How do you think farmers in the Great Plains felt about cattle drives? How do you know?
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Industrialization took on a variety of forms throughout the United States in the second half of the nineteenth century. While factories and cities developed early in the nineteenth century in the Northeast, rural life and farming remained the rule in most of the rest of the country.
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As the country, and the demand for beef, exploded during the 1800s, many ranchers started to move cattle the only way they could: via long cattle drives across the country. ... Farmers were afraid that the herds of cattle would trample their crops and spread disease to local cattle
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