UMASS/ AMHERST
315Dbb D2flS ISTS S
TWELFTH ANNUAL UEPORT
OF THE
SECllETARY
OF THE
P[as5ac|nsftts §0arb 0f ^gncullitrt,
TOGETHER WITH
REPORTS OE COMMITTEES
APPOINTED TO VISIT T^E COUNTY SOCIETIES,
WITH A]^ APPEI^DIX
CONTAINING AN ABSTEA.CT OF THE
FINANCES OF THE COUNTY SOCIETIES
FOB
18 6 4.
BOSTON:
WRIGHT & POTTER, STATE PRINTERS,
No. 4 Spring Lane.
186 5.
4^
:-Jtt
STATE BOARD OF AGRICULTURE.
1865.
MEMBERS EX OFFICIIS.
His Excellency JOHN A. ANDREW.
His Honor JOEL HAYDEN.
Hon. OLIVER WARNER, Secretary of the Commonwealth.
APPOINTED BY THE GOVERNOR AND COUNCIL.
Term expires.
EPHRAIM W. BULL, of Concord, 1866
LOUIS AGASSIZ, of Cambridcje, 1867
PAUL A. CHADBOURNE, of Williamstown, 18G8
CHOSEN BY THE COUNTY SOCIETIES.
Massachusetts, LEVERETT SALTONSTALL, of Newton, 1868
i:ssex GEORGE B. LORING, of Salem, . . 1866
. 1867
. 1868
. 1866
. 1866
. 1866
. 1866
Middlesex, JOHN B. MOORE, of Concord,
Middlesex North, .... ASA CLEMENT, of Dracut,
Middlesex South, .... ELIAS GROUT, of Ashland, .
Worcester, HENRY R. KEITH, of Grafton,
Woi-cester West, .... HOLLIS TIDD, of New Braintree,
Worcester North, .... ABEL F. ADAMS, of Fitchburg,
Worcester South, .... NEWTON S. HUBBARD, of Brimfield, . 1868
Worcester South-East, . . . VELOROUS TAFT, of Upton, . . . 1867
Hampshire, Franklin and Hampden, . THEO. G. HUNTINGTON, of Hadley, . 1867
Hampshire, LEVI STOCKBRIDGE, of North Hadley, 1868
Highland, MATTHEW SMITH, of Middlefield, . 1866
Hampden, PHINEAS STEDMAN, of Chicopee, . . 1867
Hampden East, ALURED HOMER, of Brimfield, . . 1867
Franklin, JOHN M. SMITH, of Sunderland, . . 1868
Berkshire, CHARLES 0. PERKINS, of Becket, . 1867
Hoosac Valley SYLVANDER JOHNSON, of Adams, . 1867
Honsatonic, HARRISON GARFIELD, of Lee, . . 1867
Norfolk, CHARLES C. SEW ALL, of Medfield, . 1868
Bristol, SAMUEL L. CROCKER, of Taunton, . 1866
riymouih, CHARLES G. DAVIS, of Plymouth, . 1866
Barnstable, JOHN KENRICK, of Orleans, . . . 1868
Nantucket, ...,,. JAMES THOMPSON, of Nantucket, . 1866
Martha's Vineyard, .... DANIEL A. CLEAVELAND, of Tisbury, 1868
CHARLES L. FLINT, Secretary.
TWELFTH ANNUAL REPOUT
OF THE
SECRETARY
OF THE
BOARD OF AGRICULTURE.
To the Senate and House of Representatives of the Common-
ivealth of Massachusetts :
Notwithstanding the high price of labor during the past
season, and an excessive drought almost unparallelled in the
history of our agriculture, the year has, as a "whole, been one of
great prosperity for the farming interests of the Commonwealth.
The war, so disastrous in many respects, having led to the dis-
arrangement of the system of labor in the border States and
throughout large sections of territory in other parts of the
country, has stimulated the production of some of the crops
over which those sections had, to some extent, a monopoly, and
thrown whatever advantage that monopoly possessed into the
hands of our own farmers. Rapid changes have taken place,
therefore, in our own crops, as statistics will show, and these
changes wall be more apparent in the returns of the past year
than in those of any year previous. The area devoted to
broom corn has been much less than heretofore, and that
devoted to tobacco vastly increased.
The high price of wool has had the effect to multiply the
number of sheep in the State, and thus that most profitable
branch of farming has been been stimulated to a greater degree
than ever before. The law for the protection of sheep against
6 BOARD OF AGRICULTURE.
dogs has been enforced with apparent good will, and though the
number of sheep is still far less than it should and must of
necessity be in every profitable system of farming, the enthu-
siasm for sheep husbandry has received such an impulse that a
revolution in this respect may be said to have begun.
Nor is the change in our farming less apparent in the largely
increased application of machinery and labor-saving implements
to all the operations on the farm. The introduction of the
larger and more expensive machines is naturally rather slow.
Men require time to observe and consider them. But the last
year or two has witnessed the progress in this department
which, under ordinary circumstances, would hardly be ex-
pected in ten. The hay tedder, for example, has gained as
strong a hold upon the attention of practical farmers in the
last two years as it would in other times have gained in a
much longer time, and the same may be said of other important
machines. The result has been to stimulate mechanical inge-
nuity and to increase production with a less amount of wearing
physical labor.
The manufacture and application of concentrated manures
has also been largely on the increase in certain sections of the
State, while greater system in making and economizing stable
manures has been more widely introduced, and the buying and
feeding of store cattle or sheep for the winter, mainly for the
sake of their manure, which, before the war, was confined to a
few, has become by no means uncommon in those portions of
the State where the want of manure has been mostly seriously
felt. When the price of ordinary farm-yard manure rises to
ten dollars a cord and more in a district remote from market,'
it becomes a pretty strong incentive to effort and economy in
its production.
Another evidence of increased enterprise and activity among
the farming population of the State, may be seen in the largely
increased numbers in attendance at the county fairs in all parts
of the Commonwealth. So far as my observation has extended,
these fairs were never, as a whole, so fully patronized by the
public as during the past year. On one of the days of the New
England Fair at Springfield no less than twenty-two thousand
people were in attendance. On another day, which opened wet
SECRETARY'S UEPORT. 7
and lowering, eighteen thousand, and the same enthusiasm has
been manifested at many of the smaller fairs.
Another significant evidence of a greater spirit of inquiry in
the minds of farmers is the largely increased demand for the
reports of the State Board of Agriculture. With an edition of
ten thousand copies, double the number printed ten years ago,
it is wholly impossible to supply the call for them, and hardly
two months pass after tliey are ready for distribution before the
number is exhausted and the distribution is obliged to be
stopped. With very few exceptions, these reports now go into
the hands of practical farmers, and they are unquestionably
read by them to a far greater extent than formerly.
But with these and other evidences of general prosperity,
enterprise and inquiry, I am sorry to be compelled to report
that that fatal and dangerous disease among our horned cattle,
commonly called pleuro-pneumonia, is still in existence, and
requires constant watching by a competent and vigilant
commission. The report of the Board of Commissioners on
Contagious Diseases among Cattle, is as follows :
To the Senate and House of Representatives of the Commonweallh of Massa-
chusetts :
In accordance with the law of 1860, relating to contagious
diseases among cattle, the following Report is respectfully
submitted : —
April 20th. Charles P. Preston of Danvers, and E. F. Thayer
of (West) Newton, were appointed to fill the vacancies existing
in the Board of Cattle Commissioners.
The Commissioners have been called to visit nineteen towns,
and to examine the cattle of thirty different herds during the
past eight months. In six only was the disease called pleuro-
pneumonia found to exist, viz. : in one herd in the towns
respectively of Lincoln, Ashby and Boxborough, in two herds
in Lexington, and in the herd belonging to the city of Boston at
Deer Island.
A herd of cattle belonging to John P. Reed, of Lexington,
had been isolated, by order of the selectmen, and a few days
before May 1st was discharged by them from further isolation.
The cattle were carefully examined, and no disease was found
to exist among them.
8 BOARD OF AGRICULTURE.
The Commissioners were also notified that there were sick
cattle at the barn of Martin Beatty in Lexington. On examina-
tion, an ox (the mate had been killed by order of the selectmen,)
and a cow with diseased lungs were found. Isolation of the
whole herd was continued until June 16th, when, in company
with the recently appointed Commissioner, F. D. Lincoln, Esq.,
of Brimfield, the herd was again examined. No evidence of
disease was apparent, excepting in the two above mentioned,
both of which were diseased to an extent that would not justify
the return of the animals to the owners. Accordingly, both
were slaughtered. The autopsy of the ox showed that the lower
portion of the right lung adherent to the ribs, a diseased mass
of lung tissue, was encysted and floating in pus. In the cow,
the left lung was diseased ; otherwise, the condition was similar
to that of the ox.
From the history of the cases, and the pathological appear-
ance, it was evident that the disease in both animals was of
long standing, and as no other cases occurred, the remainder
of the herd were released from further isolation.
On the 10th of May the Commissioners received a notice from
the selectmen of Lincoln that the disease existed in the herd of
George Nelson, and that the animals were kept isolated by their
order.
Two cows had died, one on the 17th of March, the other on the
4th of May ; several others had been sick, and were much emaci-
ated. Genei'ous diet was ordered and isolation continued. On the
27th, one of the cows, being greatly emaciated and evidently
much diseased, was killed. A considerable mass of disease was
found in the right lung ; the formation of pus had commenced.
The herd was kept isolated until August 3d, when three were
selected as having diseased lungs, and a fourth did not thrive.
It was decided to have the four slaughtered. The autopsies
justified the decision in the three ; the fourth was healthy.
June 3d. The Commissioners visited the farm of Levi Smith
in Ashby. One of a pair of oxen purchased in Marlow, N. H.,
and kept in the Box Tavern stable, in Stoddard, on the night of
the 24th of March was found sick, the right lung being exten-
sively diseased. The autopsy disclosed the right lung wholly
consolidated, and weighing, by lestimate, at least twenty-five
pounds.
SECRETARY'S REPORT. 9
Mr. Smith was confident that his herd would not take
the disease, as the ox was removed soon after the sickness
commenced.
On the 2d of July, nearly every animal was sick. Two were
selected for experiment ; the remainder were slaughtered on
the 3d of August, and all but one were diseased.
July 15th. At Boxborough the Commissioners found two
cows isolated by order of the selectmen, one of which showed
symptoms of lung disease ; the remainder of the herd had been
turned to pasture, consequently were not in fit condition for
examination.
On the 29th, on examination, all were found healthy, except-
ing the one sick at the former visit, which had died, and been
buried several days. The body was exhumed, and the right
lung was found to be diseased with contagious pleuro-pneumonia,
so called.
Early in May, the Commissioners were requested to examine
the herd of T. E. Cutter, in Lexington. Upon examination, all
appeared healthy. The owner being a,bsent at the time, no
information could be elicited. In June, it being again intimated
that a disease existed among his cattle, another examination
took place, by appointment, July 1st. Several chronic cases
were found, and it was ordered tliat the herd be isolated. Mr.
Cutter stated that he had already lost eleven head of cattle, the
first one dying in March, and there being no case of sickness
for several weeks, it was hoped the remainder would escape ;
but on the 21st, one of the most severe cases was found ; in
fact the animal could not long survive. It was then decided
to have the herd slaughtered. On examination, eiglit were
diseased and five were healthy.
The Commissioners were next called to examine a herd of
- cattle at Deer Island, belonging to the city of Boston. Five had
been killed, by the order of the directors of the institution
there, before the appraisal of the herd was made. It consisted
of forty-one head, many of them valuable. Eleven heavy oxen
being among the number, seven were selected for experiment ;
thirty-four were slaughtered, seventeen proved healthy and
seventeen diseased. Thirteen hundred and thirty-eight dollars
and fifty-three cents ($1,338.53,) was realized from the sale of
2*
10 BOARD OF AGRICULTURE.
the beef, &c., of the healthy animals, and applied in part payment
of the appraised value of the cattle.
The conclusions to which the Commissioners have arrived
from their investigations the past year, are that if a herd of
cattle is surely exposed by being in contact with an animal in
the early stage of the disease, (as, for instance, in an ordinary
barn, as cattle are usually tied up,) slaughtering the herd and
selling the healthy for beef is the most economical mode of
treating it ; but if the exposure is doubtful, isolation, with care-
ful watching, should be resorted to. Facts, with the figures
to substantiate the above, can be produced, but it is thought
unnecessary.
It is often asked, " Why kill the diseased ? Why not let
them recover ?"
In answer, it is proper, first, to explain what recovery of the
disease called pleuro-pneumonia is.
To illustrate : suppose, with one-half or two-thirds of one
lung solidified, the first effort of nature is to throw around the
diseased mass a covering of fibrinous material, entirely shutting
off the healthy tissue from the diseased, which is generally
accomplished in from fifteen to forty days. Suppuration then
commences on the surface of the diseased mass, which continues
until the whole is liquified ; absorption is constantly going on,
and in from six to twenty months the animal recovers, but with
the loss of a portion of a vital organ. If the animal is a work-
ing bullock, its value is destroyed ; if a cow in milk, after the
acute stage is passed, the secretation is partly restored, and the
milk consumed by the people.
Would an intelligent and conscientious physician recommend
for a wet nurse a person with an abscess or abscesses in the lungs ?
If not, why is it not equally wrong to use the milk drawn from
cows with lungs in the same or a similar condition ? <
Contagion. — In the first three herds to which the Commis-
sioners were called, it is not probable that contact with diseased
animals could be proved. Several months had elapsed since
the disease broke out, and as it was in a locality where it was
well known that the disease existed the year previous, it is not
strange that the efforts made to trace it failed. The statements
made to the Commissioners in relation to the outbreak and
SECRETARY'S REPORT. 11
spread of the disease in and from Ashby are so conclusive that
it seems proper to put them in tliis Report.
The pair of oxen kept at the Box Tavern stable over night
on the 24th of March, as before stated, were driven to the farm
of Levi Smith, in Ashby. Eighty-six days after, one of the herd
of Mr. Smith was attacked. A bull belonging to another party
was kept at the farm at the time the ox was taken sick. A few
days after, the owner sold him, and he was driven to Sharon,
N. H., where, after exposing two herds, he died, as did several
animals so exposed in these herds. Much has been said about
the disease being generated by bad ventilation. Unless the
mountain pastures in New Hampshire, the hills of Ashby, the
large, clean barns, (the doors of which had not been shut for
months before the disease broke out,) and the hills and valleys
of Deer Island require better ventilation, the theory that the
disease is caused by bad ventilation must be abandoned.
The Commissioners visited New Hampshire to learn if the
reports were true that the disease had broken out in pastures in
that State. On arrival at Peterborough, information was
received that a board of cattle commissioners had been appoinl^ed
by the governor and council, and that Albert G. Scott, Esq., a
resident of that town, was a member, who stated that the reports
were too true, and much alarm existed among the farmers of
that section. On the following day, by invitation of the New
Hampshire commissioners, several herds were examined in
Hancock and Peterborough. Two animals were selected and
slaughtered. The autopsies proved that it was the same disease
as in Massachusetts. An arrangement was made with the New
Hampshire commissioners, that no cattle affected with pleuro-
pneumonia should be allowed to go to Massachusetts, or that
cattle which had been exposed in pastures where the disease had
existed, or in adjoining pastures, should not be transported
otherwise than by railroad, and on arrival in this State to be
sold for beef, thereby protecting the farmers on the line of road
usually travelled in both States, and preventing the spread of
the disease in the localities where the cattle were owned.
Much credit is due the New Hampshire Commissioners for
their energetic and faithful co-operation in the endeavor to
prevent the spread of the disease in their own State and in
12 BOARD OF AGRICULTURE.
enforcing such rules as would tend to keep it from endangering
the herds of neighboring States.
Indeed, it appeared to the Commissioners that far less apathy
in relation to a matter so serious and vital prevailed in New
Hampshire than in many portions of our own State. It is easy
for newspaper writers to hold up any subject to ridicule, and
for careless and unobservant persons to sneer at what they do
not understand ; but it remains, nevertheless, true that no one
has seriously and candidly examined into the character of this
disease, no matter what their preconceived notions and opinions,
who have not been forced to confess that no measures for its
eradication or its prevention should be left untried, nor any
care or attention intermitted that may possibly arrest this
scourge to farmers, and this fountain of disease to ou'r people.
By order of the honorable council, the Commissioners were
" requested to cause such cattle as may be infected, or which
have been exposed to infection, with pleuro-pneumonia, to be
isolated, to determine the question of the contagiousness and
curability of the disease ; also, whether for the purpose of work-
ing, milking or breeding they have been injured, and to what
extent they h^ve been injured by exposure to disease, or by
having had the disease ; and also to ascertain, by slaughtering
.them at a sufficiently remote period, whether, and to what
extent, their fattening qualities have been injured."
As the experiments instituted are not concluded, the result
will appear in a future report.
The amount of bills audited, exclusive of the various suras to
which the several towns are liable, is thirty-eight hundred and
seventy-five dollars and ten cents, (13,875.10,) and by estimate,
it will require twenty-five hundred dollars to pay the outstand-
ing bills, making the total sum expended nearly six thousand
four hundred dollars, (!|6,400.) Respectfully submitted.
E. F. Thayer,
Chas. p. Preston,
«
Commissioners.
To the Senate and House of Representatives : —
Gentlemen, — Having received the appointment as Commis-
sioner on Contagious Diseases of Cattle, and not being able to
subscribe to the Report which the Board of Commissioners
SECRETARY'S REPORT. ■ 13
have seen fit to present, I beg leave to submit the following as a
Minority Report : —
All must admit the importance of arriving at a correct con-
clusion in relation to the disease existing among the cattle of
the New England States, known as plcuro-pneumonia. For if
what is so generally said by those who have had the better
opportunity to examine the subject be true', viz., that the future
value of the neat stock in this country depends upon the vigilance
used to check the spread of the disease by the destruction of the
cattle having the disease, or having been exposed to the same, it
is certainly difficult to calculate the importance of vigilant
action in this direction. If, on the other hand, it be true that
all that is necessary is to use the care and precaution used in
the treatment of other diseases, then the course which has been
thus far pursued by this Commonwealth can be viewed in no
other light than that of an unwarrantable waste of property,
which if followed may involve the loss of many millions of
dollars.
I suppose it not far from a just estimate to put the
amount expended by the State, and the loss suffered by indi-
viduals to the present time at two hundred thousand dollars,
($200,000 ;) and when or where this expenditure is to cease,
no prudent man will venture an opinion. Two years ago the
Commissioners announced that they were happy to be able to
say that no case then existed in the State that they were aware
of, and the public were led to believe that they were finally
relieved of the terrible scourge ; and yet there have been since
that time more than a hundred cases ! Had the present Board
been called upon to make their Report two months since, I
doubt not they would have been happy in trying to quiet the
fears of any of the timid. All at once there breaks out on Deer
Island, in one of the better herds, if not the best one in the
State, as bad a case as has come under their observation during
the season.
Believing that a just conclusion as to the proper course to be
pursued can only be arrived at by a careful consideration of the
facts bearing on the following questions, viz, : Is the disease
contagious ? if so, to what extent ? Is it curable ? To what
extent is it fatal ? Are the animals affected with the disease
worth keeping through a common course of it, either for fatten-
14 . BOARD OF AGRICULTURE.
ing, milking, breeding, or working purposes ? I present the
following as all the facts I have been able to obtain.
The first case I was called upon to visit was that of a herd
belonging to Martin Beatty, of Lexington, containing thirteen
or fourteen head, made up ofcows and young cattle. This herd
had been isolated some time previous by the order of the select-
men. The Commissioners had continued the isolation, and had,
previous to ray meeting with them, agreed to kill one cow
belonging to Mr. Beatty, and an ox which had been kept for
some time in the barn with the diseased cow, owned by Carroll
& Nevils. Both of these animals had been in a low condition,
but for two weeks or more had gained in flesh rapidly. An
examination proved that each had what is called contagious
pleuro-pneumonia. That they would have fattened readily was
believed on all hands, and their improvement for the two weeks
previous to their being killed seem(^d to warrant that conclu-
sion. Where either of these got the disease, we could not learn.
The cow was kept with the rest of the herd, (thirteen, I think,
in number,) till some days after she showed that she had the
disease, probably till after the time it is generally supposed those
affected with contagious pleuro-pneumonia will communicate it
to others, and yet no one of the herd with which she was kept
had the disease that we are aware of; and perhaps it is proper to
state that we kept the remainder of the herd isolated for some
time, and Dr. Thayer made a number of examinations before
we thought it prudent to take off the restriction.
The herd of Levi Smith of Ashby was the next I visited,
from which any facts were elicited that bear upon the questions
under consideration. Smith had a herd consisting of eight cows,
two bulls, and a calf. There had been kept a pair of oxen
belonging to one Willard with this stock, which oxen were
purchased in Marlow, N. H., and were kept one night at the Box
Tavern with some other cattle which were supposed to have
pleuro-pneumonia. I say supposed because no evidence came
before us that any one who had any knowledge of the disease
had ever examined them, and had it not been for the breaking
out of the disease in Smith's herd probably none would have
suspected the cattle at the Box Tavern. Some forty days after
the above supposed exposure, one of these oxen was taken sick.
