قراءة كتاب The Challenge of the Country: A Study of Country Life Opportunity
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The Challenge of the Country: A Study of Country Life Opportunity
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ILLUSTRATIONS
The Country Boy | Frontispiece | ||
Rural Schools in Daviess County, Ind. | Facing | page | 12 |
An Abandoned Church | " | " | 18 |
Rural Redirection | " | " | 48 |
School Garden Work at Guelph, Canada | " | " | 82 |
Plan of Macdonald Consolidated School Grounds | " | " | 86 |
A Modern Fruit and Truck Farm | " | " | 98 |
Pennsylvania Farm Land | " | " | 108 |
Cooperation on the Playground | " | " | 134 |
Types of Consolidated Schools | " | " | 158 |
Vocational Training in Rural Schools | " | " | 162 |
An Over-Churched Community | " | " | 184 |
Presbyterian Church, Winchester, Ill. | " | " | 236 |
INTRODUCTION
COUNTRY LIFE OPPORTUNITY
The glare of the city dazzles the eyes of many a man in college. For a generation college debates, in class, club and fraternity, have popularized all phases of the city problem, the very difficulties of which have challenged many a country-bred boy to throw in his life where the maelstrom was the swiftest.
In recent years however the country problem has been claiming its share of attention. It has grown to the dignity of a national issue. The great Rural Life Movement, starting from the Agricultural Colleges, has enlisted the intelligent cooperation of far-visioned men in many professions. Thinking people see clearly that in spite of the growth of cities, the nation is still rural. Agriculture is still the main business of our people. The nation’s prosperity still depends upon “bumper crops.” The nation’s character still depends upon country conscience. Not only is it true that most of our leaders in politics, in the pulpit, in all professions and in the great industries were born and bred in the country; the city is still looking to the country to develop in large degree the leadership of the future.
Were it not for the immigration tides and the continuous supply of fresh young life from the country, the city would be unable to maintain itself; it would be crushed beneath its burdens. For the city is the “Graveyard of the national physique.” With its moral and industrial overstrain, it is the burial place of health, as well as youthful ambitions and hopes, for many a young person not accustomed to its high-geared life. The nervous system rebels against the city pace. In an incognito life the character crumbles under the subtle disintegration of city temptations. The young man with exceptional ability finds his way to high success in the city; the average man trudges on in mediocrity, lost in the crowd—just a “high private in the rear rank,” when he might have stayed in the country home and won a measure of real influence and substantial happiness in his natural environment.
Not only has the lure of the city drawn thousands of young people who were better off in their country homes, the real claims of the country village upon those young people have but timidly been uttered. Not only has the call of the city been magnified by artificial echoes, the call of the open country has scarcely been sounded at all. The opportunity of the city as a life arena has been advertised beyond all reason. It is time