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The Iron Horse Trap: How Tiny Cottonwood, MN Took On Big Oil

14 min · Ayer
Portada del episodio The Iron Horse Trap: How Tiny Cottonwood, MN Took On Big Oil

Descripción

When American farmers rapidly traded their workhorses for internal combustion tractors in the early 1920s, they unknowingly stepped into a beautifully engineered corporate trap. Overnight, they went from self-sufficient energy producers to captive corporate consumers. This episode tracks the incredible, forgotten history of June 9, 1921, when a handful of Lyon County neighbors staged an act of raw economic self-defense by founding the nation’s very first cooperative organized exclusively to handle petroleum, and sparking a massive legal war that went all the way to the U.S. Supreme Court.

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episode 39 Words, 30,000 Women: Minnesota’s Suffrage Landslide artwork

39 Words, 30,000 Women: Minnesota’s Suffrage Landslide

On June 4th, 1919, a federal telegraph wire hit Minnesota announcing that Congress had finally passed the 19th Amendment. It triggered an instant, military-grade ground game. After forty years of dealing with patronizing compromises and legislative gridlock, Clara Ueland and a network of 30,000 organized women flipped a switch. They forced a special session and delivered an absolute landslide. In this episode, we trace how a multi-generational grassroots apparatus bent the state's male power structure to its will, why a gritty meatpacking town unexpectedly made national history at 6:00 AM, and the deep, uncomfortable gap between the promise of constitutional text and the reality of who was actually allowed to vote.

4 de jun de 202615 min