Dr. Thayer and Mr. Preston had the yoke appraised, killed the
SECRETARY'S RERORT. 15
sick one and found that he had pleuro-pneumonia. The other
ox was taken to Brighton, where he afterwards died, but an
examination showed to Dr. Thayer's satisfaction, that lie had
never had the above-named disease. Some two weeks after the
ox was killed, the Commissioners were called to Mr. Smith's
again and found one of the cows quite sick. We had the whole
herd appraised, killed the sick cow, (she had pleuro-pneumonia,)
ordered Mr. Smith to isolate his herd by building a double fence
on the side of his pasture where other herds were kept. One of
Smith's bulls had been with the cows of Mr. Asa Walker till it
showed symptoms of the disease, coughing and the like, and the
Board directed these cows to be kept isolated. On the fourth of
July two of Smith's cows were brought to Newtonville to be
placed with four cows brought from Maine to try the effects of
an exposure ; both these cows were killed on the thirteenth of
July and found to have had the pleuro-pneumonia. Of the
experiment I shall speak hereafter. The remainder of Smith's
herd was killed in August ; all except one cow and the calf were
diseased. What this herd would have been worth to have kept it
of course would be presumptuous to say, for there was no pains
taken with the milking; the calf which was nearly three months
old went with, and of course drew his food from, as many of them
and at such times as inclination led him thereto. Smith consid-
ered the milk of no value except to feed swine upon, and the
cows were from all these reasons used in such a manner as
would have ruined any cows for the season. It should be noted
that the calf both before and after being killed had the appear-
ance of having been perfectly healthy ; also that the neighbors'
cows that were exposed to Smith's bull, six and probably nine
in number, have never shown any signs of disease ; and further
that a bull that was kept at Smith's place for some time after the
ox was taken sick, is said to have died in about ten days after
being taken away, having given the disease to each of the herds
with which he came in contact in Sharon, N. H. What reliance
is to be be placed on this story is for others to decide ; I record
it as it was told. Smith says in relation to this bull that he
never came in contact with the sick ox, nor with any other of the
sick cattle of his herd. It is conceded that no one of the above-
named herd would have died of the disease except the ox first
taken and the cow that was killed on the 2od of June, nor was
16 BOARD OF AGRICULTURE.
it thought by Dr. Thayer that she would have died but for the
presence of a quantity of masticated grass found in the bronchial
tubes.
This is the only case to wliich we have been called where we
were able to trace even a probable connection between the disease
found, and any other herd. It is for others to judge how
conclusive the evidence in this case is.
George Nelson, of Lincoln, had a herd of about twelve head,
which were isolated by the selectmen, and turned over by them to
the care of the Commissioners. Two of the cows had died, and
one was sick at the time Dr. Thayer and Mr. Preston first visited
the place. By their order the herd was appraised, and kept
isolated ; the sick cow was killed, and found to have had pleuro-
pneumonia. Dr. Thayer visited the herd several times, and
examined it carefully. On the. 29th of June the Board, by his
advice, returned to Mr. Nelson all his herd but three cows ; but
on a subsequent visit it was decided to take one other cow with
these three, and have them slaughtered in Brighton. Three
of these cows showed the effects of diseased lungs, the other
was perfectly sound ; in one, the lung on one side was nearly
wasted, there being not more tli an ^one-third of its proper size
left, and that a hard lump adhering firmly to the ribs. I do
not hesitate to say that had either of these animals belonged to
me, and been fat, I should have used the meat for food, without
apprehending any injurious effects therefrom. So I think most
of the farmers in this Commonwealth would have done. That
they would have fattened readily, all the testimony that has
come before us goes to prove ; indeed, much of it is to the effect
that cattle after passing the acute stage of the disease, fatten
more readily for having had it.
I deem it proper to take more particular notice of
Nelson's herd, because I have so often heard it mentioned
as furnishing evidence sufficient to prove that cows affected
with pleuro-pneumonia are not worth keeping for milking
purposes. The facts in the case are simply these : From
the time the Commissioners took possession of Nelson's cows
till they were returned to him, and the four cows killed, he took
care of them for the State, charging for his trouble and whatever
it cost to feed them, on grass, hay, and meal, giving the State
credit for what so much of the milk as was deemed fit to sell
SECRETARY'S REPORT. 17
brought ; and the result was that the cost of keeping was much
more than was realized from the sale of the milk. Now, with
out going into an argument as to whether herds of cows would
generally, if kept in this manner, pay for their keeping, leaving
out of the account the value of the manure, it is sufficient in
this case to state the facts, that Nelson said, repeatedly, that the
cows, for some reason, gave but little milk ; that he could see
no difference in them in this respect. Dr. Thayer examined
them again and again, and could detect no trace of the disease
in but four, and in one of these he detected it where it did not
exist. To state the case in a different form : three of the nine
cows, (I think there were nine left after killing the first one,)
had pleuro-pneumonia. None of them paid for their keeping ;
er^o, cows that have the pleuro-pneumonia are not worth keep-
ing ! So easily do men become the dupes of their own preju-
dices ! To such ridiculous shifts as these are men driven who
have a theory to maintain which they deem of vital importance !
It may be said that perhaps the remainder of the herd had the
disease ; but one of them, at least, did not have it, and the
evidence is, that no difference existed among the herd as to the
falling off in the milk.
Not a little excitement existed in Lexington in regard to a
lierd belonging to T. E. Cutter, from which several cows had
died during the spring and summer. The Commissioners had
the herd isolated, and at a subsequent visit one of the cows was
found to be very sick. It was thought best to have the whole
herd, consisting of thirteen cows and a bull, appraised and killed
at Brighton, where the meat of the healthy portion could be
readily disposed of. All but four of the number proved to have
had the disease. The only facts I deem it worth recording here
in relation to Cutter's herd are, that Cutter declared that neither
of the cattle killed at Brighton had ever shown to him any
symptoms of the disease, though he had watched them closely,
and had had that experience which having the disease in his
herd six or eight months would give ; and that he did not men-
tion as a fact that the cows did not pay for their keeping, but
on the contrary, complained of the loss he should suffer by being
deprived of the milk of so good a herd. Let it be borne in
mind, that eight of this herd had had the pleuro-pneumonia for
months.
3*
18 BOARD OF AGRICULTURE.
July 15th we visited the herd of Oliver Meade, of Boxborougli,
consisting of two cows, and some dozen young cattle. Meade
had lost two cows, and the selectmen had compelled him to
shut up in his barn the remaining two. On inquiry it was found
that one of these cows and a two-year old had been purchased
of his brother, who lived about a mile distant, which brother
sometimes traded with Lexington people, and during the past
season had lost an animal of some disease. These were deemed
suspicious facts, and the cow bought of the brother, though
appearing to the inexperienced to be perfectly healthy, and
the one by her side which was evidently diseased, were con-
demned. The young cattle were taken from the pasture and
kept in a stable for iwo weeks, that Dr. Thayer might have a
good opportunity to examine them ; and that other herds might
not be exposed previous to such an examination. On our visit-
ing the place, two weeks afterward, one of the cows was dead.
The young cattle were examined thoroughly, particularly the
one bought of the brother, and also the remaining cow. The
doctor thought she must have the disease in the chronic stage,
being positive that she had a slight adhesion on one side, and
there seemed to be no other way to trace the disease, as none
of the young cattle had ever shown any symptoms of the disorder,
and they had been kept all winter in the barn, with the one
bought of the brother. The three cows, which Meade had owned
for years, were dead. The lungs of one of them Dr. Thayer
had examined, and there could be no mistake about its having
had the contagious pleuro-pneumonia. The remaining cow
must, as he thought, be the dragon that brought the trouble
into the family ; and though she stood a perfect picture of inno-
cence and health, was condemned. But alas for science ! her
lungs proved to be as clean as her countenance, and we poor
mortals were again afloat as to the evidence. To make the
matter still worse, it was found on hearing all the testimony in
regard to the brother's animal, that something else than pleuro-
pneumonia must have been the trouble with it. To relieve us
from the terrible dilemma, the veterinary surgeon of Boxborougli
suggested that Mr. Meade lived on a road over which cattle were
sometimes driven on their way to and from New Hampshire,
and what more probable than that some of them might have
had the disease, and stopped long enough at Meade's barnyard
SECRETARY'S REPORT. 19
to have left it! The great mi/stery vi-Q.s solved, and we left!
Let it be born in mind that there was no evidence that the
disease called pleuro-pneumonia had ever existed in any other
herd than Meade's, kept in the neighborhood of Boxborongh ; that
Meade's cows, beyond a question, had the contagious form of
the disease ; that he, or his neighbors, raised his whole herd,
except the two animals before mentioned, and thei/ were free
from the disease ; and it will be seen at once that it was neces-
sary to adopt the theory of the old negro, the veterinary surgeon
referred to, or some similar one, or the doctrine of the exclu-
sive contagiousness of the disease must be abandoned.
On the tenth of November, just as we were settling into the
belief that we had effectually checked the spread of the disease,
not hftvhig had a fresh case for three months. Dr. Thayer decided
that the herd belonging to the city of Boston, kept on Deer
Island, was seriously affected with pleuro-pneumonia. The
Board was called to confer with the directors of the house of
industry in relation to the matter. After a consultation in
which it was suggested by some of the directors, and, as I
thought, generally assented to by their board, that Deer Island
was just the place to try experiments as to the disease, it was
agreed on our part witli Mr. Payson, with whom the city author-
ities had left the whole matter, so far as they were concerned,
■ that on the Tuesday following (this was on Saturday,) the
Commissioners would go to Deer Island, have the herd appraised,
Dr. Thayer would examine it carefully, and tlie State should
take that part of it in which he should find any evidence of the
disease existing, and the city should hold the remainder.
Mr. Payson was to keep the whole stock without food
from Monday night till we should arrive on Tuesday, that
the doctor might have the better opportunity to detect any
trace of disease. From some cause, never satisfactorily explained,
I found on arriving on Deer Island on the day agreed upon,
that the programme had been entirely changed, and the Com-
missioners had agreed, without consulting me in relation to the
matter, to take the whole herd, and have it slaughtered, unless
Mr. Payson should see fit to select some of it to keep, it being
understood that should such part of the stock as he might
select thereafter have the pleuro-pneumonia, the State should pay
the city the amount at which they were appraised. Against this
20 BOARD OF AGRICULTURE.
arrangement I felt it my duty to protest, because I deemed it
a matter of great importance to the Commonwealth that the
question should be fairly tested, whether cattle affected with
this disease are worth keeping. We had been requested by the
governor and council to test, as best we could, this and other
points. Up to this time we had labored under difficulties which
here would be entirely overcome ; — such as finding suitable per-
sons to take care of, and places to keep such cattle in, without
exposure to others. Here was a herd of valuable cattle, cows
valued by Mr. Payson at from eighty to one hundred and fifty
dollars. Certainly if any animals were worth keeping through
a siege of the disease these were. Perhaps on no other farm in
this State is there that precise care taken of stock, so as to be
able to tell the profit or loss attending it ; no one coula here'
complain of the danger of exposure to other herds, this being
the only one on the island. In short, if there be a place
in this Commonwealth where such an experiment can be carried
on successfully, it would seem that Deer Island is that place ;
or if there be any cattle worth thus experimenting with, such
stock as they had there is that stock. It had been found that
in many cases where cattle were killed the effects of the disease
were so slight that no one would pronounce the beef unhealthy
for food. Mr. Payson had killed an ox of this herd that Dr.
Thayer, as a physician, had advised him to use. I proposed that
if this herd must all be slaughtered, the stock appearing to be
healthy be held by Mr. Payson, so that should there be any such
cases as referred to, the State might not lose their whole
appraisal ; the Commissioners having previously decided that
the law did not allow them to dispose of the beef when the
slightest trace of the disease was found. But this proposition
was rejected. In a single day's slaughtering were found two
oxen appraised at two hundred and forty-seven dollars and fifty
cents, (1247.50,) and would have brought more than two
hundred dollars in market ; which both my associates decided
they should not hesitate to eat or give to their families, but
whicli we could not sell. The herd was slaughtered, with the
exception of four cows, two yearlings and a calf; and these
were saved, not as the report of the Commissioners might lead
one to conclude, for them to try an experiment with, but
because Mr. Payson would rather run the risk of their having
SECRETARY'S REPORT. 21
the disease than to suffer the loss he would, if he accepted the
appraisal. Fourteen of the thirty-five slaughtered hy the Com-
missioners were more or less diseased ; two of them would
probably have died.
Up to this time not the slightest evidence has been found that
the disease had been brought to the island from other herds ;
and yet several of the daily papers of Boston published articles
calculated, if not intended, to lead the public to believe that the
disease had been traced to a yoke of oxen bought of a man in
New Hampshire, who, four years ago, sent the disease to
Quincy. It is true that the lungs appearing to have been long-
est affected were taken from a yoke of oxen Mr. Payson bought
last May of a man bearing the same family name of him who it
is said sold the cattle which caused the trouble at Quincy in
1861. But it is also true that the oxen bought by Mr. Payson
had stood in the same stable, eaten at the same rack, drank at
the same trough, worked in the same field, and been with
through the entire summer, three or four other yoke of oxen,
all of which were killed, and no trace of the disease found. It
is also true that they had never been with any other cattle of
the diseased herd ; were kept in a barn separated from them by
a distance of several rods, and the only possible exposure there
could have been from them was in that they all drank at
the same trough, but never at the same time. It is also true
that Mr. Payson had worked these oxen through the entire
season without having had the least idea of their having been
diseased. He says that some time during the summer one of
the oxen did not thrive as well as he thought he ought to have
done, and he ordered a little more grain put into his food.
These facts are worth noticing, as tending to show the value of
such cattle for work. Still, again, it is true that the butcher
employed on this farm says that he killed an animal from this
herd more than a year ago whose kings were affected in pre-
cisely the same way that those were which the Commissioners
decided had the pleuro-pneumonia. But his story was not
believed. Ah no ! for it ran counter to the popular theory in
regard to the disease. The tale of any old gossip, nay, even the
" heard tell " which dame Rumor so generally employs, is suffi-
cient to prove that the cattle at the Box Tavern were the means
of giving the disease to Smith's herd. But here, a man who
22 BOARD OF AGRICULTURE.
says he examined the lungs carefully, and certainly had percep-
tion enough, if ever he had seen one good case of pleuro-
pneumonia, to know another case, is doubted. The old lady
could not be made to believe her son's story of the wonders of
the sea, though told with moderation ; but when he told her of
the great gold chariot-wheel which they fished out of the Red
Sea, stamped with Pharaoh's name, she could believe, because
she had read in the Scripture about its being lost there. There
is still another fact in relation to the Deer Island stock worthy
of notice, viz. : seven of the ten cows killed by the Commis-
sioners, and found diseased, had passed from the acute to the
chronic stage of the disease without Mr. Payson's notice, either
by the falling off in their milk, or in any other way ; a fact
which carries additional weight when we remember that Mr.
Payson is not one of those " guess so " farmers, but one who
takes just pride in pointing out each cow in his herd, and refer-
ring to his memoranda, states the exact amount of milk she
gave in any given month, and the butter made therefrom. One
may well ask how can it be that cows affected with pleuro-
pneumonia are worthless for milk, when such a man had it in
his herd for months, and never dreamed but that he had a
healthy herd ?
My associates, in their Report, mention the fact that an experi-
ment is in progress to test certain points in reference to the
effect of pleuro-pneumonia in cows, and without giving any
particulars in relation to the progress of the experiment, inti-
mated that at some future day all the facts shall be made
known. It seems to me proper that the facts thus far developed
should be reported, and I shall therefore venture to give such
as have come to my knowledge.
About tlie first of July two cows were brought from Smith's
herd, in Ashby, to Newtonville, and placed in a barn which had
been previously selected as a suitable place to try the experi-
ment. To all appearance this barn is in a healthy locality, and
unless tlie confinement to which the cows were subjected be
objected to, I cannot see why it was not a good place for the
trial. On the eighth of the same month four cows were
brought from Maine, and immediately after their arrival, while
in that state of exhaustion which the journey would produce,
one of them was tied in a stall between the two sick cows, for
SECRETARY'S REPORT. 23
twenty-four hours. Each of the Maine cows were similarly
exposed. The two cows brought from Ashby were then killed,
and found to have been diseased with contagious pleuro-
pneumonia. The lungs of one were but sliglitly affected, but
the other had a large portion of one lung diseased. No other
animal of Smith's herd, except one cow, was as badly affected,
the lung on one side weighing twelve pounds, on the other a little
over two pounds. In about forty days Dr. Thayer decided that
one of the exposed cows had the disease, and expressed an
opinion that two others would have it. Two other veterinary
surgeons were quite confident that three of the four cows had an
adhesion, but Dr. Thayer has never given it as his opinion that
more than one has had pleuro-pneumonia.
Owing partly to an indisposition on the part of a majority of the
Commissioners, and partly to a difficulty to find a suitable place,
no more cows were exposed till the fourteenth, after the cow at
Newtonville was taken sick, when she was carried to Weston and
exposed for several 'days to two cows brought from Upton, and
after the exposure taken back to Newtonville. Neither of the
Upton cows had shown any symptoms of the malady up to the time
the disease was discovered on Deer Island, (nearly three months,)
and it was thought best to expose them to an animal from that
herd. Accordingly, Dr. Thayer selected an animal which he pro-
nounced perfect for the purpose, had it carried to Newton and
exposed the cows there to his satisfaction, when the animal was
killed and found to have had the disease in its worst form. It
is supposed that there has not been sufficient time since the last
exposure to indicate the effect.*
To sum up the result, we have exposed in the manner
I have stated six cows ; one only has had the disease ;
three of tliem have had the double exposure of having
two cows affected with the disease tied on either side of
them for twenty-four hours, in such a manner as to make it
certain that they should inhale the breath of the sick ones, eat
* Since writing the foregoing, I learn from Dr. Thayer that the " Uptftn
cows" were exposed to the animal from Deer Island for two weeks, it having
been tied between them during the whole of that time. Sixty days have passed
since, and neither of the cows has shown any evidence of having had the disease,
unless a slight cough in one of them may be considered such. Forty-five days
is the extent of time fixed upon as the time of incubation.
24 BOARD OF AGRICULTURE.
the food that the sick one had breathed upon ; and also of being
kept in the stable with one diseased cow through the whole
course of her sickness, with the exception of two or three days.
In about twenty days from the time the cow brought from
Maine was taken sick, Dr. Thayer told me she gave about the
same quantity of milk that she did before her sickness, which
certainly was a little singular, as every farmer knows that if,
from any cause, a cow falls off in her milk for any considerable
number of days it is not often she comes up to the same mark
without a change in the feed, and there was no change in this
case.
Such are all the facts bearing upon the points named in the
first part of this Report which I have been able to gather.
Meagre, I know them to be ; so meagre that he must be a rash
man who would attempt to build any theory thereon. It would
seem to me that they rather tend to a disbelief in the present
popular theory in regard to the disease than to furnish the mate-
rial to build a new one. But I do not feel that I am wholly at
fault that they are so comparatively unimportant ; more than
once have I proposed that we call to our aid some man of
acknowledged medical skill and scientific ability. But all such
propositions have ever met with disapproval. It certainly is
consistent in him who has no faith in medicine to refuse to call a
physician, and equally so in him who believes he knows as
much as any one, to ask advice of others.
• I do not hesitate to say then that the experiment at Newtonville
has proved of but comparatively little value. My associates have
no faith in the use of medicine for the disease, and still more, they
think that he who is not already satisfied that the only proper treat-
ment of a herd effected, is to have it immediately slaughtered,
is not worthy of the pains it would require to convince him. Men
having such views cannot be expected to carry on an experiment
with that interest necessary to elicit the truth ; nor can it be
expected that farmers who have their herds appraised at what
three disinterested men swear is a fair market value will make
much effort to prove they are worth keeping, when they know
that a majority of those who are to judge between them and the
State consider it worse than useless.
It is asserted, and I suppose generally believed, that the
disease has no parallel in the human or brute creation. I
SECRETARY'S REPORT. 25
have said that the proposition to take counsel of experi-
enced medical men had met with no favor with the Board.
The only testimony I have therefore on this point is the opinion
of one who has had no little experience, and in whose
judgment I have that confidence which leads me to trust my
own and the life of my family to his skill, who gave it as his
opinion on an examination of one of the more thorouglily
diseased lungs we have taken from any animal, that there was
nothing about it that he should not expect to find in an acute
case of the lung fever. Let no one suppose that I offer this
opinion thinking it of much value ; for I do not even consider,
what is so often and triumphantly referred to, the opinions of
Tom, Dick, and Harry across the water, worth considering for
one moment, when we can for a tithe of the money which has
been expended by the Commissioners in a single year, by properly
conducted experiments place all the questions of interest in
relation to this disease, and its effects forever beyond the need of
an opinion. It is not many years since the whole medical faculty
of the old world stood aghast at the virulence of a disease which
to-day is but little feared by skilful medical men, either there or
here. Nor is it long since he would have been set down as a
simpleton who ventured the opinion that any one of many of
the diseases not now classed among contagious disorders, was
other than purely so. If it be proved that pleuro-pneumonia
never appeared in this country until Chenery brought it from
abroad, it does not follow that it is not now an epidemic. Nor
does it follow, by any means, that because the veterinary surgeons
of this country have found no remedy for the disease, therefore
it cannot be cured, and, that too, so readily as to make it the
part of folly to slaughter every herd in which it appears. Certain
it is to my mind that not twenty, nay, nor even a hundred
thousand dollars will drive tlie disease from this State if expended
in the manner it has heretofore been.
Many times have I been warned against doing anything which
miglit jeopardize the farming interest of this State, or the health
of the people. I am a farmer, and what is more, one who believes
that whatever effects their welfare is of vital importance to the
Commonwealth, nor would I say one word which I believe could
possibly endanger the health of one of the humblest of our
citizens. But I can but think it necessary, that the whole truth
4*
26 BOARD OF AGRICULTURE.
in regard to this disease be brought to light. I do not deem it
proper to enter into an argument as to the best course to be
followed in relation to the disorder, but simply to give you the
facts as they have come before me, trusting that the legislature
would search out any defects that may exist in the present
statutes bearing upon this case, and apply the remedy. Let me
suggest that if the present system of slaughter is to be continued,
that the law be so amended as to enable the Commissioners to sell
for meat such beef as they may deem perfectly healthy for food.
I annex hereunto a copy of each of the Orders * passed by the
governor's council, intended as it would seem to be a guide in
some degree for our action. There can be no possible doubt but
that the course therein indicated could be carried out with
perfect safety to the community. Nor can I for a moment
question whether a series of experiments, if made by men compe-
tent to make the same, would ultimately be the means of saving
a vast amount of property to the Commonwealth. Certain is it
that the public would then have the satisfaction of knoiving- what
had better be done instead of groping where, at best, all is mere
conjecture. . F. D. Lincoln.
Brimfield, January 7, 1865.
I have been desirous from the first to embody in my Reports
a full history of the proceedings on the part of the Common-
wealth and individuals acting in any official capacity, in regard
to this disease. It is for that reason that I have delayed the
printing some days to give place to the above report of the
minority. I will not allude to its general tone of gross injustice
.to Dr. Thayer, whose long experience and observation of this
malady would seem to entitle him to be treated with respect,
at least, by a colleague just appointed upon the commission,
with no previous observation of the disease. Every one who
knows the competency of Dr. Thayer and his eminent fitness
for the position he holds upon the commission, will entertain
the fullest confidence in his skill and judgment, in the perform-
ance of his duties. He is well known to be better informed in
regard to the disease and the facts of its more recent history
than any other man in the Commonwealth. It is but fair that
*The substance of these Orders is given on page 12, in the report of the
majority.
