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MembershipTwo types of membership are available. Individual membership and Family membership.Individual membership gives you all benefits and entitles you to full voice and vote at the Grange. Individual membership dues are $35.00 a year and are prorated for the year when you first join. The Initiation fee for new members is $2.00. Family membership dues are $70.00 a year and are also prorated for the year when the family joins, and has a $4.00 one-time initation fee for the new family. To join, a person or family must submit an application along with the appropriate dues and fees to the Secretary of the Grange. The following applications are available as downloads: Individual Brochure Application For more information, contact our Membership Chairman: Trudy Lachnite at 503-545-9318 or come to one of our Grange meetings for a lot of fun and fellowship. History of the Patrons of Husbandry The Grange came into being in 1867 because of the vision of Oliver Hudson Kelley, a Minnesota farmer and activist. He had long held that farmers, because of their independent and scattered nature, needed a national organization which would represent them much as unions were beginning to do for industrial workers. Farmers were at the mercy of merchants for both needed farm supplies and for marketing their crops. Railroads and warehouse companies were taking advantage of farmers as well. Kelley and some of his friends organized the National Grange (officially known as the Order of Patrons of Husbandry) as a fraternal group similar to the Masonic lodge. The early leaders were responsible for promoting cooperatives which had the potential of helping farmers economically. Effective lobbying efforts were undertaken early and this activity remains a bulwark of Grange service to rural America. Education of rural residents was championed by the early Grange and, due to Grange agitation, dramatic improvements were made in rural schools. The birth of the Extension Service, Rural Free Delivery, and the Farm Credit System were largely due to Grange lobbying. The Grange at all levels is strictly nonpartisan and does not endorse candidates for public office nor contribute to their campaigns. At the national level, the Grange actively lobbies for causes which are in accord with organizational policy. All policy within the Grange originates at the local level and the organization remains as one of America's best examples of democratic grass-roots activism. The primary legislative objective of the Grange is to represent the views of rural residents and the agricultural community. These issues include transportation, farm programs, rural economic development, education, health and safety concerns and many others. Each year the policies are summarized and published in booklet form. Early in its history Grange leaders realized that social interaction was especially important to rural residents. For over 140 years Grange halls have existed as community centers where residents gather for educational events, dances, potlucks, town meetings, political rallies and other meetings. Junior Grange, 4-H, FFA, scouting and Camp Fire groups have thrived because of Grange support and each year tens of thousands of Grange members participate in numerous community service projects. A wide variety of social, leadership and educational opportunities for members of all ages have been made available throughout the organization' s long history. Members not only receive personal satisfaction from accomplishing something they enjoy, but they share in the greater reward of being an active part of an organized effort to bring people together for good times, constructive activities and honest, hard-working community building.
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