| ▲ | danans 3 hours ago | |||||||||||||
> Look at the farms that still have the houses of that era standing on them and you'll soon notice that they are all mansions. Those are usually large plantations, and the people who owned them weren't just farmers but vast landholders with very low paid labor working the farm (at one time usually enslaved). I doubt they were representative of the typical turn of the 20th century farm. If we're speaking from vibes rather than statistics, I'd argue most 19th century farmhouses I've seen are pretty modest. Not shacks, but nothing gigantic or luxurious. | ||||||||||||||
| ▲ | 9rx 3 hours ago | parent [-] | |||||||||||||
> Those are usually large plantations There are no plantations around here. This was cattle and grain country in that time. Farmers got rich because all of sudden their manual labour capacity was multiplied by machines. The story is quite similar to those who used software to multiply their output in our time, and similarly many tech fortunes have built mansions just the same. > Not shacks, but nothing gigantic or luxurious. Well, they weren't palaces. You're absolutely right that they don't look like mansions by today's standards, but they were considered as such at the time. Many were coming from tiny, one room log cabins (stuffed to the brim with their eight children). They were gigantic, luxurious upgrades at the time. But progress marches forward, as always. | ||||||||||||||
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