SECRETARY'S REPORT. 27
he should liave an opportunity to correct many of the state-
ments so well calculated to mislead, and I therefore give place
to the following communication :
Dear Sir, — I wish to review, in as brief a manner as possible,
the minority report of F. D. Lincoln,. Commissioner on Conta-
gious Diseases of Cattle. Passing over the few first pages, in the
14th, he says, " There had been kept a pair of oxen belonging to
one Willard, of Ashby, which were supposed to have pleuro-
pneumonia. I say supposed, <fec." The facts are, and we had
the evidence of several persons, that while a pair of oxen was
being driven from Concord, Mass. to Stoddard, N. H., one of them
faltered and was evidently sick, — was put up at the Box Tavern
stable. Sometime after, a disease broke out in the said stable ;
a cow in the stable was sold to one Shelden, in Hancock, who
sold her to Washburn, who sold one from his herd to Hay ward,"
a neighbor, who had lost eleven head of cattle at the time of
our visit to New Hampshire, he, Hayward, sold one to one
Hadley, of Peterborough, who owned the pair of oxen alluded
to in the majority report. Mr. Lincoln had the same oppor-
tunity to learn the above history of the spread of the disease
from the Box Tavern as I did. It is said that " there are none
so blind as those that won't see."
At page 17th he says that Dr. Thayer examined (the cows at
Nelson's, in Lincoln) again and again and detected the disease
in one where the disease did not exist. It appears to me that
if a man wishes to overthrow an old theory, built upon an expe-
rience of five years, with all the evidence that could be obtained,
it would be far better to state facts, or at least to learn the facts,
so as to be able to state them. The truth is, I did examine
them again and again, and was unable to detect disease in but
three. The fourth, although liberally fed, did not thrive, the
owner often stating that she must be diseased. Knowing that
in many subjects the disease does exist, either in remote situa-
tions from the surface, or in so small a space that the usual
examinations fail to discover it, it was thought best to slaughter
the animal. So much for the statement so sneeringly made.
Again on the same page, Mr. Cutler complained of the loss he
should suffer by being deprived of so good a herd. It is not to
be wondered at that he should ; his herd originally consisted of
^8 BOARD OF AGRICULTURE.
twenty-five animals, and nearly one-half he had already lost,
another was sick and certainly would have died, the commis-
sioners then took possession of the herd, which then consisted
of fourteen head.
Again in relation to Mead's herd, a gentleman informed us
that an ox was killed at a slaughter house in Acton, belonging
to a brother of Mead, said ox had a diseased lung, to an extent
that the butcher refused to have anything to do with the meat.
On our arrival, it Vas found, as stated by Mr. Lincoln, that there
were two cows tied up by order of the selectmen. The cattle
belonging to his brother were examined, the owner and the
neighbors questioned, but no satisfactory evidence could be
obtained. It was resolved to have the the dead cow exhumed ;
on examination, the wall of the thorax had been removed on
the healthy side, but the diseased lung had not been seen ; it
was removed and found to be consolidated. The disease of
which the animal died was contagious pleuro-pneumonia. The
remaining cow was examined, and it was supposed had the
disease in a chronic form. Whether she had or not, it would
have been necessary to have removed her, from the fact that
ishe had been tied up by the side of the acutely diseased one for
several days, which cow finally died. It is more than probable
she would have had the disease, and as there was but one, the
expense attending the keeping and the necessary examinations,
would far exceed the value of the animal ; for that reason she
was killed. Again he says, in relation to the herd at Deer
Island : " It was agreed on our part with Mr. Payson, with
whom the city authorities had left the whole matter, so far as
they were concerned, that on the Tuesday following (this was
on Saturday) the commissioners would go to Deer Island, have
the herd appraised. Dr. Thayer would examine it carefully, and
the State should take the part of it in which he should find any
evidence of the disease existing, and the city should hold the
remainder." It is true that in conversation with the directors,
some one remarked that Deer Island would be a good place to
try the experiments. The question was asked what would be
the best manner of disposing of the herd. The reply was that
the most economical was slaughter, there being many animals
among them valuable for beef, which had not yet shown any
symptoms of illness, and that the period of time had passed for
SECRETARY'S REPORT. 29
attempting to save them by separation. The question was then
put Ijy the president, and it was decided to refer the matter to
the president and superintendent. The president afterwards
left the management of tlie subject on their part to Mr. Payson,
with full powers. It was then agreed to have tlie cattle
appraised and examined on Tuesday, Mr. Payson declining to
make any proposition until then (Tuesday). On our arrival at
Deer Island, Mr, Payson came forward and stated that he
thought it best for the State to "take the wliole, unless that after
seeing the lungs of those we might kill, he would take six or
eight which were the least liable to have the disease. Accord-
ingly three Jersey heifers (the least exposed of any in the whole
herd), and five cows from the infected barn, were selected by
Mr. Payson, who several times remarked tliat certain cows,
pointing them out, would not have the disease, having constitu-
tions strong enough to resist it. Without going into any
elaborate argument about experimenting at Deer Island, suffice
it to say, that it would be highly improper to use that place for
experimenting, as proposed by Mr. Lincoln. On the island is
an institution containing from six to eight hundred people,
requiring the milk of more cows than can be pastured there in
summer, and unless the milk of the diseased ones was used
(and who would dare to take the responsibility of allowing the
milk to be used under such circumstances), the institution
would be deprived of one of the most important products. It is
well known that if a disease breaks out in one of our correc-
tional institutions (as for instance at the State prison a few
years since) more is said about it than there would be if any
number of children in other circumstances should be attacked
with disease by eating the products of diseased cows ; and if an
epidemic should break out on Deer Island, while the milk in
question was being consumed, much censure would be cast
upon all the parties concerned.
From the want of time necessary, it is impossible to notice
all the inaccuracies, misstatements, and fallacious reasonings in
the minority report. A few lines relating to the experiment
will suffice. In a note on the 23d page is the following state-
ment: " Sixty days have passed since, and neither of the cows
has shown any evidence of having had the disease, unless a
slight cough in one of them may be considered such.
30 BOARD OF AGRICULTURE.
The facts are, that the calf was carried to Westou on the
night of Nov, 21, and was kept two weeks and one day, between
the two cows. On the 12th of January one of them coughed
several times when I was present. Mr. Jacobs, who had the
care of them, stated that she had coughed considerable for some
days. On the 17th he informed me that the day before, the
other cow first showed the same symptoms of illness that the
calf did, and was quite sick. The present symptoms are, Jan.
18ih : the animal stands with the head drooping, the hair
standing up, coughing almost incessantly, considerable loss of
appetite, and on being turned out of the cow-house to drink, is
hardly able to move so great is the debility. It will be seen
that forty-two days after the removal of the calf and but
fifty-seven from the time of its being first placed with them,
before vinmistakable symptoms of thoracic disease wePe present.
To sum up, it is probable that at least, four if not five of the
animals exposed, took the disease. I am not so presumptuous
as to pretend, in all cases, to' diagnose the disease in question,
and he must be an expert in pathological anatomy who, as Mr.
Lincoln states, decided on the examination of one specimen of a
diseased lung with contagious pleuro-pneumonia, " that there
was nothing abou.t it that he should not expect to find in an
acute case of lung fever." E. F. Thayer.
PUBLIC MEETING OF THE BOARD AT GREENFIELD.
The meeting of the State Board was held this year at Green-
field, December 13, 14, and 15, and was very well attended, not
only by the members of the Board, but by the farmers of Green-
field and vicinity. His Excellency, Governor Andrew, occupied
the chair during the first day.
The sessions commenced on Tuesday afternoon, December 13,
at Franklin Hall, where the opening address was delivered by
Dr. LoRiNG.
ADDRESS OF DR. GEORGE B. LORING.
Gentlemen : The success which attended the first meeting of
the Board, for the purpose of lectures and discussions on agri-
cultural subjects, held at Springfield last year, established the
propriety of such exertions to diffuse agricultural knowledge
throughout the Commonwealth. We had the pleasure of listen-
SECRETARY'S REPORT. 31
ing, at that time, to the rules which science has endeavored to
establish, by careful and accurate investigations into the pro-
cesses of nature, upon which the farmer depends for the pros-
perity of his labors. The properties of the soil, and their
relations to a fitness for the various crops, as defined by chemical
analysis, were laid before us with great clearness and ability.
The use of fertilizers in the way considered by science to be the
most effectual and economical was developed with striking
method and precision. We listened with profound admiration
to the recital of those discoveries in embryology, which seem to
promise the establishment of fixed laws by which the farmer can
increase and improve his flocks and herds. And we heard with
real benefit the details of those practices, by which the diligent
and intelligent farmer has arrived at some remarkable result,
and has proved to the world by a successful experiment, some
law of reproduction which the theorist had " sought but never
found." In the debates and lectures there was an admirable
combination of the knowledge which had actually served the
purpose of some practical farmer, and which he had acquired in
the pursuit of his calling, and that knowledge which, starting
from abstract principles, only requires tha confirmation which
practice alone can give, to become a blessing to mankind.
Representing, as each one of us does, the agricultural societies '
of the State, and calling together the farmers of tlie neiglibor-
hood, we had an opportunity to test the comparative value of
the two sources of knowledge to which I have referred. And
in the comparison, I think neither side was the loser ; and I am
sure no representative of either side retired from those discus-
sions without feeling that he was under obligations to the other.
The union of the knowledge of the schools, and the knowledge
of the field, of the agricultural college and the agricultural
society there witnessed might have taught any fair and intelli-
gent observer that in the great work of agricultural education
the two may and should go hand in hand.
Tliere are those, I know, who think otherwise. Whether it is
their superior knowledge of the business of agriculture, their
unusual success in the work of husbandrv, their remarkable
ability to judge of the qualities of cattle, the most advantageous
crops, the most profitable animals for a given locality, the most
economical cultivation, or their ignorance of botli science and
32 BOARD OF AGRICULTURE.
practice which has brought them to this conclusion, I will not
undertake to say. I find the enterprising and intelligent leaders
of agriculture in England and America, those men who believe
in developing the resources of these two countries by the
diffusion of useful knowledge in matters of farming, ever ready
to record and consider the experiments of practical men in their "^
fields and stalls. Throughout the most useful agricultural
literature of these two countries, I find diffused the results of
experiments in every conceivable branch of husbandry. If I
would know the comparative value of the various modes of
preparing food for cattle, the effects of various combinations of
food, tested by careful weight and measure, I have but to turn
to the statements drawn up and recorded by those who knew
how to select animals for feeding, and who, having written down
the results of their observations, offered them to some agricul-
tural society either at home or abroad for publication. If I am
at a loss to know what mode of cultivation, and what crop are
peculiarly adapted to any given piece of land, I need not search
in vain through the transactions of agricultural societies. It .
may be difficult to establish by mathematical, tables the precise
cost of any crop throughout any large territory, because nature
has her own mode of working in every locality, on hillside and
in valley, on northern and on southern slopes, on the seaside
and on inland plains — but I can lay aside my arithmetic and
having learned the precise spot on earth where my labor is to
be applied, I may get my lesson of those whose agricultural lot
in life is analogous to my own. Shall we then reject the tran-
sactions of the Royal Agricultural Society, the various treatises
on practical agriculture, all the record of the founders of breeds
of cattle, the reports of local societies in this country, the com-
pilations and essays of secretaries of the various boards of agri-
culture among us, simply because they have not received the
sanction of a professor in some experimental agricultural college,
or because the officers of such an institution have no faith in
the information which an observing and successful farmer
acquires as he goes on with his work ? That system of educa-
tion which is based upon the assumption that all beyond its
limits is profound ignorance, can hardly succeed in guiding the
mind of man aright. And the president of an agricultural
college who shuts his eyes against all the practical information
SECRETARY'S REPORT. 33
which has been collected into the form of a text-book of agricul-
ture, must be careful lest he lose himself in his attempts to
judge of the occupants of a barn yard, and lest he find with
astonishment that the crops of surrounding farms far outstrip
tliose which lie beneath the shadow of his own institution. It
is not to be supposed that the agriculture of our country is
waiting for that light alone which is to radiate from the schools.
We have already accomplished much ; and the school which is
successful will take its departure from the facts now established
by long experience. In this way, and in this way alone, can it
be useful to a community of farmers. We must at least use the
knowledge we now have, until we are offered something better.
The truly scientific man feels and knows this. He knows the
value of what has actually been done on the farm. And while
he patiently pursues his investigations, he never loses sight of
the point of his departure, nor forgets that he must return to
the farm, in order to ascertain how his labors may be useful
and valuable.
In discharging our duty as a Board of Agriculture, we are
called upon to be ©specially observant of the practical operations
of farmers themselves, at the same time that we endeavor to
collect and diftlise all the valuable explorations of science. But
inasmuch as we have the farmers for our constituency, I propose
in opening the discussions of the present session, by dwelling
upon the general business of managing a farm — that business
which is alone universal — that business which belongs to every
people and varies as their soils and climates and tastes and
necessities vary — that business which lies at the foundation of
all others, and which although pursued sometimes rudely and
sometimes with the utmost skill, never fails to bring with it a
permanent and even prosperity.
It is indeed the chief business of the world. Those nations
which have of necessity adopted it as the great means of sub-
sistence, have endured the most devastating wars, civil and
foreign, with comparative impunity. While the great manu-
facturing and commercial cities and nations of olden times, have
succumbed either to the destruction of internal dissentions or
to the waste of foreign invasion, the agricultural people and
kingdoms have flourished with almost immortal force and
vitality : Tyre and Carthage have hardly loft a trace of their
5*
34 BOARD OF AGRICULTURE.
ancient splendor. Venice has long since sunk. But Egypt still
has her granaries and crops, as when the sons of Jacob sojourned
there to procure food for their improvident tribe. China has
been devoted to agriculture for more centuries than are recorded
in human annals ; and her empire is now opened to reveal the
astonishing wealth of her rural population and the superior
excellence of her farming. France has been borne by her
farmers through revolution after revolution, filled with that
recuperative energy which belongs to that people who cling to
the soil. England owes her stability not to her mills, which
totter before every starving mob which a civil convulsion rouses
to madness, not to her ships dependent upon the prosperity of
others for their activity and profit, not to her banks which
fluctuate with the rise and fall of every military movement or
every financial crisis ; but to her lands, to those homes of a
rural population, to the broad acres groaning with the weight
of crops — the wealth of accurate, systematic, careful and
vigorous agriculture.
In our own land, the large majority of the people, the great
mass of wealth, the largest part of the energy, are devoted to
tilling the earth in some form or another. The number of
farms in our own State is about 36,000— $109,000,000 is
invested in these farms alone, over $3,000,000 in tools and
machinery — $9,600,000 in live stock. The amount invested in
Yarms in this State is usually about one-sixth of the whole
amount invested in manufactures throughout the Union.
I state these striking facts to show you that you belong to a
most important branch of the business of the world — to that
business without which the prosperity of peace would be
blighted, and the adversity of peace would become intolerable —
without which no civil institutions could exist, and which is the
only national support in times of strife. I think you will agree
with me, therefore, that an agricultural population should be
the most successful, the most reliable, the most intelligent, the
most industrious, the most grateful to that kind Providence
whose goodness is always spread before them in abundant and
large luxuriance, the most prudent and careful amidst all these
bounties.
In order to discharge the duty which devolves upon a member,
of this most substantial and least precarious of all branches of
SECRETARY'S REPORT. 35
business, we must understand thoroughly how to manage a
farm.
How to manage a farm ! Surely this is easily answered, I
am told. Any man endowed with ordinary physical faculties
and common intelligence can conduct the business of farming
in New England, you will say. The intricacies of business may
indeed overwhelm a man. The cares of a profession may be
beyond his management. He may be stranded ere his voyage
of life is half over, upon some unknown and unexpected shore.
But to manage a farm, how simple, how easy is the process !
Now is this so ? Are you not aware that as a general rule
our agriculture is lying torpid, in the hyperborean winter of
neglect and indifference. Why, gentlemen, the shop of the
mechanic is looked upon as of more real value to-day than the
acres of the farmer. The young man, who sits day after day at
the window of yonder little edifice, devoted to his journey work,
looks out with a sort of compassion upon him who, less favored,
passes along the road to his daily toil upon the land. Farming
is made subservient to every other calling. It is conducted too
often with less skill than any other calling ; not because it is
easier, less intricate, simpler, but because it is more complicated,
requiring quick perceptions, a steady eye, a ready hand, judg-
ment, foresight, thought, care, management. It is easier, let
me tell you, to make a shoe or a chair, than it is to raise one
hundred bushels of corn to the acre, or to feed a cow profitably
upon the crops from your own land. A gentleman once showed
a capitalist and merchant of Boston, a farm of five hundred
acres, which it was necessary for him to manage, and he
exclaimed that he had got intellectual labor enough before him
to occupy the mind of any one man. He thought his ships, his
stocks and insurance complicated and trying enough — but the
farm more than all. And have you not seen how like magic a
tract of territory would improve year after year under skilful
and well applied labor ? Have you not before your own eyes
the contrast between energetic and active farming, and the more
sluggish operations of too many of your neighbors ?
How to manage a farm, then, is not the simplest and easiest
thing to do — not the simplest and easiest question to answer.
Men buy farms indiscriminately, too often injudiciously, —
careful enough, perhaps, about the price, but careless enough
86 BOARD OF AGRICULTURE.
about the quality and location. There is just as much differ-
ence between a good farm and a poor one, as there is between
a good ship or a good cow and a poor one. It is not every acre
of land in every locality which will pay for good husbandry.
A farm should be chosen, then, with reference to locality,
whether near to or remote from a market ; with reference to
the soil, whether light or heavy, warm or cold, sloping north or
south, wet or dry; with reference to the kind of farming to
which it is adapted ; with reference to the balance it possesses
of land for tillage and land for pasture, of upland and meadow,
of woodland and cleared land.
When purchased, it should be devoted to that kind of farm-
ing to which it is best adapted. It would be idle to undertake
to raise corn on heavy clay soils, or a long continued succession
of hay crops upon sands. No sane man would try to raise beef
within the sound of Boston bells — and no man would establish
a market-garden on the hills of Berkshire. It would be idle to
pasture Shorthorn cattle on Cape Cod, and a waste of pasturage
to keep West Highlanders in the valley of the Connecticut. We
must decide with judgment what our farm is intended for ; and
never, until the promise of seedtime and harvest is broken, will
that farm fail to respond to well-directed care and industry.
On every farm the buildings should be well located — some-
where about the centre of all the farming operations. A hill-
side, with a southerly aspect, will furnish an excellent location
for the barn, with its cellar opening to the south, and its yard
warm and well-protected for cattle. The house should be con-
veniently situated near the barn ; and if it is adorned internally
•with taste and economy, and surrounded externally with trees
and shrubbery judiciously planted, depend upon it, your repu-
tation as a farmer and a Christian will not suffer, neither will
your purse, should you at any time desire to sell your place.
But, at any rate, select a cheerful spot, near the centre of your
tillage lands. No farmer can afford to haul his manure a mile,
when he can just as well use it within a quarter part of that
distance. Begin to cultivate directly about your buildings. If
you liave a lot that is pretty good, yielding a fair crop of hay or
corn close at hand, and one not quite so good more remote, it is
poor economy to try to make the remote land as good as that
close ' hy you — it is good economy to bring the latter to the
SECRETARY'S REPORT. 37
height of cultivation before your begin upon the former. This
can wait for^its turn. Cultivate well, then, the best land directly
about your homestead. And let your good farming radiate as
it were from that centre.
Stock your farm to its utmost capacity, with good animals —
the best are the cheapest — feed well, and enlarge your manure
heap by every means in your power, with compost, with muck,
with loam from the roadsides.
In the selection of animals, too much care cannot bo exer-
cised to avoid those which are not adapted to your farm. There
is no more pitiable object than a half-starved animal, laboring
to supply itself with food on a short pasture, or on herbage not
suited to its wants ; nor is there anything more unprofitable.
If we look about us, we shall find that some breeds or families
of cattle thrive in one locality, others in another. There are
sections of our State, in whicli Shorthorns have for many years
been profitable, and in which tlie introduction of pure blood
of that bfeed has vastly improved the quality of the cattle pre-
viously existing there. There are others in which such attempts
have proved utter failures. In some localities the Ayrshire has
found an abundance of suitable food, and without developing
an overpowering tendency to fatten, has preserved all the milk-
ing qualities for which it is so remarkable in the land of its
birth. And without any well-known breeding, some parts of
New England, some single farms, have succeeded in developing
families of cattle peculiar to themselves, and possessing very
considerable merit, and all the qualities which make them espe-
cially useful in their own location. It is the animal which
thrives well, which is the best choice of every farmer. And
whetlier it be Sliorthorn, or Devon, or Ayrshire, or native, it
6an only be profitable when it possesses its health and strength,
and increases easily in growth on the farm where it is to be fed.
It is not size, but quality, which should be consulted by the
farmer in his choice of animals. On the luxuriant pastures of
the West and. South-west, large animals thrive easily, and small
ones soon develop a tendency to increase their proportions from
one generation to another. But in New England, we can feed
smaller animals more profitably ; they bear our cold winters
better ; they subsist more easily on our short pastures ; they
are usually stronger, more enduring, perform more labor, and
38 BOARD OF AGRICULTURE.
afford meat of a finer and more delicate quality. This is a gen-
eral rule for New England ; although there are a few sections
in which large cattle have been a source of profit to the
producer.
The same rule holds good with regard to sheep and horses ;
and not without compensation. For while the farmer in Massa-
chusetts is obliged to resign large mutton sheep, he receives
more than an equivalent in the heavier fleeces and sweeter mut-
ton of the smaller breeds, which thrive on his short pastures,
and on his coarse winter forage. And while he fails to produce
the heavy draft-horse of Ohio and Pennsylvania, he can boast of
the strength, and endurance, and sagacity, and rapid motion of
that horse of all work which grows nowhere so well as in New
England.
