that no more than 30% of cultivated land could be used for cotton. Difficult to enforce, the law was found unconstitutional in 1932.[3] Mississippi and Arkansas passed similar legislation except with escape clauses which set dates for the regulations to expire.[6]

Legacy

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Although traditional politicians would have been ruined by such a defeat, Long became a national figure and cemented his image as a champion of the poor.[15]

SenatorCarter Glass of Virginia, one of Long's most adamant opponents, said regarding the Cotton-Holiday, "Contrary... to popular supposition, neither SecretaryWallace of the Agriculture Department, nor thePresident of the United States should be credited with the original idea of 'scarcity of production' as a cure for the depression. The credit for this peculiar notion should go to Mr. Huey P. Long."[16]

References

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Citations

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  1. ^Snyder (1977), pp. 133-135.
  2. ^Snyder (1977), pp. 135.
  3. ^ab"Telegram from Huey Long, August 16, 1931".Texas State Library and Archives Commission.Archived from the original on December 28, 2020. RetrievedDecember 28, 2020.
  4. ^Snyder (1977), pp. 136-137.
  5. ^abSnyder (1977), pp. 138-139.
  6. ^abSnyder, Robert Edward (1980)."The Cotton Holiday Movement in the South".Surface. Syracuse University. RetrievedJanuary 13, 2021.
  7. ^Snyder (1977), pp. 139-140.
  8. ^Snyder (1977), pp. 144-145.
  9. ^Snyder (1977), p. 147.
  10. ^Snyder (1977), pp. 147-149.
  11. ^Snyder (1977), p. 152.
  12. ^Snyder (1977), pp. 154-158.
  13. ^Snyder (1977), p. 158.
  14. ^Nilsson, Jeff; Hollandbeck, Andy (September 29, 2016)."Long before Trump: The Unsettling Popularity of Huey Long".The Saturday Evening Post. RetrievedJanuary 12, 2021.
  15. ^Snyder (1977), pp. 158-160.
  16. ^Snyder (1977), p. 160.

Works cited

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  • Snyder, Robert E. (Spring 1977). "Huey Long and the Cotton-Holiday Plan of 1931".The Journal of Louisiana Historical.18 (2):133–160.JSTOR 4231670.(subscription required)
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