Western Sugar Cooperative (English Wikipedia)

Analysis of information sources in references of the Wikipedia article "Western Sugar Cooperative" in English language version.

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  • "Chapter 4: Heart Mountain" (PDF). cwu.edu. Retrieved August 16, 2020. Seasonal leaves greatly benefitted area farmers. By the end of the 1942 harvest season, nearly 1,400 evacuees were working outside the center on farm labor contracts (Mackey, 2000). Farmer responses to these workers seems to have been quite positive; however, sugar beet farmers in Wyoming's Big Horn County generally were not happy with the work done by Heart Mountain evacuees likely because most of the workers had little previous farm experience (Fiset, 1999).

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  • Eric Twitty (August 2003). "Silver Wedge: The Sugar Beet Industry in Fort Collins" (PDF). SWCA Environmental Consultants. Retrieved August 9, 2020.
  • Adam Thomas (August 2003). "Work renders life sweet: Germans from Russia in Fort Collins, 1900-2000" (PDF). SWCA Environmental Consultants; Advance Planning Department, City of Fort Collins, Colorado. Retrieved August 13, 2020.

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  • Sherrie Peif (June 14, 2004). "Kodak breaks ground on thermal plant". Greeley Tribune. Retrieved August 15, 2020. When Howard Smith moved his family to northern Colorado 35 years ago, he knew good things would happen.

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  • "Films, Slides on Sugar Beet Raising to Be Shown". Heart Mountain Sentinel. March 23, 1943. Retrieved August 16, 2020. Technicolor films and slides on sugar beet culture will be shown tonight at 24-30, according to Tom Mullowny, Great Western Sugar Company representative. Dates of showings in other mess halls will be posted on the mess hall bulletin boards.
  • "General Information". Heart Mountain Sentinel. May 22, 1945. Retrieved August 16, 2020. The Great Western Sugar company has offers in the Lovell and Billings areas for sugar beets. This is an opportunity for family relocation. Rates will be $13 per acre for blocking and thinning, $4 for hoeing and $3 for weeding. Families interested should contact the relocation division.

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  • "50 years ago". TheMountainMail.com. August 31, 2016. Retrieved August 15, 2020. 7 September 1966: Mrs. Helen Thatcher White has been named chairman of the board of the First National Bank of Salida and of the four other Colorado banks owned by her husband, William M. White, nationally known financier-industrialist who died in an automobile accident near his Pueblo home Aug. 16. Mahlon Thatcher White of Durango, elder son of the Whites, has been elected president of the banks, which his father directed as board chairman and president. The second son, William M. White Jr., New York financier, will serve actively as consultant and advisor to the White family interests.

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