It is especially important that cattle should be furnished with
warm and well-ventilated stables in winter. The cow has not a
rapid circulation, nor an excess of animal heat. She does not
require much exercise. Her muscular system is not largely
developed. And her whole system is better able to discharge
the duty of producing milk, while at rest, than under any other
circumstances. Her normal condition, in a domesticated state,
is repose. She only requires a luxuriant pasture and short
journeys in summer, and warmth, and repose, and good feed in
winter. Slie enjoys confinement ; and she does not enjoy
exposure to cold, nor does she thrive well under it. Animals
should be fed with regularity — three times a day being sufficient.
And they should be provided with some variety of food. Cattle
will thrive, it is true, upon an abundance of sweet, early cut
hay, and on that alone. But they can be more economically
wintered with a change now and then to hay of a poorer qual-
ity, combined with roots, especially if the farm has a supply of
poor hay, and is near a good market for the best.
■For the bedding of cattle, refuse hay, straw, leaves, saw-dust,
sand, &c., can be used. For the health of the animals' skin,
the sweetness and cleanliness of the stable, and the benefit of
the manure, sand is undoubtedly the best material that can be
used for this purpose. A liberal supply of refuse hay, for bed-
•ding, very often produces a cutaneous eruption, which is very
uncomfortable, and injures the appearance of the animal ; and
when mixed with the manure, it requires great care lest it create
SECRETARY'S REPORT. 39
too rapid and destructive fermentation. Sand can be used
freely without any of these bad effects. It prevents, more than
anything else, the collection of lice in the stables ; it keeps the
hair and skin of the cattle in good condition, and makes the
best compost for heavy lands that can be found. For retaining
the moisture, preserving manure from heating, and preparing it
for introduction into cold and clayey soils, it is unequalled.
Cattle should be turned to grass pretty early in the spring, —
before the grass becomes so luxuriant and succulent as to load
their digestive organs with an excess of fermenting juices and
to produce an excessively laxative effect upon the bowels. The
change from one kind of food to another is, in this way, too
great ; and it requires many weeks for the animal to regain the
tone of the stomach, which has been thus disturbed. It may not
be best for the pastures, but it certainly is for the cattle, that
they should be turned upon. them as early in the spring as the
weather will permit. They are thus prepared for the abundant
feed of early summer, and will occupy this time in taking on
fat instead of regaining their health.
Sheep, like cattle, should be wintered with care as regards
feed, and with more exposure. Colts should not be confined in
warm stables, nor allowed any other food than the best hay,
with a few roots, until four years old, if you would have them
hardy and vigorous, and not feeble and weedy. With these few
hints on animals, I pass to the land and crops.
Never try to cultivate a piece of land that is saturated with
water until you have drained away that water, and as you value
your future comfort and profits, do no not be led into using
stone drains when tiles can be furnished within any reasonable
distance.
The crops to be raised depend very much upon your locality.
I suppose grass is the most profitable crop on most lands. At a
distance from the market, and on lightish soils, corn is a good
crop to raise, especially where it can be fed with cheap hay, and
where the farmer must drive a long distance to obtain it if he
does not raise it.
When corn is easily obtained in the market and hay is dear,
roots are a profitable crop. Indeed a moderate supply of roots
will be advantageous to cattle feeders everywhere. I have
raised two successive years nearly six thousand bushels of roots
40 BOARD OF AGllICULTURE.
on about seven and a half acres of land. I do not think that
five hundred bushels of corn would have been of so much ser-
vice to me in feeding my dairy herd and young stock, even
including the fodder which the corn would have produced.
Be not induced to devote too much of your best laud to fruit
trees. Fruit is an uncertain crop, and you have all seen the
old orchard which enriched the father standing in the way of
the sons, who cannot bear to cut down the trees which were
landmarks to their childhood. Plant a few trees and cultivate
them well with bones and lime and ashes, if you want fruit ;
with barnyard manure and muck, if you want leaves, roots
and branches.
Whatever crop you raise, do it well ; and expect to have no
idle days from the 1st day of January to the last of December.
And be sure to farm in such a manner that when you have
used whatever of your crops are necessary for the production
of manure to enrich your farm, you will have a surplus of
marketable produce to sell. And after your farm is pur-
chased and well stocked, let the additional capital invested in
it be well directed labor in making fertilizers and applying
them, and not in patent manures or fancy crops. Tiie life of a
man is too long to allow of his stimulating his lands with guano
and phosphates untij they are exhausted beyond redemption,
and his purse is usually too. short. The life of a man is too
short to allow of his devoting an acre of land throughout one
whole season to a crop which has only a speculator's recommen-
dation and a fancy value.
And above all, keep so far as possible an accurate farm
account, and journal of daily events, as the master of a ship
keeps his log.
As an additional stimulus to good farming, I would recom-
mend the entry of farms for premium, with the various agricul-
tural societies. I have often expressed my high estimate of the
value of the knowledge recorded by careful farmers, and col-
lected by agricultural societies in their reports ; and I know of
nothing more useful than well drawn statements of the general
management of the farm. Some of the most interesting agri-
cultural papers on record are the reviews of farming in the
various shires in England, drawn up by some competent person,
under the auspices of the Royal Agricultural Society. They
SECRETARY'S REPORT. 41
present a summary of the soils, crops, animals, geological form-
ation, resources and general condition of these districts of the
kingdom. In one or two instances, a similar attempt has been
made in this country. The amount of information thus col-
lected has always been great and various ; and it has presented
that sort of knowledge to the farmer, which would enable him
to make a comparison with the agriculture of his own section,
and receive valuable suggestions from it. So of the reports of
farms. The details of the cultivation of a good crop of corn
are always interesting and instructive. The mode of restoring
pasture lands, which has met with a good result, is of value to
every Massachusetts farmer. Tiie rules by which any breed of
cattle or sheep has been developed and improved, are always
attractive and useful. And there is no single operation in agri-
culture, whether of drainage, or tillage, or manuring, which
does not require the most careful investigation, and a record of
which will not secure the attention of every enterprising hus-
bandman. But no one of these involves the whole business of
farming ; and each experiment or operation may have been
carried on in the midst of very poor and very unprofitable
general management. The recital, therefore, of a successful
farming operation as a whole, is what we most need. He who
has learned the best method of bringing a common New
England farm into a profitable condition, and of managing it
well in all its details, and who has recorded it carefully and
accurately, has done a service which cannot be too highly esti-
mated. He lays down the rules by which the most healthful
and generally profitable business is conducted ; by which the
most cheerful homes find a substantial foundation ; by which
true prosperity is most evenly diffused. He presents a picture
which all men admire, and which all would be happy to secure
for themselves.
The advantages which we enjoy for such record as this, in
this day, are very great. The details of farming, when by
hand labor alone the fields were tilled, and when strength and
industry were the sole requisites for good agriculture, were
comparatively simple. But the modern attempts to elevate the
standard of agricultural enterprise and to stimulate agricul-
tural intellect, have rendered the business one of more
interest, and more careful and profound study. The soil, under
6*
42 BOARD OF AGRICULTURE.
the eye of the chemist, becomes something more than a mere
inert mass, about which the conjectures of practical farmers
constitute the whole fund of information. The fermenting heap
of manure which the experienced eye surveys with satisfaction,
and the experienced hand manipulates at just the proper
moment, has been subjected to scientific investigations, which
would explore the liidden treasures of mountains of minerals,
and is a topic upon which the most intricate and elaborate dis-
quisitions may be written. The uses of all artificial manures
have been presented by the scientific for the experiment of the
practical farmer. And the ingenuity of man is exhausting
itself in its endeavors to bring the labor of the farm within the
grasp of accurately constructed machinery. In this way, farm-
ing has become a lesson which the most careful student can
hardly master, and for the thorough comprehension of which
the doors of schools and colleges are now thrown open. It is
under the effect of this new light that the farm l>ecomes so
much a matter of renewed interest. And when we find
included in one grand whole, the best selection «nd manage-
ment of lands, the best mode of stocking, the best construction
of buildings, the best use of manures, the best collection of
machinery, the best methods of tillage, the most careful and
successful application of the most approved forces to the work
of a farm, the best exercise of modern intelligence and culture
in this work, we have before us an example worthyof imita-
tion, and a chapter on farming which we cannot study with too
much care. It is especially important that the agricultural
societies should use every exertion to collect and diffuse this
information. Premiums on farms, premiums on the best man-
aged manure heap, the economy of its construction, and the
greatest amount made with a given number of animals ; pre-
miums on the best collection of agricultural implements actually
used one season on a farm; premiums on the most systematic,
intelligible and accurate statement of the business of a farm,
should be offered, and farmers should be encouraged to
compete for them.
I am aware that some of the information gained in this way
may be somewhat crude and inaccurate. But the true value of
such information cannot long remain concealed, and it serves
as a proof by contrast, much more often than as a means of
SECRETARY'S REPORT. 43
misleading those who are in search of true knowledge. Neither
has it that insidious danger, which attends a false theory pre-
sented with all the tempting and hewildering influence of what
is called scientific authority.
In discussing the question, how to manage a farm, I have
been led on to consider the duties of farmers toward agricul-
tural societies, and the reciprocal obligations of the latter,
because, I have always found that associations of this sort have
always exerted a good influence on the agriculture of the region
in which they are located. There is nothing so contagious as
good farming — unless it be bad. The example set by an indus-
trious and skillful farmer is never lost on the community in
which he lives. As his own labor radiates from his homestead
out over his surroiinding acres, so does his example and influ-
ence spread over the farms about him. And societies composed
of such men, have a wider influence still. They bring together
the thoughts and deeds of a larger section. And when we
remember how isolated a farmer may be, and often is, how
under the confinement of his own business he sees but little of
what is going on about him, it will be easy to appreciate the
value of any association which will enlarge his sphere of obser-
vation, and bring him into closer relations with his neighbors,
whether near or remote. And in the desultory remarks which
I have made upon farm management, I have endeavored to
draw our own attention to th3 diversity of interests, and the
variety of questions which come before us as a Board of Agri-
culture. We have our part to perform in the work of agricul-
tural education now going on. And we shall only perform that
part well, when by diligent collection of facts, and proper
arrangement of them, by the encouragement of practical indus-
try, by the diffusion of practical knowledge, we furnish the
foundation of good farming to every one who will read, and
point to those examples of good husbandry, the following of
which will enable every sagacious and diligent land-owner to
convert his acres into a well-managed farm.
At the conclusion of the address. His Excellency proposed a
vote of thanks to the speaker for his very able and interesting
address, which passed unanimously.
44 BOARD OF AGRICULTURE.
The first question for discussion was then announced as
"Agricultural Education," and on motion of Dr. Loring, Gov-
ernor Andrew was invited to give the Board his views on the
establishment of an agricultural college, and the course of
study to be pursued.
Gov. Andrew. — I do not think I have any views to give upon
the subject of an agricultural college, which would be quite
appropriate at this moment. Those which I most sincerely
entertain have been given officially, heretofore, and have been
pretty well understood by the people of the Commonwealth who
take an interest in the subject, and who care to know what they
are. I do not think that the views which I entertain upon the
subject of an agricultural college are those which, at this
moment, are quite popular in the Commonwealth among the
farmers. My own views, I think, were substantially overruled
by the action of the legislature, and I do not care to say any-
thing with a view to interfere with, or to question, or to criticise
— not even to criticise in a friendly spirit — the tendency which
the management of the subject takes, under the^direction which
has been given to it by the legislation of the Commonwealth.
I think it better that those things which are undertaken, and
which are settled, should have an opportunity to be fairly tried.
I believe in the fair trial of any experiment which it has been
once agreed shall be attempted ; and I think it is well to have
every question closed, at any rate, for the purpose of experi-
ment, at some time ; and, therefore I do not believe that any
views peculiar to myself would be advantageous to be presented
at this moment. I certainly, on this and all other occasions,
feel entire freedom to express a sincere and very earnest interest
in the subject itself, regarded in any of its relations. '
The suliject of agricultural education, — by which I mean, when
I speak of it in connection with a college, not merely instruction
in farming, regarded as a trade, — not merely what I may call
the technical instruction of the practical farmer, but something
a great deal more than that ; because instruction in the
technicalities of farming, regarded as a trade, may be obtained
in every town in the Commonwealth, on the good farms and
from the good farmers. But I believe that all farming will
depreciate and run to seed, just exactly as ] believe that
mechanics and manufactures, and all those pursuits which are
SECRETARY'S REPORT. 45
more commonly regarded as the learned pursuits and profes-
sions would run down and utterly depreciate unless there was
a standard higher than that which is observed and cultivated by
those who, for convenience' sake, we will call the practical men ;
and all practical men, so called, are in danger of committing
this error, of regarding the standard of the practical man as the
standard of ideal excellence. My notion is, that an institution,
grand and generous, intended to be lasting, both in its own
history and in its bearings and ultimate effect, should have in
itself the capacity of presenting an ideal standard, not merely a
practical one. If it does not present something a great deal
better and higher than the best farmer in Massachusetts can
realize and actualize in his annual experimentation on his own
farm, it then falls far below its own proper standard.
Now, the university or college where young men arc taught in
those studies which are preliminary to those in whicli they
engage with a view to the procurement of a particular profes-
sion, must have a staff of professors, it must have a laboratory,
it must have a library, it must have those means and appliances
of teaching and culture which are very far beyond those pos-
sessed by any one of the individual gentlemen who are its
patrons and supporters, and very far beyond those wliich will
be the private possession of any of its best pupils afterwards, or
else it will fall very far below the proper standard of such an
institution. Unless a theological school possess a library more
extended, more various, more rich and fertile than the private
library of the country clergyman, or of the most favored and
wealtliy clergyman of the community, it Avill turn out very
poorly instructed men in the domain of theological science and
learning. Unless the law school possesses much more ample
resources in respect of the particular branches of study which
it is necessary a young man should be taught, than are pos-
sessed by the mass, or even by the most favored individuals of
the profession in Massachusetts, you will have but a very inade-
quate representative of what the poorest and humblest lawyer
would regard as an adequate and appropriate law school of
Massachusetts. So, too, if you please, take the apothecary, or
the most learned, skilful, studious, and scientific physician,
engineer, mechanician, or cultivator of any of the specific
branches of applied science in the community, — any such person,
46 BOARD OF AGRICULTURE.
having any proper sense of the dignity of his own calling, feels
the necessity for the existence, somewhere, of a fountain to
which he may resort, and to which his children may be sent,
for instruction, for books, for machinery, for all the appliances
and means of the laboratory ; and unless some such thing
exist, somewhere in the community, he knows that his own art,
his own science, even in its application to the practical affairs
of life, must run down.
Now, it seems to me, that the time has come when the agri-
culturists of a State as full of all the resources of learning as
Massachusetts is, as full of wealth, as full of intelligent, scientific,
and practical farmers as Massachusetts is, with so high an ideal
standard as the people of Massachusetts possess of all sorts of
excellence in theoretical and practical affairs both, — I think the
time has come when the agriculturists of Massachusetts have a
right themselves to be represented, and their posterity hereafter
to be benefited, by an institution which shall be to agriculture,
regarded as an applied science, or as one of the means of the
application of science (for that would be truer,) what the higher
institutions of science and learning are to the learned profes-
sions, more specifically so called. Everybody knows, who has
observed the matter at all, how far farming, even in the best
communities, lags behind almost all the other arts and profes-
sions of our refined civilization. Farmers themselves have a
great tendency to regard their calling not in any sense as a
profession, but only as a trade, and to regard it as one to be
learned, not scientifically, but empirically. Now, that is the
greatest and most utter nonsense in the world ; for the wealth,
comfort, refinement, and civilization which mankind enjoys rest
at last iipon that solid basis of the land ; and they are all sup-
ported and nurtured (not merely human life, but all its arts
and all its refinements,) at the last, from the cultivated soil ; and
just in proportion as you can elevate agriculture itself, will you
finally elevate, I think, the people of any country. But agri-
culture is not to be elevated in the way you lift a rock, by
prying it mechanically ; it must be elevated just as the human
soul itself aspires and soars towards heaven — by the inspiration
of light and immortal truth ; by the inspiration of that truth
which enlightens and lifts up the individual mind and soul and
permeates and so lifts up the whole community.
SECRETARY'S REPORT. 47
I feel the utmost diffidence in attempting to speak at all upon
a subject of which I am conscious I have only the slightest pos-
sible glimpse. I am no farmer ; I have not the means to be a
farmer ; I have not the time to be one ; I have none of the
opportunities for that sort of enjoyment or culture which are
given to many of the gentlemen who are here before me ; and
therefore I can only lisp what I may call the struggling aspira-
tions of a soul which feels a certain sympathy with a great object,
a grand purpose ; which is grand when considered in connection
with our patriotic as well as our economical duties and interests
as citizens and as men ; and I feel that in so doing, I only com-
mend to other men a line of thought which they can pursue
with a degree of profit and instruction to which I can hope in
no measure to aspire. And if by these few remarks thus unex-
pectedly made, I shall have opened the way to a discussion, I
shall be more than thankful for having had the opportunity to
make them.
C. L. Flint. — It so happens that I have given my views on
this subject at very considerable length in the last Annual
Report, which has been placed, probably, in the liands of almost
every person present ; so that my general views in regard to the
subject of agricultural education in Massachusetts are pretty
well known. But perhaps it may be well to state, very briefly,
what has already been done by the trustees of the Agricultural
College, — for that is a subject which I suppose this question was
intended to embrace.
It is well known, probably, to most persons here present, that
the national government made a grant, two years ago, of public
land scrip to each of the loyal States, in the proportion of 30,000
acres for each representative and senator in Congress, for the
purpose of establishing agricultural colleges in the several
States. That gave Massachusetts 3(30,000 acres of the public
land. By the terms of the Act, one-tenth only of that grant
could be used for the purchase of land for an agricultural col-
lege in each State. That took out 36,000 acres of the scrip.
The legislature .in its wisdom saw fit to grant three-tenths of the
remainder to be spent under the direction of the Massachusetts
Institute of Technology. That is an institute which has been
incorporated in Boston, and which is starting forth under very
favorable circumstances, designed to teach the application of
48 BOARD OF AGRICULTURE.
science to all the mechanical arts ; and it will teach this in the
most thorough and efficient manner, with large means, ample
resources, and the highest scientific talent in the country. The
legislature took the view, that as instruction in the mechanic
arts was the special province of the institute, that part of the
Act which contemplated instruction in the mechanic arts, (for
that was contemplated as well as agriculture,) could be better
carried out by that institute than by an agricultural college,
and therefore provided that three-tenths of the land scrip should
be applied under the direction and supervision of that institute.
That left 216,000 acres to be sold, and the proceeds invested as
a permanent fund, the income alone of which is to be iised for
the support of an agricultural college. The legislature at the
same time appointed a board of trustees for this Agricultural
College, merely as agents to carry out the general policy which
had been adopted by the Commonwealth.
Another condition was, that in the selection of a site for
this Agricultural College, the trustees should either raise them-
selves the sum of $75,000, or the town where the location should
be fixed should raise that amount,*to be applied to the erection
of suitable buildings ; so that, in the selection of a location, the
trustees were limited to those towns which complied with this
condition, otherwise, they would have had to go forward and
raise the $75,000 themselves. It will be seen, therefore, that
the trustees were not at liberty to go into any part of the Com-
monwealth and locate this institution where in their best judg-
ment it would seem to be for the best interests of the institution
and of the Commonwealth that it should be located, but they were
practically limited to those locations which should offer to raise
$75,000 — a sum not easy to be raised in many sections of the
State. One individual in the town of Lexington offered, with
great liberality, $50,000, in cash, on condition that the town
should raise the other $25,000, and the trustees were assured
that that amount would be raised. Then the town of Spring-
field assured the trustees, by their representatives, that if they
saw fit to locate tlie College there, tlie money would be raised ;
and the same pledge was made for Northampton and Amherst.
There were, then, four competitors for that location. The trus-
tees had fixed in their minds, in the main, what they desired in
connection with the location of the College. They found, on
SECRETARY'S REPORT. 49
examination, that the land which was offered to them in Lexing-
ton was mainly adapted to a grass farm, the gentleman owning
it having spent more than a thousand dollars an acre on much
of the land in clearing it of rocks, and in otlier general improve-
ments. , It was not, therefore, so well adapted to the general
purposes of experiment and cultivation as the trustees thought
the farm connected with an agricultural college ought to be.
The places offered them in Springfield were not what the trus-
tees thought desirable ; the farms offered in Northampton were
not fully satisfactory ; and they came to the conclusion, after
considerable examination and deliberation, that so far as the
farm was concerned, that in Amherst was on the whole better
adapted for the purposes of such an institution than the farms
offered in either of the other towns, so that they felt bound, on
the whole, to locate the institution, so far as their power
and choice should go, in the town of Amherst. The town of
Amherst assured the trustees that the $75,000 would be raised,
and it has been raised.
I make this general statement in regard to the subject in order
that those present who may not be familiar with the course
which the matter has taken may understand the pi)sition in
which the trustees of the Agricultural CjoUege were placed.
They were actually limited to these four locations, and they
were obliged to select the one which, in their judgment, appeared
to be the best of the four. It is not necessary to say, that if
there had been a wider range of choice, the result might have
been very different.
I will state in addition, — although I suppose the matter to be
now so far closed that it cannot lead to any practical result — the
plan which it was thought by some would, on the whole, be for
the best interests of the State. It is well known to those present
that there was a large farm, known as the Bussey estate, in West
Roxbury, left to Harvard College, half of the fund left with it
tt) be devoted to the establishment of an agricultural college on
the farm, one quarter to the Law School, and the remaining
quarter to the Divinity School. This farm comprises 300 acres,
is beautifully situated, well walled, and furnished with all the
desirable improvements for a large and elegant farm. The
income from that fund, at the present moment, is from twelve to
fifteen thousand dollars a year. The estate is subject only to a
7*
50 BOARD OF AGRICULTURE.
single life interest, which could, no doubt, be easily purchased.
Now, it was supposed that arrangements could be made with the
corporation of Harvard College, by which tliat farm could be
placed under the control of the present board of trustees of the
Agricultural College, Harvard College reserving to itself only so
much control, by the way of visitation and the appointment of
trustees as to comply with the terms of the will. Now, it will
be seen that in case the agricultural population of the Common-
wealth had the right eventually to decide this question, and if
they could see it for their interest to unite the national fund
with the fund left by Mr. Bussey, there would be an income of
twenty-five or thirty thousand dollars, which might be applied to
the support of this agricultural institution almost immediately.
