Llewellyn Castle: A Worker's Cooperative on the Great Plains

Llewellyn Castle: A Worker's Cooperative on the Great Plains

by Gary R. Entz
Llewellyn Castle: A Worker's Cooperative on the Great Plains

Llewellyn Castle: A Worker's Cooperative on the Great Plains

by Gary R. Entz

Hardcover

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Overview

In 1869 six London families arrived in Nemaha County, Kansas, as the first colonists of the Workingmen’s Cooperative Colony, later fancifully renamed Llewellyn Castle by a local writer. These early colonists were all members of Britain’s National Reform League, founded by noted Chartist leader James Bronterre O’Brien. As working-class radicals they were determined to find an alternative to the grinding poverty that exploitative liberal capitalism had inflicted on England’s laboring poor. Located on 680 acres in northeastern Kansas, this collectivist colony jointly owned all the land and its natural resources, with individuals leasing small sections to work. The money from these leases was intended for public works and the healthcare and education of colony members.

The colony floundered after just a few years and collapsed in 1874, but its mission and founding ideas lived on in Kansas. Many former colonists became prominent political activists in the 1890s, and the colony’s ideals of national fiscal policy reform and state ownership of land were carried over into the Kansas Populist movement.

Based on archival research throughout the United States and the United Kingdom, this history of an English collectivist colony in America’s Great Plains highlights the connections between British and American reform movements and their contexts.


Product Details

ISBN-13: 9780803245396
Publisher: Nebraska
Publication date: 12/01/2013
Pages: 288
Product dimensions: 6.10(w) x 9.10(h) x 1.30(d)

About the Author

Gary R. Entz is a historian who previously taught at McPherson College in Kansas. He currently teaches at Nicolet College in Wisconsin. His articles have appeared in the Journal of Mormon History and Kansas History: A Journal of the Central Great Plains and in edited volumes.

Table of Contents

List of Maps
Preface
Introduction: Llewellyn Castle
1. The Sorrow of the Land: Bronterre O’Brien and the National Reform League
2. High Moral Chivalry: The Mutual Land, Emigration, and Cooperative Colonization Company
3. An Honest Social State: The Workingmen’s Cooperative Colony
4. Moral Intoxication: Frederick Wilson
5. Hold Up the Lamp of Hope: John Radford
Conclusion: The O’Brienites
Appendix
Notes
Selected Bibliography
Index

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