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  1. Nov 24, 2015 · Bonanza farms — large, commercial farming enterprises that grew thousands of acres of wheat — flourished in northwestern Minnesota and the Dakotas from the 1870s to 1920. Geology, the ...

  2. Examples include Steele, Carrington, Blanchard, Cleveland, Clifford, Ayr, Chaffee, Edgeley, Amenia, and Tower City. Large numbers of workers were hired each season to do the planting, harvesting, and other tasks on the bonanza farms.

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  4. Bonanza farms—large, commercial farming enterprises that grew thousands of acres of wheatflourished in northwestern Minnesota and the Dakotas from the 1870s to 1920. Geology, the Homestead Act of 1862, railroads, modern machinery, and revolutionary new flour-milling methods all contributed to the bonanza farm boom.

  5. The largest and best known of the "bonanza" farms was the Dalrymple Farm, located 20 miles west of Fargo, consisting of 11,000 acres. This was, at one time, the largest cultivated farm in the world. Despite the size of the few bonanza farms, the average size farm in North Dakota during this time remained 200-300 acres. Even as late as 1910 ...

  6. Sep 22, 1991 · MOORETON, N.D. — His was the last of the “bonanza farms,” the megafarms carved out of cheap land originally granted to a railroad making its way through the Dakotas in the late 19th Century.

  7. Jun 29, 2017 · The bonanza farms must have been a machinery salesman’s dream. In 1878 the Cass-Cheny farm had 84 plows, 81 harrows, 67 wagons, 30 seeders, 45 binders and 8 threshing rigs.

  8. Sep 4, 2023 · Bonanza farms developed as a result of a number of factors, including the efficient new machinery of the 1870s, cheap abundant land available during that period, the growth of eastern markets in the U.S., and completion of most major railroads between the farming areas and markets. Bonanza farms were encouraged by John Wesley Powell who, by the ...

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