I think that nobody will say that an annual fund of twenty-
five or thirty thousand dollars would not have made such an
institution a success, because that would have secured the
liighest scientific talent in the world.
But the popular sentiment seemed to be, that the farmer
should have an institution by himself; that there should be an
Agricultural College established for the express purpose of edu-
cating farmers' sons alone ; and the general opinion seemed
to be tliat that institution sliould be isolated, should be devoted,
to a large extent, to practical agriculture, and if practical agri-
culture were to form a large element in it, it would be desirable
that it should be located further inland. There are evidently
two sides to the question. There are some objections, perhaps,
to a location in the immediate neighborhood of a large city, or
another collegiate institution. The question before tlie people
was, really, whether the advantages of that large fund, with the
farm connected with it, and the incidental advantages of the
Institute of Technology and of the institutions in that immediate
neighborhood, were not so great as to make it very important
that the location should be fixed there. I will not attempt to
enter at any length into the discussion of that point, because 1
suppose the question is now fixed beyond any change, whatever
may be the opinion of any one individual in regard to it.
The discussion was continued by E. W. Stebbins, of Deer-
field, Levi Stockbridge, of North Hadley, Alured Homer, of
Brimfield, Velorous Taft, of Upton, C. 0. Perkins, of Becket,
and Dr. Geo. B. Loring, of Salem.
SECRETARY'S REPORT. 51
Gov. Andrew. — Perhaps I may be permitted to recall to the
memory of gentlemen, one important consideration, which -lies
at the bottom of everything which has been said about the
establishment of an Agricultural College, and that is, that no
fund whatever has been provided by the legislature of Massa-
chusetts, nor by any of the people, in addition to the 300,000
acres of land scrip, with the exception of the $75,000 which it
was provided by the Act of the legislature, incorporating the
Agricultural College should be raised by subscription, for the
purpose of erecting the buildings. The Act of Congress donat-
ing the public lands, in the proportion of 30,000 acres to each
member of Congress, senator and representative, for this pur-
pose, provided that no part of the proceeds of the sale thereof,
should be used for the purpose of erecting buildings, but one-
tenth part of the amount donated to each State might be used
for the purchase of land. Before anything could be done,
therefore, some provision had to be made for the procurement
of buildings. The only provision made by the legislature for
this purpose was the one requiring that the sum of $75,000
should be raised by subscription or private donations. That
$75,000 could be procured only by making it for the interest of
the people of a given town or neighborhood to subscribe towards
the establisliment of the institution in their own vicinity, it
being supposed to be advantageous to have it in the neighbor-
hood of any given people who should subscribe the money
necessary for the buildings. There were three or four neigh-
borhoods, therefore, as Mr. Flint has already remarked, who
proffered the requisite sum of $75,000. Now, after the pro-
curement of the land, and the erection of the buildings — so far
as $75,000 will go towards their erection — there is no fund
save the land scrip, three-tenths of which" have been given to
the Institute of Technology, as the proper proportion belonging
to the mechanics and manufacturers, who have an interest in
the fund. After taking out, therefore, the one-tenth for the
procurement of land, and giving three-tenths to the Institute of
Technology, in aid of the cultivation of the sciences and arts
in connection with the study of mechanics and practical manu-
facture, there remains six-tenths of the 360,000 acres as the
only fund of the Agricultural College.
52 BOARD OF AGRICULTURE.
Now, I tried, very early, by correspondence with the governors
of the other States, to effect an arrangement with all the States
by which this land scrip should be reserved, and not thrown
upon the market at a less price than a dollar an acre, believing
that all the public lands available were worth, and would turn
out to be worth, a dollar an acre. You know that $1.25 an
acre is the price at which lands that have been surveyed can be
acquired ; and land warrants representing land which had not
been surveyed could be bought, at tliat time, for about a dollar
an acre. I thought that the people of the States, being inter-
ested in keeping up the price of the lands to a fair minimum,
ought to be willing, at home, in their own States, to purchase
the land scrip, giving their State governments, which were
made, by Act of Congress, the trustees of this school fund, a
fair price like that ; then, after individuals or companies had
purchased the land scrip they would be free to enter it upon
any surveyed lands which were open for entry. The State
could not enter ; she could only sell the scrip.
No State, under the Act of Congress, can be the holder
of any land lying outside of its own borders, and as we have no
public land within our borders, we could enter none. The
State of Massachusetts could sell its land scrip, and the persons
who bought could then enter and occupy the land. I found,
however, very little response from the other States, and within
a very short time after, the State of New York actually put
their land scrip upon the market, and brolvC down the price at
once to eighty cents, and other States began to follow on. Last
winter, I talked with various gentlemen whom I knew, — public-
spirited men, men of means more or less ample, — and various
gentlemen interested in agriculture as practical farmers or
otherwise, who I knew possessed more or less available means,
urging upon them the importance of creating a working fund
for the Agricultural College, and endeavoring to show to them
that it would not involve much outlay of money, considering
the large number of people and the large amount of means
which they controlled who were interested in the subject, if they
would take all our scrip at a reasonable price, or at a price a
little liberal, and take the chance, if necessary, of a small margin
of loss. But there did not appear to be any interest in tliat
particular view of the subject which was intense enougli to
SECRETARY'S REPORT. 53
secure tlie disposition of the scrip in that way. The governor
and council, in pursuance of the authority and duty imposed
upon them by the Act of the legislature, fixed upon eighty
cents an acre a^ the minimum price at which this land scrip
might be sold, and Judge French was appointed a commissioner,
under the Act, and authorized to sell the scrip, subject to the
minimum price of eighty cents an acre, under the general
supervision of a committee of two members of the council, if I
remember right, so that the details of the operation should be
always overlooked by some persons connected with the executive
government of the Commonwealth. Precisely how much has
been sold, I do not recollect ; but I think about 80,000 acres, at
a price of eighty cents an acre, or perhaps a trifle above.
So, gentlemen, you see that when we are discussing this sub-
ject in view of what we would like to have, what we would
prefer, what we would advise, we are, perhaps, necessarily, a
renaote distance ofif from any substantially practical view which
it is possible for the trustees of the Agricultural College to take,
in administering the fund of the institution, under the Act of
the legislature. It has been the object, I believe, of the trustees,
to set the institution in motion as early as they conveniently
could do it ; still, it can never come to anything at all until the
whole or nearly all the land scrip shall have been disposed of ;
and at the present price of eighty cents an acre, it will only
afford a very meagre and beggarly fund from the income of
which to maintain an institution which shall be of any sort of
credit or usefulness to the Commonwealth ; and if any of the
trustees were influenced to vote in favor of establishing it in
the neighborhood of any other institution of learning, from
which they might hope to derive assistance, either by the aid of
its library, its laboratory, or the convenient contiguity of its
scientific professors, whom they might also employ to lecture, it
was probably owing to what they felt to be the exigent necessity
of the case, which admitted no alternative. If the people of
the Commonwealth who have a living interest, a personal
interest, they and their posterity, in such an institution, had
undertaken fo be liberal in a pecuniary way, as well as liberal
in their views concerning the organization and purposes of such
an institution, it might then have been put upon a basis entirely
independent of any suspicion, even, of a connection with any
54 BOARD OF AGRICULTURE.
other institution. But I think that a fund very much larger
than is ordinarily supposed to be necessary would be found
requisite in order to establish an institution which should be of
any great advantage or any credit to the Commen wealth. Had
it been thought proper to have taken measures to put the
Bussey Institute into operation, and to make that fund available
immediately, then the scrip which was given by the United
States to the Commonwealth, might have been easily enough
withheld from the market until it could bring a price propor-
tionate to its real value ; and in the meantime, the institution
might have been set into operation immediately and its fund
enlarged by the aggregations from time to time derivable from
the proceeds of the sales of the land scrip. That, however, was
not the view which met the approbation of the legislature, and,
perhaps, not of the people of the Commonwealth, and it has not
been undertaken. The Bussey Institute, however, will some-
time or other, of necessity, become a living and active institution.
As soon as the life shall terminate of the person who holds the
life estate in the Bussey family, it will then become the duty of
the corporation of Harvard College, either directly, or indirectly
through other persons or societies, to incorporate that institu-
tion. There will be a farm of some three hundred acres, as
Mr. Flint has mentioned, in a very high state of cultivation,
with a great many of tlie means and appliances of elegant as
well as useful, valuable and productive farming, the proceeds of
which will form a fund out of which the lecturers, professors,
and other expenses of an institution of learning can be main-
tained. In the meantime, nothing having been done by that
institution, there is at present no practical work of that sort
open to the farmers of the Commonwealth, as far as I know,
except to do their best to render efficient the institution which
is no'w called the Agricultural College of Massachusetts.
Evening Session. — The Board met according to adjournment,
and Leander Wetherell, Esq., of Boston, delivered a valuable
lecture on Agricultural Botany, which was listened to with
great attention by a large and intelligent audience.
On motion of I)r. Loring, the thanks of the Board were
presented to Mr. Wetherell for his interesting lecture, and the
meeting adjourned to Wednesday morning, at 10 o'clock.
SECRETARY'S REPORT. 55
SECOND DAY.
Wednesday, Dec. 14.
Morning Session. — The Board met at ten o'clock. In the
absence of the president, Dr. Loring was appointed chairman.
On motion of Mr. Perkins, a committee of three was appointed
to consider the subject of the Agricultural College, and report
to-morrow morning, at ten o'clock. The chair announced as
that committee, Messrs. Perkins, Huntington, and Grout.
THE CORN CROP.
The first subject announced for discussion was the corn crop,
and Dr. Hartwell, of Southbridge, was called upon to open
the discussion.
Dr. Hartwell. — I am entirely unprepared to make a speech
upon the subject, but I have some facts in relation to the man-
ner of planting corn, the preparation of the soil, and taking care
of the crop.
No man can obtain a profitable crop of corn unless his soil is
well enriched. It is in vain to plant corn upon poor soil. The
^old method of planting corn was to spread the manure, perhaps
to the extent of twenty cartloads to the acre, over a large sur-
face, and the farmer would usually obtain from twenty-five to
thirty bushels to the acre. The expense of ploughing and
cultivating an acre of corn, aside from putting on the manure,
with the price of labor at a dollar a day, would be $15. The
twenty loads of manure were worth to the farmer about $20.
There was an outlay of $35 ; so that the decision of the farmer
was, that there was no profit in raising corn. But if you will
put on forty loads to the acre, and take good care of the corn,
you may produce from sixty to seventy-five bushels an aci'e.
The cost of plougliing and cultivating will then be $15 an
acre ; for it is no more work to cultivate an acre for seventy-five
bushels, than it is for twenty-five, and the cost of your manure
$40. I should charge one-half the manure to the corn, and the
other half to the succeeding crop, making tlie cost of your crop,
$35 ; and if you have a crop of seventy bushels, at $1 a
bushel, you have then a profit of $35 on that acre. The fodder
will pay, as a general thing, the expense of taking care of the
crop, after the last hoeing. The high-farming system there
shows a profit, and it is the only system which will pay with the
56 BOARD OF AGRICULTURE.
corn crop. If you cannot go into the high-farming system, you
had better abandon tlie crop.
I have said that there should be forty loads of manure to the
acre. .If you have 'but forty loads, put it all on one acre, not
on two ; because the crop will not be much less at any rate,
from one acre than from two, and you add $15 to the expense of
raising it, if you cultivate two acres instead of one.
In regard to the manner of planting, I will say that the dis-
tance I have settled upon is three and a half feet each way. I
think there should be, for every stalk of corn, at least three
square feet. The poorest crop of corn I ever raised was planted
with the hills less than three feet apart. It was well manured.
It was the best-looking corn that I ever saw in the month of
June, but it was so near together that it shaded the ground.
The stalks were very thick, but the ears were very short.
I have been told that in Virginia they only put one kernel
into a "hill, and make the hills six or eight feet apart, and that
a larger crop is secured with only a single kernel in a hill than
with more. I usually put five kernels in a hill, as some of the
seed will not germinate, and the worms will destroy some. At;
the distance of three and one-half feet, if three stalks are left,
it is sufficient. I can then cultivate my corn with the cultivator,
and do it with animal power, which is always cheaper than
hand labor. The cultivator can be run within six inches of the
hill, each way, and then there will be one foot to each hill for
hand hoeing. In putting the kernels into the hill it has been
my practice to put them as near together as possible. Farmers
were formerly in the habit of taking pains to spread the kernels
as much as possible in the hill ; I find they grow better by being
combined. There are several advantages in that combination.
One is, it is much easier to cultivate the ground. The weeds
do not come up among the corn, and you are not obliged to
use your fingers in eradicating them.
Another advantage is, that in hoeing, you can bring the earth
up around all the stalks, without any trouble at all. Then they
endure.the winds much better ; they will stand stronger against
the blast than if they stood at a distance from each other. I
never have observed a stray stalk of corn in a field that pro-
duced a good ear. I consider that corn is a family plant, and
that it will grow better in hills than in drills. Then again, in
SECRETARY'S REPORT. 57
harvesting, the stalks come more directly within reach of the
hand when growing compactly than when scattered over the hill.
The cheapest way of harvesting is to cut up the corn and
stack it whenever it is sufficiently ripe to avoid the danger of
heating in the stack. Another advantage in cutting it up is to
save it from the early frosts. If you have a frost by the 20th
of September, if your corn is not pretty well ripened, it will
be injured ; if it is in stacks, you are very sure to save your
crop. The only objection to that way of harvesthig is the
extra labor of husking, but that is very little. Your corn is
then put up in bundles, and is ready for the pitchfork, and to
be packed away in any part of your barn.
As to the value of corn fodder, I am not very sure about it.
I think, as a general thing, it has been overrated ; but I believe
the fodder from an acre of corn that will produce fifty bushels
is worth quite as much as a ton of English hay, and that will
pay the expense of cutting, carrying to the barn, and packing
away.
With regard to the value of the corn crop, compared with
other products of the farm for feeding, it has been usually
estimated that fifty pounds of corn are worth one hundred
pounds of the best English hay ; but some farmers I have known
have had a disposition to abandon corn and go into barley,
thinking that they would save labor and get about as much
profit as they could from corn. I think they will abandon that
idea. I think the corn crop one of the best crops in New
England ; we know it is the great crop of the nation, and I
think that any New England farmer who abandons that crop
will be in a situation to impoverish his land.
Rev. Mr. Dean. — Do you use phosphate, ashes, or plaster ?
Dr. Hartwell. — No, sir, I have only used stable manure, and
that upon the surface, for the reason that I have had plenty of
manure for my land, and have not, therefore, used any of the
stimulating manures. For a great many years I have put no
manure in the hills. If the land is warm and well manured at
the rate of forty loads to the acre, it will need noner The
reason I have not put any manure in the hills is on account of
the expense and labor of doing it. It would be no injury to
the crop, and it might forward it in the month of June. But if
58 BOARD OF AGRICULTURE.
your land is warm there is no danger that the crop will not
come forward in season.
Rev. Mr. Dean. — Do you raise pumpkins or flat English
turnips with your corn ?
Dr. Hartwell. — No, sir, I have planted pumpkins, but I
would as lief have weeds. I don't believe in putting any other
crop with the corn. I plough my land in the fall, smooth
over the surface, and then apply my manure ; and I usually
work it in deep with a horse-plough. I spread the manure from
the cart, and do not tip it up in heaps, because it is impossible
to spread it evenly in that way. A load of manure is sufficient
to spread over four square yards. Measure off that distance,
set down stakes, and let your man spread his load over that
space, and you will hit it. I have tried spreading the inanure
on the ground in the fall and leaving it until spring, but I
would not, as a general thing, advise it. If you put it on a
westerly declivity it will blow away ; but if you have a piece of
land that is protected by woods or that has an eastern or south-
eastern declivity, there is no harm in putting on your manure
in the fall. There was a premium offered by our society for
the best acre of corn. I measured off one acre and weighed
the crop after it was husked, and it averaged eighty pounds to
the bushel in the cob, and the acre produced a fraction over
one hundred bushels, for which they gave me the premium, $18.
HoLLis TiDD, of New Braintree. — Was your land green-sward
or old soil ?
Dr. Hartwell. — This last year it was green-sward that had
been mowed for some four years. It was turned over, thoroughly
smoothed down, and the manure spread over it. To do this
it is necessary to keep a stock of manure one year ahead. I
think manure grows better by keeping. I think it is better to
plough in the fall than in the spring.
Mr. Perkins. — What time in the fall do you prefer to plough ?
Does it make any difference whether it is the first of September
or the latter part of November ?
Dr. Hartwell. — I think September is the best ; but farmers
must do as they can. They cannot always do the work of the
farm at the time they ought to. If I had my choice I should
do it in September, but October or November will answer the
purpose.
SECRETARY'S REPORT. 59
E. W. Bull, of Concord. — One of the most successful farmers
in Concord, who grows the largest crop of corn to the acre of any
man in town, but whose soil is rather low and moist, lets the grass
grow until very nearly the first of June ; certainly until the
season is warm and the grass has grown considerably. He
hauls on not less than fifty loads to the acre, which is partly
fermented, but not wholly, and ploughs it under immediately
with a plough which gives a furrow of about eight inches. He
harrows the surface over thoroughly and plants the corn with a
little ripe compost in the hill to start its roots quickly. The
season is warm, the ground is warm, the manure is warm, and
the ground is soon covered with so many stalks that I think the
doctor would say he would have no crop, and yet he counts
positively and confidently upon fifty or sixty bushels, and
is not disappointed, and his following crops are all so much the
better for it. If the corn crop did not pay, in a money sense,
still it is a most important fallow crop ; and since we must have
a fallow crop, I think it is particularly fortunate that we have
one that gives us breadstuffs. The English farmer must fallow
with the turnip, but we have a fallow crop that gives us some-
times fifty bushels to the acre.
Harrison Garfield, of Lee. — If I wanted to raise an extra-
ordinary crop of corn for one year, I should certainly pursue
the same method that the doctor does ; but it is a question in
my mind whether manure put on in that way will serve the
best interests of the farmer in a succession of years. My
experience has been that it is best not to leave the manure
exposed to the rains and to evaporation any longer than is
necessary. I have practised putting it on in the spring so tliat
I could retain the fertilizing property of the manure, not only
for the crop I put in at present, but for future crops. I should
be glad to have gentlemen here, who have had a larger experi-
ence than I have, express their views in relation to that point.
Dr. Hartwell. — I can state one fact that will perhaps throw
some light upon the question. Several years ago I ploughed an
acre and a half in the fall in the manner I have described ; I
proposed to make a nursery upon half of it, and I put on the
manure and spread it upon the surface of the soil, but the
frosts followed so soon that I was not able to work it in. I
changed my mind in relation to planting a nursery, and in the
60 BOARD OF AGRICULTURE.
spring I spread an equal quantity of manure over the remainder
of the land, and planted it all with corn. Where the manure
was put on in the fall the corn was a great deal the best. I
could see it in the rows, contrary to my expectation, for I
expected that I had lost something on the manure. The next
year the land was sowed with oats, and I could see the line
where that manure came that I put on in the fall. Next year
it was sown to grass, and that line was seen three years
afterwards. I am not sure that there were not circumstances
connected with it that I was not aware of, but that was the
fact as it showed itself to my observation at the time. I tried
it one year afterwards, but it was on a piece of land over which
a great deal of water passed, and I lost some portion of the
manure by the wash. For that reason I abandoned it ; and, as
I told you, for general use I would not recommend it. It is
only under peculiar circumstances, where your soil is protected
from winds and washes that it will answer to leave tbe manure
upon the surface.
Rev. Mr. Dean. — I suppose, in discussing the question of the
corn crop, it is necessary not only to look at the immediate
results, but at the general results to the farm. In Orange
County, New York, where I was brought up, they used to put
on the manure in the spring ; but the most successful farmers
argue of late that corn is a very exhausting crop, and that there
is a difficulty after the rotation is complete, the grass running
out in a little while ; so that I find now that the most successful
farmers do not put on all their manure with the corn ; they
manure to get rather below a fair crop than otherwise, and
reserve a large part of their manure to put on when they put in
their wheat, and then they get a very fine field of grass, and
manure for the next rotation of corn, oats, &c. They manure
with the clover. I should like to know whether Massachusetts
farmers have any experience in that direction.
Dr. Hartwell. — So far as I know, they have not. They
have experience in putting manure on grass lands, and many
of them like the process. But with regard to the system I
have spoken of, the farmers are not in a situation to practise it.
There are no farmers in our section that I know of who have
retained a year's stock of manure. They would be under the
-necessity of losing one year's crop of corn to get into the
SECRETARY'S REPORT. 61
system. For that reason they usually put on in the spring the
manure that has been made during the winter. But I certainly
would recommend to every farmer who raises corn, to have one
year's stock of manure on hand, if he can possibly get into that
situation.
Professor Agassiz. — I have no opinion to express concerning
the mode of applying manure, but I would suggest some experi-
ments which may be beneficial in settling the question I have
heard discussed. The object of manuring the land is no
doubt to furnish food to the plants. Now I would like to know
what is the extent of the rootlets which grow from a stalk of
corn — how deep do they go and how widely do they spread ?
If your manure is to be beneficial at all it must penetrate to the
extent to which the rootlets of the plant extend, and at the
time those rootlets are most active. Therefore experiments
ought to be made by which to ascertain how deep the effect of
the manure is felt in the land after a certain time from the
period when it is put on the surface. Unless you know that,
you are all the time working in the dark ; and I am not aware,
from the observations I have heard here, that it is positively
known to the growers of corn in how much time the roots grow
to such a depth, and such a depth, from each stalk, and how far,
deeper and wider they extend in successive weeks or months,
and how far the manure follows that growth, so as to furnish at
every stage the proper nourishment to the corn. That, I
believe, is one of the most interesting desiderata to the agricul-
turist,— to ascertain at what rate and what extent the manure
is carried down into the ground. We ought to know that for
every crop.
Dr. Hartwell. — I wish to say, in reply to the question of
Professor Agassiz, that I know they spread over every inch of
the soil ; with regard to the depth I am not able to say. "With
regard to manuring upon the surface I will mention one fact.
Two years ago I left a large heap of manure upon the surface
of a lot before I ploughed it. It lay there about one year.
When I spread this manure upon the land, knowing that where
the heap lay the eartli would be so highly charged-with salts that
it would be difficult to get a crop, I ordered my man to take off
four inches of the surface and spread it over the rest of the
field. That was a year ago this fall, for last year's crop. I
62 BOARD OF AGRICULTURE.
planted the field with corn. Where this heap had stood the
corn looked burnt, and when the dry time came on, the
surface of that ground, four inches below where the manure
lay, was covered with nitre. You will find that it will permeate
the soil for as much as eight or ten inches. The soil seems
to have a wonderful affinity for the salts of manure. You will
find that water from a manure heap, running over a ploughed
field, will lose all its coloring in running a few rods, and be
perfectly white. Nature always manures upon the surface. It
is a question whether the benefit of manure will not always be
as great placed upon the surface as in any other position. I
have seen manure spread upon a gravelly knoll in a pasture,
and left upon the surface of the land, and the result was most
excellent.
Mr. Grout. — I rise for the purpose of putting an inquiry in
regard to the basis we are working upon. "We are treating of
soils for the production of corn. To get that corn we are
obliged, here in New England, to use manures ; and the appli-
cation of manures is of course a very important item in the
case, and, in connection with it, the kind of manures to be used
on different soils. I should be glad to hear from Dr. Hartwell
and Mr. Bull the character of the soil in the cases to which
they referred. Professor Agassiz suggests a questit)n in regard
to the depth to which the roots of corn penetrate. I have
examined that matter myself, and I have found the roots about
two inches under the surface. They do not run to a very great
depth. They need the heat of the sun, and sometimes the
moisture of the dews will affect the roots of the corn. They
perfectly permeate the whole surface ; they reach into every
particle of manure that is applied there. I once, in cultivating
some potatoes, found that the roots ran nearly across the row.
Thinking it would injure the crop to hoe them, I left three or
four rows to see what the effect would be, and I don't think I
had half as many in those rows as where I hoed.
Now, the application of manure, unless we know the kinds of
soil as well as the season in which it is to be applied, is like
prescribing the same kind of medicine for all sorts of diseases.
We cannot safely calculate upon the effect. I think we ought
to understand the character and composition of the soil, and
what kind of manure is required for different soils. ' Unless we
SECRETARY'S REPORT. 63
know this, we cannot tell whether forty loads to the acre will
produce sixty bushels of corn, or more or less ; or whether
twenty loads will not produce fifty or sixty bushels to the acre.
I have put on twenty-five loads to the acre, and have got over
seventy bushels ; and I have applied more than that sometimes,
and have not got near so much as that — say forty bushels to
the acre. Now, there is a difference in seasons about that, and
there may be a difference in manures that we don't know about,
as well as a difference in the soil. I think all these fundamental
facts should be studied, that we may have more basis to go upon.
Prof. Agassiz. — The observations which have just been made
show that we are in ignorance of one fact which is of the utmost
importance — the depth to which rootlets grow and from which
they receive nourishment. I was quite astonished to hear the
gentleman's statement that they go down only two or three
inches. I believe they go down several feet. Now, how is that
fact to be ascertained ? It is not an easy matter. It cannot be
ascertained by tearing the corn from the ground. The only
way is to wash the earth away with water, using no violence
whatever. If that be done, I think it will be found that the
network of rootlets, which is attached to every plant of corn, has
a most extensive system of ramifications ; and to what extent
that goes, and what the plant can receive from these different
rootlets, are essential elements in the consideration of this
question.
Remarks have been made concerning manuring at the sur-
face as being nature's mode of manuring. No doubt it is ; but
let us see to what depth this manure is carried in the course of
years. Nature is every year manuring the land, by the fall of
the leaf and the decay of the plants growing at the surface ; but
that manure, once at thq surface, is all the time sinking down.
Every new layer brings the preceding lower and lower down
and we ought to know positively to what depth all that is car-
ried. I have looked for that information wherever I could, and
I don't think we have any information of that kind. It would
be well if we began to collect it systematically, and every
contribution in that direction, will, no doubt, be a benefit to
agriculture.
The subject was then laid upon the table, and the next topic
for consideration was a lecture on
64 BOARD OF AGRICULTURE.
GRAPE CULTURE, BY E. W. BULL, OP CONCORD.
I shall give a familiar talk upon grape culture, and try to
show that it may be successfully introduced into New England,
and counted upon as a constant and sure crop as confidently,
and even more confidently than your apple crop. Careful
inquiries instituted by Colonel Wilder, some years since, showed
tliat the value of the fruit crop of Massachusetts was not less
than two millions of dollars. Yet our fruit crop is rather uncer-
tain. Pears only succeed constantly in sheltered locations and
in a soil properly adapted to them. Apples, even, are failing,
as our apple growers complain, constantly, more and more every
year. From the ravages of insects, the vicissitudes of the sea-
sons, and, possibly, as a committee of this Board thought they
found, some years since, from neglect of the proper modes of
culture — from imperfect manipulations in the nursery — in short,
from various causes, the apple seems to be less certain than
formerly, and our fruit crop less certain as a matter of income ;
and if it ceases to be profitable, it must be given up. A friend
of mine, whom I have known for years, who has four acres of
as handsome apple trees as you can find in Massachusetts, told
me the other day, that after fourteen years of cultivation, during
the whole of which time they have been of bearing size, and
have borne occasionally, he is about to cut them down, because
they do not, on the whole, cover the actual expense of cultiva-
tion ; and he comes to me to see whether the grape cannot be
grown there, and whether, if so, it will pay.
The grape is, perhaps, the most ancient fruit known to man.
In periods of the most remote antiquity, ever ^nce there has
been any historic record of fruit, there has been a record of
grape culture ; and in all ages, it has been considered the type
of human felicity to sit under the grape in peace and security.
There would not be, I think, this uniform testimony to the early
and continued cultivation of the grape, on the part of all writers,
in all ages, had it not been considered, in all times, the best
fruit grown — and that is my opinion. I am, perhaps, something
of an enthusiast in the culture of the grape. I speak to you
of it out of my experience of more than twenty-five years. If I
speak in the first person singular so often as to lay myself open
to the charge of egotism, I beg you will consider that I do it.
SECRETARY'S REPORT. 65
not because I do not know it lays me open to that charge, but
to avoid too much circumlocution, and to save time, of which, I
have no doubt, I shall consume too much.
I said that grape culture is possible in Massachusetts. I do
not mean by that, that all grapes can be grown here ; but I do
mean, that grapes have always been here since the hrst white
man set his foot upon the soil of Massachusetts, when he found
the grape so abundant that he christened the country, " Vine-
land." We had, then, only to get out of this native stock,
which was adapted to our climate, and perfectly hardy, a seed-
ling of good quality ; we had only to break it of its old habits,
in short, to make it edible, to attain the object we had in view.
I do not doubt that this idea occurred to many before I took it
up. The intelligent horticulturist saw it would be the work of
a lifetimie, and we are a people impatient of delays ; we want
our results swiftly ; and, therefore, although they saw it to be
possible, and might recommend it to others, they forbore to pro-
ceed themselves with a course of breeding which involved the
work of a lifetime, and perhaps more. In my own case, after
having grown grapes of all kinds in my garden in Boston, with
great success, I found myself unable to grow them on a sunny
slope where I felt sure I could do so.- What was I to do ? I
loved the grape, and must have it. I might go to Pennsylvania
and grow grapes, but I could not take Massachusetts with me,
and I wanted Massachusetts, and I wanted the grape too. So I
set about raising seedlings from this native stock, and in the
second generation, I got a good grape ; and from that grape I
have seedlings still better ; and from them again, I have seed-
lings growing ; and I think I have established the fact that the
time will come when out of these successive reproductions, you
will have grapes as good as you desire, — grapes as good, perhaps,
as those of any part of the world, — hardy, perfectly adapted to
our climate, and which may be grown in field culture, as you
grow any other crop ; for I have found the grape more certain
and more constant than any other fruit crop, not excepting even
the hardy currant of the garden. For twelve years, I have had
the grape ripen its crop perfectly every successive year. Four
years ago, on the last day of September, we had the thermometer
at twenty degrees, freezing all the young wood, and all the
buds which were immature, but still, under these most unfav-
9*
6Q BOARD OF AGRICULTURE.
orable circumstances, which had not occurred for thirty-six
years before, I had a remunerating crop of grapes.
But although the hardy grapes may be grown here without
difficulty, still, they prefer certain kinds of soil, they need cer-
tain aspects, and certain conditions of growth, without which
they will not come to perfection, without which they will not be
of good quality. And let me say, in passing, that this accounts,
probably, for the diverse opinions in regard to our new grapes,
which are planted every year by various horticulturists, and
cultivated with equal skill, as far as cultivation goes, but in
regard to which the conditions necessary to the successful cul-
ture of the grape have not, in all cases, been present ; so that
in one instance, where these conditions are present, the grape
comes up to its type, and in the other falls behind it, as to time
of ripening, and of course, as to quality. The soil should be
light and warm, so that the tender roots of the grape may per-
meate it easily. It does not seem to be necessary in my expe-
rience— although it runs counter to my former belief, and
although it runs contrary to all the instructions of the books —
that the soil should be rich. We are told to trench the ground
and enrich it abundantly, and that nitrogenous and concentrated
manures are necessary and best for the grape. It is within my
knowledge, that a certain eminent grape-grower trenched his
soil thirty inches, and put upon an acre of land no less than a
thousand loads of manure. I think the size of the load was not
stated, but a thousand, even of the smallest loads, would be an
excessive quantity. On that soil, Delawares were grown six
feet in length in a season, from one year vines. This seems to
run counter to my experience, that grapes do not need a rich
soil ; but I speak of the hardy grapes that we have here. The
Delaware is a slow-growing grape. It has been traced to the
garden of Mr. Prevost, in Philadelphia, a gentleman who grew
foreign grapes ; and many German cultivators believe it to be a
seedling of the Traminer, a German grape, growing there. It
requires high feeding ; it grows slowly ; it is a child of another
country, and requires more nourishment and feeding than our
own more robust progeny. This is true of the foreign grape
generally. If you undertake to grow it here, you must enrich
the ground very much, so as to make some sort of compensation
for the long season which it had in its own country of five months,
SECRETAEY'S REPORT. 67
as compared with our shorter season of less than four. A light
corn soil, enriched as' if for corn — that is to say, forty loads to
the acre, (more or less,) compost, such as a farmer would give
to it for corn, to promote the formation of the roots of the young
plant, and establish it — I have found to be the best. After that,
no barnyard manures are required, only mineral manures.
Indeed, I have given up, from the necessity of the case, in the
light of my long experience, the use of barnyard manures, and
give only potashes, which are indispensable, in tlie form of wood
ashes, and sulphur, which I have found to be also indispensable
to the perfect health of the grape. It is a sort of medicine for
all those diseases incident to the grape, growing out of bad sub-
stances in the soil, or growing out of atmospheric influences or
any other. I apply it in the form of gypsum, which is nearly
one-half sulphur. Phosphate of lime is also indispensable.
This promotes the formation of roots more than any other
manure, except thoroughly decomposed cow manure, which is
in some sort a substitute for bone dust, containing as it does,
considerable phosphate of lime, and promoting the formation of
roots, as it does, certainly in the same way and to the same
extent that the phosphate of lime does.
Let me say that the quantity of manure I should apply to the
acre, after the vines get to bearing, would be twenty bushels of
wood ashes, twenty bushels of fine bone dust, and five bushels
of plaster of Paris — gypsum — sown broadcast, and worked in
lightly. Once in three years, that application will be sufficient
for any vineyard which is thrifty and of hardy grapes, or for any
vineyard well established, to keep it up to a full crop, and to
make as much wood as a grape-vine ought to make ; which
wood will be solid and strong, and consequently hardy, and
capable of enduring our winters.
Although the soil should be perfectly adapted to the grape,
you still want a good aspect. A south aspect is by universal
consent the best. The grape is a child of the sun, and it wants
heat — heat at the root and heat at the top. I have seen the
thermometer at one hundred and four degrees, and the soil at
one hundred and thirty degrees, when the thermometer was
inse^rted in the sandy loam, but I have never yet seen a day so
hot that it curled a leaf of the grape or seemed to have the
slightest pernicious effect upon it ; on the contrary, it seemed
68 BOARD OF AGRICULTURE.
to enjoy it. I have never seen a day so hot that the grape
did not seem to thrive all the better for that heat. All cannot
have a south aspect, however ; and the next best aspect would
be, in my experience, south-west ; next, south-east ; next, west ;
and, lastly, east. This runs counter to the teaching of the
books, and to the opinions of many horticulturists. When some
eminent grape-growers came to my house, and saw a grape
growing in a west aspect, they said they wondered it throve
there at all ; but I invited their attention to another vine, of
the same age, growing on the east side, and that on the west
side, although the characteristics of the soil were less favorable,
was much the best. And it seems to me there is a good reason
for this. In the autumn, when the atmosphere cools in the
night, the afternoon sun lies on the west side until the last
moment, and that afternoon sun is of great service in carrying
the grape through the night, without interrupting the flow of its
juices. Climate is somewhat within your control, in this mat>
ter of aspect. A south aspect, with surrounding woods, will so
modify an otherwise rugged and severe climate as to be equal to
a degree or two of latitude ; for although the grape does not
need the protection of the woods against the winter winds, it
does need all the heat it can get, as I said before ; and a vine-
yard planted near woods, which interjcept the rapid currents of
air which carry away the heat, you can see would be a great
deal warmer than if lying in an open space. So that climate
may be modified by patches of trees, and the grapes have a pro-
tection equal to covering up in winter, or to a degree or two of
latitude ; and many grapes which are not hardy enough for field
culture, but of excellent quality, may be grown there with suc-
cess, and so we may increase the variety of grapes we grow, and
have some grapes, with that degree of protection, which otherwise
we could not have. Protection, although by some of our grape-
growers believed to be indispensable, even to our hardy grape,
implies so much labor and expense, and at a time when every
farmer is so busy that he will be pretty sure to neglect it, or not
be able to give it to the vines, would be such a drawback to the
field culture of the grape, that it would, probably, never prevail
largely in Massachusetts, where labor is so costly. I know that
in Europe, in some districts, near the north line of grape culture,
they do take down and protect their vines in winter. But labor
SECRETARY'S REPORT. 69
is cheap, the grape interest is the ruling interest, the most pro-
fitable interest, and they think they can afford to do it, and they
do do it; but our people, I think, would not. Now, in my
judgment, protection is never needed where a hardy grape is
used, and where it is properly cultivated, in which case its wood
will be ripe and solid and capable of enduring the winter better
than in the other case.
And what is proper cultivation ? Simply that the vine shall
be kept in perfect healtli, and not pushed so fast with stimulat-
ing manures that the tissues of the wood will be loose, spongy,
and in short, unripe. I have seen the shoots of an oak tree,
which stopped growing in the spring, from drought, but started
again in August, with the late rains, and grew long, killed by
the severe winter frosts, showing that even the hardiest of plants
must have its wood well ripened to endure the winter. Some
grapes which are believed to be tender are positively hardy when
grown in this way ; but almost everybody grows the grape with
so much stimulating manure that the wood is not thoroughly
ripe and hard, and so those which are by nature a little tender,
die utterly, and even those which are hardy, with proper cul-
ture, lose some of their wood. You can see, I think, that with
this method of cultivation which I- have suggested, the grape
would not be likely to make too much wood. If it made no
more than half a yard, or twelve inches of wood — thoroughly
well ripened wood — with well developed buds, you might be
content. But you would find, in growing the grape, or any-
thing, indeed, that the rule for pruning would lie in this : that
if you have great power at the root, you must have a corres-
ponding extension of top. There must be a proper -balance
between the root and the top. If there be too much top, the
growth will be meagre, and the crop meagre. The remedy
would be, of course, to cut back severely. But if, on the other
hand, your grape was growing with such luxuriance as to get
out of hand and crowd the trellis where you did not want it,
and you kept cutting it. back severely, the difficulty would only
be continued from year to year, and you would have wood, not
fruit. So it happens that some of the most prolific vines we
have, do not, under some circumstances, bear ; but on inquiring,
you will usually find that they have grown with such vigor,
t
70 BOARD OF AGRICULTURE.
they have made such an enormous quantity of wood, that the
formation of fruit buds was impossible.
But I did not mean to speak of pruning immediately. I was
speaking of planting, a subject on which, it seems to me, to be
important that we should talk plainly, because so many arc
planting grapes, and so many are likely to be misled by the old
practice, and by the written instructions copied from books, in
regard to trenching, manuring, and excessive feeding, which
would probably cheat them of success instead of giving them
success.
In planting the grape, as I said before, in regard to manure,
I should prepare the land as if for corn. I should plant in
rows north and south ; the rows ten feet apart, the vines six feet
apart in the row, so that you would have wide rows to work in
with your plough, your cultivator, and your cart for gathering
the crop ; and, the plants being six feet apart, you have sixty
square feet for each plant, or about seven hundred and twenty-
six plants to the acre. Planted at this distance, strong growing
vines will be close enough. I have tried all the various distances
recommended by the books, and I find that our strong growing,
native stock requires more room than the foreign grapes. Half
a rod each way, which has been recommended, would be a very
good distance; but the method of placing the rows ten feet
apart, thus facilitating and cheapening the culture, seems to me
to be better, and therefore I adopt it. There is another reason
for this mode of planting, and that is, that the sun may lie upon
the ground between the rows and heat the earth down to the
deepest roots, in the middle of the day. If your espalier is
six feet high, you will be able to gather your grapes, by this
method, very easily ; and perhaps it is the best method.
When you plant, keep in view the fact that the grape wants
heat at the root, and that, if put too deeply into the soil, they
will not get that heat at the root which they need ; and that
other fact, that in dry soil they must not be so near the surface
as to cause them to suffer from the summer drought. You will
plant them about six inches deep. The roots should be spread
in every direction carefully, and never left crossing each other ;
for if they cross each other the sap is intercepted, and the roots
do not perform their functions for the grapes. Having planted
them and covered them carefully* with the hoe, I should not
SECRETARY'S REPORT. 71
touch them again that season, any further than to keep down
the weeds in the row. The reason for this is plain. All the
leaves which these branches contain help to make roots, do
make roots. The more foliage you have on your vine, the more
root you will have at the end of the season ; and since you will
in any event prune back closely at the end of the first year, I
would by no means pinch the growing shoots in the summer.
Your vine will then be left to run about upon the ground, and
to be blown about by the wind ; for every movement of the
branch facilitates the vegetable processes going on in the plant,
as has been found by experience ; and, in fact, writers on horti-
culture, in the magazines of this day, recommend this very
mode, which I have used for ten or twelve years, as the result of
my experience, and which I recommend to you as not only the
best way, but the one involving the least trouble.
When you have got to the end of the first year, you want to
begin to shape the vine,'and therefore you cut it back to a
single stem, which you leave of greater or less length, accord-
ing to the strength of the stem. It should be not less than
twelve or fifteen inches from the ground, to facilitate culture
about the grape, the hoeing, weeding, &c. If you train upon
the espalier, your first wire will be eighteen or twenty inches
from the earth, which is low enough to lay out the lower or first
branches for fruiting ; and therefore you will leave your main
stem of that height. For training upon poles, twelve inches will
be enough. As this is always to be the main stem of the grape,
no other growth can be allowed from the bottom. From that
main stem you train your branches. If you prefer training on
poles, then two systems of pruning occur to you, the renewal
system and spur pruning. If spur pruning is to be adopted,
one pole is sufficient ; if the renewal system, two poles are
required, and you must train the wood alternately on one pole
and the other. The objection to the renewal system, in my
mind, is this : that on the long shoot, which you will leave,
although it may be covered with well-ripened buds, you are' not
sure of getting good bunches of fruit throughout the whole
length. The sap rushes to the end of the upright branch, and
pushes the buds there first. The bunches are largest there ;
the bunches below that point start later. I am aware that
when the root is large, and the vine has attained its utmost
72 BOARD OF AGRICULTURE.
vigor, it will have sufficient strength to push all these huds, and
give you hunches of equal size ; but in the early period, for
three, four or five years, you will find in the renewal system,
the best bunches at the .top, and the meagre and less valuable
on the lower part of the stem, therefore I prefer spur pruning.
Spur pruning means leaving the shoots of the current year in
short spurs of three or four eyes, on each side of the old wood
for the next year's bearing ; cutting out alternate spurs to one
eye, to make new wood for the next year's bearing ; when you
will cut back those spurs which have borne fruit this year to
one eye to make bearing spurs for the next year, thus keeping all
your spurs near to the old wood and avoiding unsightly stubs.
It is the easiest mode of cultivating and pruning ; when once
well established, an intelligent boy, fourteen years old, can
prune your vineyard as well as yourself. Usually, the fruit
ripens a little earlier on the spur ; and there seems to be a good
reason for that, because you have cut away all but three eyes,
and they were the eyes which were first pruned, and are, there-
fore, the most solid and well-ripened ; and being nearer the
main stem, the sap does not have to traverse so long an extent
of wood to reach the fruit. You would, I think, in the summer,
find it profitable to pinch excessive growth ; and it would be a
safe rule to pinch whenever a shoot had grown, say twelve
inches, perhaps sooner with short-jointed wood ; and wood will
be shorter or longer jointed, according as the stimulus at the
root pushes that wood with more or less vigor. If you have
just the right quantity of root to support the vine, the wood
will be short-jointed ; it will have its eyes three or four inches
apart ; if you feed it excessively, the joints may be twelve inches
apart. The long joint is objectionable. It shows you have
pushed your wood too fast, the buds are not so strong and the
wood not so solid. You would find, therefore, in spur pruning
the advantage of having the first ripened wood and the first
developed buds.
As to the time of pruning, November is the best season.
Having, at the end of the first year, got your main stem estab-
lished, you would lead, if in pole culture, one stem from it, if
in trellis culture, two stems, which would be tied on to the
espalier diagonally, at an angle of forty-five degrees say, and
pinched occasionally, that the wood might be made robust aild
SECRETARY'S REPORT. 73
solid. No matter if your grape does not grow — and some kinds
will not — more than twelve inches in a season, still I would
pinch the terminal bud, that tlic others might be consolidated
and made robust. With rapid-growing vines, six feet of wood
would be made, perhaps ; still, you would pinch at every twelve
inches, so as to make sure of solid wood, and strong, well-devel-
oped buds. This brings you to the third year. In the third
year, you will cut back these laterals, these diagonal arms, to a
strong bud, though it take you back very near their base ; for
these arms are to remain in the future, and be the vine which
may continue, perhaps, for a century, if properly cared for ; for
the grape is one of the longest-lived of all fruits, if cultivated
with care. There are specimens in this country with a diameter
of trunk of twenty-four inches, and "which were believed by
Downing to be two thousand years old. You want to proceed,
therefore, as if your vine were to remain there forever ; you
want to make that wood solid and enduring; and, therefore,
you will cut back these diagonal arms at the end of the first
year of their growth to a strong bud and to solid wood, though
it take you very near their base. The next year, being the
third year from planting, the spur which you have left will give
you some fruit. You will have seen, probably, that your vines
are strong, well established, and capable of carrying a crop — a
light crop — the first crop. If they are weak, for any reason,
they should not be cropped that year, or ever, until they get
well established. But if well established the third year, you
may take your first crop ; and you may safely take, with the
Concord, for instance — which is the grape I have planted in
field culture, five pounds of grapes to the vine. The spurs will
usually set three bunches ; pinch the growing wood at the first
bud beyond the last bunch, and cut away one or two of the
bunches, leaving the strongest, so that the vine may not carry
more than five pounds. At the autumn pruning cut back the
first spur to three eyes, the second and third to one eye each,
and the fourth spur, which will be opposite to the first, to three
eyes. The spurs left with one eye each make your bearing
wood of next year. The spurs of three eyes, which bear this
year, will be cut back, at the end of the season, to one eye, to
make bearhig wood the next year for successive fruiting. By
10*
74 BOAKD OF AGRICULTURE.
this method you annually alternate your spurs and keep the
bearing wood close to the main stem.
If, for any reason, your spurs are weak, cut them back one
eye to make strong wood for the next year's bearing, — never
fruit a weak spur.
Suppose you have too much wood ; there is but one remedy,
and that is, to withhold all feeding of any kind until the crop,
to which the strength of the vine goes, has exhausted the vine
sufficiently to bring it to its proper balance. A too strong vine
will sometimes take four or five years to attain that balance ;
and, as I have said before, you will know what that is by the
fact, that when you have the true proportion between root and
branch the new wood will be not more than two feet and a half
in length, with short joints and full buds. Your vine is then in
a state of perfect balance, and in the proper condition to give
you its best crop.
Pole culture, you perceive, would be the same thing, except
that, in the renewal system by two poles, these arms are cut
close to the main stem alternately, — one this year, we will say,
and the other the next. Usually, one of these spurs shoots one
eye, and the other two. If both grow, you will take out the
weakest, and train up the strongest on the pole. Though you
have two new shoots for the current year, at the end of
the season you will cut one of those out close to the main
stem, and the other one you will cut down to the point where
the wood has ripened buds, well enough developed to bear your
fruit. Now, you have got one shoot for bearing fruit, and one
spur for making wood, the succeeding year. The one that is to
bear fruit goes to the top of the pole and bears its fruit, and that
which is to make wood, makes new buds and new wood, to bear
fruit the next year, and so on alternately. That is the renewal
system which is adopted at the West, in growing the Catawba
grape ; but many of the growers are now going into the espalier
culture, as on the whole the most economical, and certainly the
best, as giving two long arms of bearing wood, which do not
need to be constantly renewed, and giving annually larger crops
than are obtained with the pole culture ; and, lastly, saving the
trouble of perpetually renewing the poles, which must be
renewed every second or third year, while the espalier does not
need to be renewed oftener than once in ten or twelve years.
SECKETARY'S REPORT. 75
But at the base of all this pruning lies the great fact, that if
you have too much root power, you cannot handle the top, and,
therefore, you must not feed your vine too much. If it will
bear a little more feeding, give it to it afterwards, so as to make
the vine grow to the size you want ; but if you have too much
root power, you must let the top grow, and it may be in many
cases impossible to give it proper extension ; certainly it would
be in vhieyard culture, after it had filled your espalier.
If, now, you have your vineyard, or your vines in open field
culture, you will look the third year for your first crop ; and
you may take, as I have already said, from well established
vines — those vines which are in good health, and making their
half a yard or two feet of new wood annually — five pounds to
the vine, safely. Much more has been taken, without apparent
harm, but in presenting to you these facts out of my experience,
I take the sure and safe side, that you may not be disappointed.
Although I might state much more extravagant results, much
larger crops which I know to have been taken in successive
years from young vines, I forbear to recommend such a course
to you, because, when you begin the culture of the grape, I
want you to have absolute success and long-continued success,
and this method will insure it to you. You may take, then,
five pounds to the vine the first year ; the next year, ten pounds
to the vine ; the third year, of cropping, you may take fifteen
pounds to the vine ; the next year, and from that time forward,
you may take twenty pounds annually to the vine. I know a
piece of ground, of such soil as I have described, in the town
where I live, and belonging to townsman of mine, which for
three successive years has given crops exceeding this estimate
largely, without any application whatever since they were
planted, seven years ago, but wood ashes, at the rate of fourteen
bushels to the acre. It is not liberal to the vineyard, it is not
fair treatment of the vines, to crop them in such a heavy way,
nor do I believe that in the end it will be so profitable to the
vineyard owner ; but it is true that the very first crop taken
from this vineyard was at the rate of nearly three tons to the
acre ; the second crop was at the rate of seven tons to the acre ;
and the crop he took from it this year, being the third crop,
without enriching in any way, was at the rate of eight tons to
the acre. These are excessive crops, and not to be counted on
76 BOARD OF AGRICULTURE.
always. AtKelley's Island, where they grow the best Catawbas,
they boast of a crop of three and a half tons to the acre, as if it
was a large crop ; and it is a large crop. But you are to remem-
ber that that grape has a constitutional defect — the rot — always
weakening it more or less, and sometimes excessively, otherwise
it might, perhaps, give the same weight. Your first crop would
be at the rate of more than 3,500 pounds to the acre ; your
second crop, 7,000 pounds ; your third crop, over 10,000 ; your
fourth, 14,000 pounds, or seven tons to the acre. I have shown
you that that crop has been exceeded for three successive years,
from a vineyard treated as I have described. I think I may
assume, therefore, that this would be a reliable annual crop.
Some of the vines in the vineyard I have spoken of, bore thirty-
five pounds this year. I have estimated twenty pounds to the
vine as a full crop, and that will give you in round numbers,
seven tons of grapes as the usual crop.
Now, can anything be more profitable than grape culture ?
I have endeavored to show you that grape culture is absolutely
certain, under certain conditions. They are conditions within
the reach of any man within Massachusetts. That it is more
profitable than any other crop is within my experience ; and
that it is more sure and constant than any other crop is also
within my experience, for I have for many years never failed of
a crop.
Now, how shall we get still better grapes ? for that is the
problem before us. Chance seedlings, or grapes bred from
tender, though excellent varieties, and inheriting the tender
constitutions incident to the family to which they belong, will
never do for field culture, though they may do for the amateur.
We want yet better grapes, and I think we may have as good
grapes as those of any other country in time, if we only go
about raising them intelligently from seed. Constant reproduc-
tion from seedlings having the indispensable qualities of hardi-
hood, vigor of growth, adaptation to the season and vicissitudes
of climate, will give us still better grapes than we now possess.
I will give you some of the results of my own experience in that
direction, in tlie hope that some of you will take up this really
national work, that our final success may be more rapidly
achieved ; for the seeds of the same grape would show greater
variation from the original type when grown in various soils and
SECRETARY'S REPORT. 77
aspects, than upon the soil where it originated, when all the
conditions of soil, climate and culture were the same always.
Beginning with the wild grape — the best I could find — the
earliest, having also those qualities which I have endeavored to
describe to you ; I got, from tlic seedlings of that grape, first
the mother of the Concord ; second, out of that seedling, the
Concord ; out of the seeds of tlie Concord, many new grapes,
nearly a score of which are great improvements over the Con-
cord ; so that the pulp, which is one of the distinguishing char-
acteristics of our native grape, is lost, and you have a grape of
tender and delicate texture throughout, like the hot-house grape ;
so that tlie wild flavor so objectionable to us is lost, and there
is now no sign of wildness about it. Indeed, I venture to say,
that if I were to show you several of these new grapes at this
time, and tell you they were seedlings of hot-house grapes, you
would assent to it. So far as the texture, appearance, and even
the flavor are concerned, you would say, " These are better
than any of our native grapes," and that the foreign grape must
always be the best. I could deceive you, I think, into that con-
clusion, so great is the improvement. From these, again, I
have seedlings now two years grown. In five years they
will come to fruit, and I shall have a new point of departure.
I know it requires patience, and some enthusiasm, on the part
of a man to grow seedling grapes and wait six years for the first
fruit ; and when he has got his first fruit, perhaps it is not so
good as he expects ; but if it is pretty good, if it is an improve-
ment, if for any reason it is worth saving at all, let him count
confidently on its improving for several years, from year to year,
for that is the uniform result. The fruit of the first year is not
so good as that of the next, other things being equal, and it
grows better and better for several years. I plucked this year, on
the twentieth day of August, one white seedling grape, and one
black seedling from seedling vines planted ten years ago. And
that brings me to the consideration of a point I ought to have
mentioned before, relating to climate. The grape wants heat
at the time of ripening the fruit. Now, if it be late, ripening
when the early frosts have come, and our nights have grown
cool, and our days foggy and cold, it cannot be so good. It
will not ripen so much in two weeks of such weather as it
would in four days of absolutely hot, clear weather, such as we
78 BOARD OP AGRICULTURE.
have ill the latter part of August and early in September.
Therefore you want an early ripening grape, if it be possible ;
but if your seedling be a little late, or if the weight or the
quality does not come quite up to your expectations, by reason
of the circumstances I have just mentioned, do not reject it
altogether ; but if it be worth keeping at all, count upon its
being, in a more favorable season, like this last, much better.
As to soil affecting the quahty of the grape, I ought to say a
word. It does. The best grapes are grown in the sweetest and
best soil. That is to say, soil naturally sweet of itself and fed
with such vegetable and animal manures as do not convey to it
disagreeable odors ; for the soil takes odor, and the grape takes
odor from the soil. I know that absolutely, for, having applied
some wool waste to some young seedling vines which I wanted
to get rapidly forward, — seedlings which had borne once, and of
which I wanted to see a second crop, — which wool waste was unc-
tuous with fat and grease, will you believe it when I tell you that
I found the abominable flavor of that half decayed wool waste in
my grape in the autumn, and so did everybody who tasted it.
The grape abhors foul odors. It is a dainty feeder. Although
it will bear so much feeding, under certain circumstances, yet it
absolutely needs, in my judgment, only that peculiar kind of
feeding which comes from vegetable debris and those minerals
which its constitution requires.
I have recommended the raising of seedlings by direct descent
for two reasons ; because, in the first place, hybridization is so
difficult ; and because, in the next place, when you hybridize
the finer grapes known to us now, which are tender grapes,
upon the more hardy mother grape, to get the quality of the
better grape and the hardiliood of the mother grape, we are not
quite sure of success. It is a hybrid, and must always be ; and
although it may have more of the hardy constitution of the
mother than of the tender constitution of the higher flavored
and better male parent, still, it will have a constitutional pre-
disposition to tenderness ; and though you may possibly get a
grape which will bear the climate, it is more than likely that in
that event, you have not a true hybrid, — that is, a hybrid that is
accepted without dispute as a true hybrid, — that is hardy. I
know that Mr. Rogers has raised some hybrid grapes which are
of good quality, and great acquisitions, as I think ; but I
SECRETARY'S REPORT.
believe the savants in horticulture, many of them, at least, and
more from day to day, have come to the conclusion that they
are not hybrids at all ; and that is my opinion. I conclude so
for this reason. These hybrids were raised from a seedling
grape and the Hamburgh and other hot-house grapes. Now,
the seedling grape is itself an improvement on the native grape,
and these seedlings are in the second generation from the
original native stock, and hold the same relation, therefore, to
the native that my Concord holds. ' He has done just what I
have done : broken the habit of a wild grape, and improved it to
that stage that led him to think he had got a true hybrid. Let
us look at this matter a moment. The grape is perfect in its
flowers. Each flower contains the male and female organs, and
is covered by a calyx. When the stamen is elongated, this little
calyx is thrown off", under the stimulus of the sunshine, and in
that act the pollen, which is thoroughly ripe and effloresced,
impregnates the germ. Now, if you are going to hybridize,
how will you know whether that has happened or not ? Why,
you must sit and watch the blossom as it throws off" this little
calyx. You must have a large magnifier to see whether the
pollen was effloresced and has impregnated the germ, or whether
it is hard, close, and not ripe. If ripe, you cannot impregnate
that germ, although you have the pollen ready. But if you
find one, the pollen of which is not ripe, but where it is close
and hard, that germ you may touch with the prepared pol-
len, after cutting away all the weak parts, and you have a
true hybrid. It is not, you see, impossible, but it is very
difficult.
I spent a fortnight in my hot-house, with my daughter, from
nine o'clock in the morning until four in the afternoon, impreg-
nating a Concord which I had there for that purpose. I had not
the least idea that it was a work of so much difficulty and so nearly
impossible as it proved to be. Hybridization, therefore, is not
impossible, but I do not believe it would be practicable. How-
ever, if I wanted to hybridize, I think I would do this : I would
take the very best hardy grape, which had the properties which
I wanted to get in the progeny, and impregnate it from another
grape which had other properties, a union of which would give me
just what I wanted. In other words, both being perfectly hardy,
I would go to all this trouble to hybridize, in order to get the
80 BOARD OF AGRICULTURE.
result I aimed at more speedily, — that is to say, the properties
of both parents into one seedling, which should be perfectly
hardy. But I have shown you that you would be more likely
to reach your aim directly by raising seedlings ; and for your
encouragement I would say, that I raised two thousand before
I got anything to surpass the Concord, but since then, of a
thousand seedlings, over one hundred have proved to be good ;
so that one hundred seedlings would be likely to give you at
least ten good grapes.
Now, I want your help. I have given my life to this work,
not solely for the benefit of others, not alone for a selfish pur-
pose, but because I must do it. The enthusiasm which has
animated me in regard to grape culture for thirty-five years does
not abate, but increases with increasing years ; and so long as
I live, I shall go on with my work. But I must depart, and if
somebody does not follow it up, we shall never have what we
ought to have, — an American grape which shall excel all others.
Gentlemen, I thank you for the patience with which you have
listened to me so long.
Mr Lathrop moved a vote of thanks to Mr. Bull for his able
and interesting lecture. Prof. Agassiz seconded the motion,
and said : I cannot express how delighted I have been with it.
I am a child of the vineyard, and I know how important it is to a
country to have vineyards to grow wine, and what advantage
to a people it is to have sound wine, and to be able in that way
to drive out all intoxicating liquors. It is the most excellent
temperance movement that was ever started on this continent,
and I believe that Mr. Bull will be a benefactor to his country
by what he is doing. The vote of thanks passed unanimously.
Mr. Phinney, of Barnstable, moved the addition of two mem-
bers to the committee on the Agricultural College, which
motion prevailed ; and the chair appointed Messrs. Phinney and
Stockbridge to the committee.
Dr. LoRiNG. — It is very doubtful whether the question in
regard to the corn crop will be discussed again. It was pretty
well discussed this morning, but I wish to propose two questions
for the consideration of the meeting and for its action. No
doubt the mind of every man is made up in regard to them.
The first question is : Would you plough sward land and put
SECRETARY'S REPORT. 81
the manure on the surface, in autumn, for a corn crop ? The
other is : Would you plough sward land in the spring and turn
under the manure for a corn crop ?
Mr. TiDD. — It seems to me that the diversity of opinion in
respect to this matter arises, in some measure, from the
differences in soil.
Dr. LoRiNGc — I proposed the questions with the express pur-
pose of having some explanation of that sort go with the dis-
cussion. I am satisfied that each gentleman would vote on
these questions according to the character of the soil he is called
upon to cultivate.
Mr Bull. — The question, even in the simple form in which it
has been presented, involves so many considerations of soil and
climate, heat and moisture, and succeeding crops, that I would
rather have it laid over for future consideration than to take a
vote upon it now.
Dr. Hartwell. — I should rather object to this Board of Agri-
culture undertaking to decide as to the best method of applying
manure, and have it circulated through the Commonwealth for
the farmers to follow, perhaps to their disadvantage. It seems
to me we should hesitate until we have further light. We are
not prepared, now, to make so important a decision.
The questions proposed by Dr. Loring were laid on the table,
and the meeting adjourned till afternoon.
Afternoon Session. — The Board met at two o'clock, and
took up the subject of the
improvement of pasture lands.
Mr. Anderson, of Shelburne, was called upon to open the
discussion. He said : I came here with no expectation of giving
my experience. It is true that grass-growing and stock-raising,
which are intimately connected, are the principal objects of my
labor, the things I take the greatest interest in, and, in fact, that
I profess to know the most about, but to give my views, unac-
customed as I am to speaking, will be difficult.
Some thirty years ago I commenced farming. Formerly I
was engaged in teaching, but my health failed, and my physician
told me I must seek some other employment. I accordingly
left, and went on a farm. At first, I was not able to labor more
11*
82 BOARD OF AGRICULTURE.
than two or three hours a day, but I soon found I was improving.
My object was, originally, to recruit my health and go back to
teaching, but I soon became satisfied that in order to enjoy
health, it was necessary for me to continue this active employ-
ment. I went on a farm of some two hundred acres, probably
as unpromising as any in the county of Franklin. It had been
worn out by ploughing and raising grain. To begin with, they
raised wheat as long as they could, and then corn and rye.
The pastures were ploughed as long as they would produce
anything ; and when I went on to it, the probability is that ten
head of cattle was all it would support. The pastures were
covered with bushes, brakes, and every kind of noxious vege-
table that is entirely useless to the farmer. I commenced with
mowing the sweet fern. My neighbors told me that it was labor
lost ; that where I mowed one bush ten would spring up. But,
to begin with, I knew something of the laws of vegetable life ; I
knew that cutting down a vegetable and destroying its leaves,
which are its lungs, must eventually kill it. These ferns were
thick and large, and after mowing them I raked them into
bunches and burnt them, so as to leave the ground entirely
clear to mow over the second time. When they came up the
second time I could go over it with a common scythe and
mow it as fast as I could grass, and faster, too. The third year
there were but very few left ; and the fourth year they were all
gone ; and this land, that was covered by this kind of vegetable,
is now the richest and best of pasture land. After disposing
of these, I went at the brakes. I mowed them down, and kept
them mowed down, and destroyed them, so that there is scarcely
a brake on the land.
My idea of the improvement of pasture land is that the main
thing is to clear every noxious and useless vegetable out of the
way, and let the grasses have a chance to grow, and they will
take care of themselves. Another thing I am satisfied of, is,
that if land is let alone, it will recuperate itself ; that nature's
operations are the surest and best. I never would plough land
for pasture or for mowing, where the surface is smooth and free
from water. On some portions of this pasture, where there were
strawberry vines, the " five-finger," so called, white grass, and
different kinds of vegetables that stock will not eat, I sowed
plaster. TJie effect of that was to start the clover and other
SECRETARY'S REPORT. 83
grasses ; and when the clover starts on land where this white
grass grows, the cattle will eat the clover and pull up this grass.
After you once get your pasture lands into good condition, there
is no further trouble ; that is, if you c^o not feed them too close.
It is a law of nature, that the root must be somewhat in propor-
tion to the top. You will always observe, m pastures that are
close fed, that the roots extend but a short distance. If you
will allow the grasses to grow, they will penetrate the earth and
answer the purpose of subsoiling. Clover is one of the best
vegetables for this purpose ; it penetrates to a great distance.
The Canada thistle has been considered as one of the greatest
curses to the farmer ; but I consider it a benefit to our farms.
There is no vegetable that penetates so deeply and leaves the
soil in so good a condition as this does, and it is not very
difficult to get rid of it when you want to. Where they grow
very vigorously their roots, of course, extend in proportion.
The probability is that their roots extend three or four feet in a
deep soil ; and if the soil is not deep they will deepen it ; and
after they have left the soil, they leave a considerable amount of
vegetable matter to enrich it.
This farm that I have been on, and have attempted to improve,
would not carry through the summer, when I took it, more
than ten head of good cattle. The probability is that the value
of the stock when I went on the farm was not more than five
hundred dollars. To-day I would not take four thousand dollars
for my stock. I have forty head, and I believe they would sell
for that at auction.
Well, there has been no mystery about the matter. I have
let nature work. To be sure the soil is naturally of a good
quality ; but it looked as poor as any soil could look, judging
from the grass and everything else it produced.
Mr. Lathrop. — I would like to inquire how you get rid of
the Canada thistle.
Mr. Anderson. — When they are in full bloom, I cut them off.
If they are mowed about this time, the stalks, which are hollow
become filled with water, and they do not grow again. I have
found that in two or three mowings I got rid of them. But if
you have to mow them every year they will abundantly compen-
sate you for the labor.
84 BOARD OF AGRICULTURE.
«
Leander Wetherell, of Boston. — I simply wish to say that I
had the pleasure, this past autumn, of going over the pastures
Mr. Anderson has spoken of, and the results which he has stated
seem to have been fully realized ; for I have not been on any
pastures that I was so well pleased with since I was on the Ken-
tucky blue-grass pastures, of which his reminded me. I was
there about the first of October, and they were then covered
with an excellent crop of grass, notwithstanding the dryness of
the past season. Mr. Anderson stated to me one fact, which he
has not. mentioned here, and that is, that in the spring he goes
over the pastures and beats the droppings of the animals to
pieces, so that they are scattered over the surface of the ground.
That is a labor to which but few farmers would subject them-
selves.
Now that I am up, I would add that plaster will recuperate
pastures where it will work. I asked a gentleman, who lives in
the town of Hardwick, in the county of Worcester, where the
pastures are very good, how they compared with what they were
twenty-five years ago. " Well," said he, " I can say that they
are better ; that these dairy pastures will keep more stock now
than twenty-five years ago." This, 1 suppose, is explained by
the fact that plaster works well on those pastures ; and having
been applied occasionally it has kept them in this growing and
luxuriant condition. But then, there are many acres of pasture
in this Commonwealth, where j^laster will produce no more
effect than so much sand sown upon the surface. These pastures
must be recuperated in some other way. I agree fully in the
remark made by Mr. Anderson, that pasture land that can be
depended on for grass is better and more enduring if it has
never been ploughed or harrowed, than land that has been
broken up. I have observed an illustration of this on a hill in
the east part of Ware, where the land was tilled, and bore
excellent crops ; afterwards, it was seeded down and turned to
pasturage ; and that pasture is now a great deal inferior to a
pasture right by its side, that never has been ploughed, I
believe that the same is true with regard to mowing lands. I
consider land that is in a condition to produce grass naturally,
and that has never been ploughed, the most profitable mowing
land, as the other is the most profitable pasture land.
SECRETARY'S REPORT. 85
With regard to the mode of destroyhig buslics, I can give
you a fact that came under my own observation. A pasture
was grown over with elders and white birches, which were
cut close to the ground, raked up and burnt, and then plaster
was sown on the ground. There was hardly any grass to be
seen at that time, but a good crop of grass immediately came
in ; and after a second cutting of the bushes, tlicre was no
more cutting to be done. I think it is true, that if you can
make grass grow you will destroy the brush,, and if you cut the
brush low, and often, if necessary, I think you will find that
with the aid of plaster, or some other fertilizer, you will remove
the bushes, and produce a good grass crop.
Mr. Anderson. — I will say, that I think no labor bestowed on
my farm pays so well as this knocking to pieces and pulverizing
as fine as possible the droppings of the cattle. Pastures that
were very uneven when I began this operation have been made
smooth as mowing land, by spreading these droppings. Another
thing that I have attended to a great deal, is the removal of
stone. Our pastures are stony. On some of them, it would
seem as though the surface was covered with stone. When I
began to pull up these stone, one of my neighbors came along
and said : " You are injuring your land ; your labor is worse
than useless. Those stone warm the land, and stony land will
produce more feed." Well, I paid but little attention to it,
because, as far as my experience went, the grass around stones
was not more luxuriant than it was at a distance, but generally
the reverse. Then land that is covered with stones will not stand
drought so well as land that is free from them. Stone, from
the very nature of the substance, absorbs caloric, and heats the
soil. I had always observed that stony land dried first ; and
before I commenced this operation, our pastures suffered from
drought more than neighboring pastures. After removing
these stone, and encouraging the grass to extend to a deeper
depth, these pastures suffered less than any of the same
character.
The Chairman. — Mr. Anderson has certainly advanced some
ideas that are valuable. Whether they are applicable to the
whole Commonwealth is a question. I should like to hear from
some gentlemen who have had experience in this matter. His
statement that he can raise more grass upon his pastures with-
86 BOARD OF AGRICULTURE.
out the plough than with it, is a very important one to discuss
practically.
'Mr. Lathrop. — The best piece of pasture that I have, is a
piece from which the timber was cleared in 1840. In the
winter of 1850, the cord wood was drawn off. The sprouts
were then four or five feet high. Next year I cleared them off,
and sowed plaster at the rate of one hundred pounds to the
acre. That pasture will summer a cow to the acre, on the
average. It is now covered with white clover and Kentucky
blue-grass. My other pastures were covered, some sixty years
ago, with small pines. These were cleared off and plaster
sown, and the grass commenced growing very luxuriantly.
The owner, who had six hundred acres, could hardly buy cattle
enough to eat up his feed, whereas he had formerly been
obliged to send his young stock away to pasture. We take
pains to mow our brakes and Canada thistles, for we are not so
fortunate as Mr. Anderson, and find that no grass will grow up
among the thistles. I can only say, that we attribute the
improvement of our pastures more to plaster than anything
else. I should not plough woodland, nor burn it, but let the
leaves and small brush remain to enrich the soil.
Mr. Wetherell. — Some twenty years ago, the Essex County
Society put forth the inquiry, whether plaster exhausted the
lands. There was a gentleman in our village who had a plaster
mill, and I knew his way was to use his plaster quite freely on
his land. I went to him and asked him, " How long has your
pasture been plastered ?" " For some over thirty years ; some-
times once a year, and sometimes twice." " Well, what was
the condition of that land previous to the application of the
plaster?" "I had six acres, and could barely keep one cow.
I have reduced it down to about four acres, and keep a horse,
a yoke of oxen, two cows, and sometimes a calf." And that
pasture will do the same thing now. I think if plaster would
exhaust land, that would have been exhausted long since.
Asa Clement, of Dracut. — The pasture land in our locality
has deteriorated within my recollection greatly, and it has been
a part of my study, at least, to learn to improve my own
pastures. I have come this conclusion, that it is, as has just
been remarked, bad policy to burn upon our soils, when there
is so little vegetable matter in them. If you must burn at all,
SECRETARY'S REPORT. 87
let it be in a very slight manner. I recollect that last year I
cleared a piece of new ground. There were some white pine and
elders on it, and I burnt the brush that was scattered over the
surface. I did not pile it up, but let the fire run over the sur-
face very lightly ; and very soon I saw bunches of white clover
coming up, and by autumn, it had nearly covered the ground.
Then again, I have been accustomed to mow the bushes and
brakes, and all noxious weeds and vegetables, and let them lie
upon the surface and decay. I would, a? a general thing,
repudiate the idea of burning brush upon our shallow soils.
There may be exceptions, however. We have found, on many
of our pastures, that the labor of keeping down the brush, and
the white birches and alders, has been more trouble than the
feed we got has been worth ; and consequently, some of us
have let our older pastures grow up to white birch. To be sure,
it is not the best quality of wood, but we can always sell it for
something — for all it is worth perhaps — and clear new lands.
These new lands produce fine, sweet feed, and if the brush is
left to decay upon the surface, good white clover will come in,
and will last, there is no doubt, a great while.
Mr. Anderson. — I would like to inquire in regard to the
dryness or moisture of the pastures.
Mr. Clement. — A portion of this soil is dry. In some places
there are what we call " runs " through it, that are tolerably
moist, and the white birches that grow up become quite sizable
trees in a few years. On the knolls where the soil is thinner
and poorer, the trees are dwarfish, and will die down before
they become useful for fuel. Ordinarily, we can spade down
two feet very comfortably. There is a hard-pan twenty inches
or two feet below the surface. A good deal of it is none too
wet ; and last year these knolls looked as though they had been
burnt over.
Dr. Hartwell. — Gentlemen have been speaking of those
pastures that are improved by the application of plaster. There
is a kind of land in Worcester County that plaster improves ;
there is another kind that it makes no impression upon whatever.
Clayey, moist soils are improved very much by the apj)lication
of plaster. The diluvial, or drift soil, with the gravel which
overlays, in some instances, this formation, is never improved
by plaster. You will find that there are pasture lauds where
88 BOARD OF AGRICULTURE.
the upheaved rock abounds in sulphur. These lands are not
improved at all by plaster. I have one pasture which plaster
improves and one Avhich it does not improve. The latter I have
improved with ashes or manure. I know of no way of improv-
ing a pasture of that kind except by giving it some foreign aid,
aside from plaster, to bring it up. Tlie method I pursued with
one pasture was to mow off the bushes and dress it over with
compost. That will certainly bring in any kind of grass, whether
you sow it or not. ^ Horse manure, sown upon the surface, is
death to these bushes ; they can't stand cultivation ; and if you
can manure these pastures so far as to bring in a crop of any
grass thtit the cattle will eat, you will be sure to drive oil all the
old buslies. The grasses, such as clover, June grass, and red-
top, leave out in the ground ; all the great sour plants leave out
high ; and, as I said, if you continue to cut the plant below the
leaf, you are sure to kill it. We have not the means of bring-
ing up many of these old pastures, for the supply of manure is
limited ; but all those lands that are improved by plaster can be
improved, because the amount of plaster of Paris is unlimited.
Lands which will be improved by plaster are worth more than
double, I think, what those lands are that plaster will not
improve. The only way to do with those old pastures that we
have not the means of bringing up is to let them go back to
wood. They can be renovated in that way, and it is the only
way in which a great portion of the waste pasture land in this
Commonwealth can be restored to advantage.
Mr. Wright, of Deerfield. — My experience in reclaiming pas-
tures is exceedingly limited. Some ten years ago, I purchased
a portion of a field (fourteen acres,) which had been used, before
I bought it, to pasture two cows. ^ I had the impression that it
could be improved. I hired the pasture the hrst year, to exper-
iment upon it somewhat. I was satisfied, from the result of
one year's operations, that there could be an improvement made.
I purchased it, and my neighbors joked me severely upon the
exorbitant price I paid for it. Probably no man in the neigh-
borhood would have given half the amount I paid for it. I paid
twenty-seven dollars an acre, and it had, within two or three
years previous, been sold for ten dollars, but I could not obtain
it for any less. The year I came into possession, I put in three
cows. Two of my neighbors were at my place, talking about
SECRETARY'S REI'r)U1\ 80
the purdiasc, and tlicy said Llicy Lliou;:,liL 1 had o-of, my place
pretty well stocked ; that they didn't bulicve the pasture wouhl
carry through those three animals. I remarked that I didn't
tliink it would, and 1 should remove one of them in the course
of the season. However, it was a fine season for the growlli of
vegetation, and they lived through th(! sunnner. TUo next
spring I conmienced my operations. Jn the first place, 1 removed
all obnoxious vegetation ; I made a clean thing of it. U cost
me a good deal of labor, but when it was bruslied ovci-, it looked
very smooth. I then took twenty bushels of ashes, three-c^uar-
ters of a ton of plaster, and ciglit bushels of hen manure, and
composted them together. It lay some two or three weeks, and
then I scattered it round the fourteen acres, broadcast. It had
a very wonderful effect. I have continued this same dressing
up to the present time. I commenced this Ofjcration seven
years ago, and the season before the last, I j)ut in seven cows
and three early sj)ring calves, and had a very line pasture.
This last season I put in the same, but in consequence of the
severity of the drought, I removed two of the animals. Hut
from the experience I have had with this tract of land, I think,
if I am permitted to live three years, I can keep ten cows on
this pasture, and that they will be able to fdl themselves in two
hours, and lie down. There is a great deal of real estate in the
town of Deerficld that is useless. We are so situated tliat we
arc in want of home pastures, which we do not possess ; but I
am satisfied that if the proper measures were taken to reclaim
this waste land, we could be well supplied with Ijeautiful
pastures, within a stone's cast, almost, of our homes.
Dr. IIartvvicll. — Have you made the experiment with plaster
alone ?
Mr. WiiKJiiT. — I have, sir. The pasture is very hilly, with
the exception of two or three acres upon the top, which are
flat, and the soil is a sandy gravel. I think that plaster alone
would not have much effect upon it. If I come down the lull
a little, some ten or fifteen feet, where it is clay, there I get the
effect of plaster alone.
Mr. Smith, of Northampton. — I have the misfortune to
own something like a hundred acres of land occupied for
pasturing, which is situated very differently from that in the
neighborhood of my friend, Mr. Lathrop, of which he has given
12*
90 BOARD OF AGRICULTURE.
a description. Plaster alone does not seem to have any effect
upon it whatever. It is ground that has been ploughed, hereto-
fore, for a long series of years. I should endorse fully the
sentiment that has been expressed here, that it is no improve-
ment to plough or burn forest lands newly cleared. I have
made some little effort to kill out the brush on my old pastures,
where there are the high laurel and sweet fern. I consider the
laurel one of the hardest bushes in the world to kill. It is
hard to plough up, and cutting it off seems only to give new
vigor. I have tried burning, but so many leaves fall from it,
that they make a light body of matter that burns very readily
in a dry season ; and I have only to follow that up about three
years, to eradicate all the grass that does grow on the land. I
find it eradicates the grass, but does not hurt the bushes, — they
grow finely. This land is situated on the sunny side of Mount
Tom, prettily located, but rather rough. The soil is a stony
loam or loamy gravel. It was naturally a strong soil, but it
has been ploughed to death. It produced a heavy growth of
oak and hickory, and when it was first cleared off, in my grand-
father's day, they used to get good wheat from it — much better
than they got on the river flats. Consequently they ploughed,
and planted, and cropped, without returning any thing back,
until they entirely exhausted it. These lands have not been
ploughed much for the last thirty years. We have been expect-
ing that by adopting a system of pasturing and keeping the
bushes down, they would eventually improve, but the improve-
ment is very slight, if any. I have commenced ploughing, to
some small extent, to renovate them. I turn over a piece as
well as I can, for stony ground, and sow rye, with ashes or
guano, or any fertilizer that I can get up there ; I cannot spare
manure to use up there. Ashes work well. I have used in
connection with ashes, plaster. I cannot see that plaster,
applied alone, has any effect ; it may with ashes. In that way
I get a pretty good growth of rye. But I do not harvest the
rye. I let it stand until it has headed out, and then turn in
my cattle and feed it down. In that way I have improved the
land, as far as I have tried it. It has given me the most satis-
faction of any method I have ever attempted. It makes an
abundance of feed, and my seed takes well, sown in that way.
It is not very expensive. Fifteen or twenty bushels to the acre
SECRETARY'S REPORT. 91
will give a pretty good growth of rye, and will cause grass seed
to spring up and live. One piece of four or five acres that I
ploughed up a few years ago, has produced more feed than any
ten or twenty acres of the same piece.
Mr. Anderson. — I still contend that I can kill the high laurel.
It is a good deal more difficult to kill than sweet fern, but I
have succeeded, on pastures where I have attempted it, in the
course of six or seven years. It requires a good deal of time
and attention, but if you cut it down smooth to the ground in
the first place, and are assiduous in your labors as soon as
it comes up, you will be sure to kill it. It can no more live
without its leaves, than a man can live without lungs.
I would like to inquire about ditching. I have, by expending
perhaps twenty-five dollars on four or five acres, in digging
ditches and filling them with stone, made land which was
formerly useless, the very best land I have. A great deal of
our pasture land is too moist. Pasture and mowing land should
be dry enough to raise corn. The best corn land is the best
land for grass, and I think we should derive as great benefit
from ditcliing our pastures as we should from ditching our
mowing land.
Dr. Hartwell. — Is there any plant that will not die if you
cut it below the leaves ?
Mr. Anderson. — No, sir. I remember that, formerly, our best
mowers were considered those who mowed close to the surface ;
and I have known them mow so close on our best lands, where
we had been accustomed to have a second crop, that we could
not get a second crop ; whereas, on other parts of the field, that
were mowed so as to leave something of the herbage, it would
start right up and grow. The other would not start that year,
and would be injured for years after.
Mr. Perkins. — One word in regard to cutting down trees and
vegetation. I maintain that if you cut hard wood from this
season until the first of May or June, it will not kill it. You
may cut any kind of vegetation from the latter part of August
to the first of October, and effectually kill it. If I am cutting
in the forest, and wish it to sprout up again, I cut only in the
spring ; if I don't want it to sprout, I cut from the latter part
of August until the first of October. I have cleared thirty-five
acres of meadow, that was just one mass of underbrush. I cut
92 BOARD OF AGRICULTURE.
this brush in the month of August or September, and effectaally
finished it ; there was no sprouting ; if I had cut them in any
other season, they would have grown again.
E. W. Stebbins, of Deerfield. — Is that so with regard to the
wahiut ? Can you kill out the walnut sprout by cutting it once
or twice, or even twenty times ?
Mr. Perkins. — We have no walnut timber in our place, and I
cannot say from actual experience ; but I have no doubt that it
can be effectually killed. There is a time when the life of the
tree is pretty much done for this season, and does not operate
until the next ; and if, at that time you cut off all the leaves, it
will effectually kill it.
Mr. Smith. — In answer to Mr. Stebbins's question, I will say
that some few years since I spent a few days in Wisconsin. A
friend of mine was clearing a piece of land for wheat that was
covered with what they call " scrub timber," consisting of white
oak and walnut ; and they were digging it out invariably. They
dug down twelve or fifteen inches, and cut off the roots. I
asked the reason for that, and they said it was the only way
they could clear the ground. They stated that they would grow
there for a hundred years if they were not cut down low.
I will state that I use ashes, leached or unleached, on my
land, and the result is to bring in white clover, I consider that
I get great benefit from it.
Mr. Wetherell. — I was speaking to Professor Turner, one
day, and I told him that I had heard that the hickory could not
be transplanted and made to grow. He said, " I can show you
one growing." I asked him how he managed to move it, and
he said, " My men dug down a depth of twenty-two feet, to the
end of the tap-root, and then the tree was removed to my yard,
a large hole dug, and the root coiled and placed in that excava-
tion." He showed me the tree, and it was growing. That is
.an illustration of the depth to which the tap-root of that partic-
ular tree penetrates.
I would say, also, that a friend of mine told me that he cut
over a swamp the last of December or first of January — cut it
smooth and close — and he never saw a sprout from a single
bush or shrub. He said he had cut it frequently before, at
other seasons of the year, and was troubled with sprouts ; but
in this instance, he never saw a single sprout. Yet this case
SECRETARY'S REPORT.' 93
docs not come within the loeriod that Mr. Perkins names.
When I was a young man, engaged in clearing land, I remember
very well, that where trees were cut in June or July, they
would sprout luxuriantly, because I had the painful labor of
going over and beating them off, before burning the brush.
Mr. Smith. — One case is brought particularly to my mind.
Some few years ago, I purchased a piece of land of six acres,
covered with an alder swamp, very thick, and some of them
large enough to use for wood. I cleared that piece of ground
in the latter part of December, and I never was so little troubled
with sprouting as on that piece of land. That was an exceed-
ingly cold time ; but whether this result was owing to the action
of the frost on the roots, or to the time it was cut, or what, I
never was satisfied. I cut them as low as I could.
Mr. Stebbins. — There are pasture lands in this vicinity for
which neither plaster nor ashes will do anything. What shall
we do with them ? Tliey have been plonghed to death. The
policy of the old farmers here was, when they cleared a piece of
timber land, to burn it over, plough it, and rye it ; and some of
our pastures have been ryed and ryed until there is hardly a
shadow of soil left. Tlicre is no vegetation on them, and no
amount of ashes or plaster that you can put upon them will
make vegetation there. There is another difficulty with our
pastures — some of our farmers are in the habit of stocking too
high. But there is another class who have run into the opposite
extreme. I have seen the feed on some of these pastures knee-
high all the season through, and in connection with tlie grass
there has sprung up, within the last few years, a little knotty
bush, almost as small as grass. There was none of that until
within the last four or five years. I attribute that wholly to
the grass not being fed down. The cattle won't touch that,
either early in the spring or late in the fall. Pasture lands
want to be fed off close all through the season.
Mr. Taft. — The gentleman [Mr. Stebbins] wants to know
what he shall do with land that neither plaster nor ashes will
help. We have, in the south part of Worcester County, quite a
portion of territory that we call the " pine plains." That territory,
I am told, was planted with corn by the Indians, and since then
it has been ryed to death ; and we have come to the conclusion
that the best we can do with it is to let it run up to wood.
94 BOARD OF AGRICULTURE.
White birch, pitch pine, and white pine grow there. I have in
my mind now a piece of land that in 1833 was sold for five dol-
lars an acre. Two years ago, I offered a man seventy-five
dollars for an acre of it, which was mostly white pine, and he
thought it was worth more. Last week, a piece of tliis land was
sold for thirty dollars an acre, on which, since I was twenty
years old, I have seen rye growing. I suggested that the pur-
chaser paid rather a high price for it, but was told that he got
it cheap. That is covered with pitch pine and white birch, which
are worth six dollars a cord. "We have come to the conclusion
that that kind of land isn't worth anything for pasture, espe-
cially around certain localities, where our fences " winter-kill "
badly.
A. F. Adams, of Fitchburg. — I have tried sowing new land
for feed, in the spring and in the fall, and I like spring sowing
much the best. I plough quite late, after I have done my fall
work, and let it lie until about the middle of June. Then I put
on a few loads of compost, and sow it with winter rye — about
two bushels to the acre — and grass seed. It then comes into
feed in August, when our pastures are most apt to fail, and
when we need the feed much more than we do in the spring.
Mr. Homer, — I would suggest to Mr. Stebbins that he try
buckwheat on this land that has been exhausted with rye. Let
him raise it for twenty years, and if he don't have as good a
crop the twentieth year as he got the first, I shouldn't be willing
to give much for his land. There will be a very nutritious crop
of redtop following the buckwheat. I have a piece that has
averaged me over ten bushels to the acre. I have a pasture
containing altogether some fifty acres. There is some of the
cowbane on it, and a little high laurel and hardback ; but
wherever I have tried plaster, it has killed out those things. I
will say, in I'Cgard to plaster, that the white, soft plaster is not
worth much for me. Give me the strongest scented plaster.
It may be the heaviest, but it will pay the best. Wherever you
can produce white clover, if you will put on plenty of plaster,
you can have good pastures.
Mr. Stebbins. — I would like to inquire if there is any way to
kill out moss without ploughing?
Dr. Hartwell. — Compost manure or horse manure will kill
it. It is an expensive way, but that will do it, and bring in
SECRETARY'S REPORT. 95
white clover. It will also kill any other wild plant, if yoii will
cut it down. It is as fatal to these wild plants as civilization is
to the Indian, — just about as sure to kill.
Harrison Garfield, of Lee. — I have on my farm hardhack,
and I have found that it gets so strong a hold that no grass will
grow at all. It has formed a perfect mat, so that cattle cannot
get through, where, ten years ago, there was a good pasture.
I have practised mowing it seven or eight years, and cannot
kill it in that way. Three years ago I commenced ploughing it
up in September and October, pulling it out of the soil and
throwing it upon the surface, and when it got dry, gathering it
together and burning it ; then I manured the land and cultivated
it. It takes two pair of oxen to plough it. Its roots are jagged,
and fill the whole surface of the earth. Cutting it down tends
to spread the roots and make it grow thicker, so that we have
been obliged to tear it out and change the character of the soil,
by deep draining, to keep it out, after we had got it eradicated.
I am fully persuaded that no cutting down, however close to the
ground, will ever kill it. It may, possibly, do it in some places
where the soil is lighter than ours.
Then, in relation to Canada thistles. They have been there
for twelve years, and have been mowed every year, when the
stalk was hollow ; they have not been suffered to go to seed.
Yet we do kill them by mowing. I have had them on my own
lands and driven them off by mowing. But I think much
depends on location and the nature of the soil, in regard to
killing them off by cutting.
Prof. Agassiz. — I would like to inquire what plant it is that
is called " hardhack ? " In the eastern part of Massachusetts,
it is the spirea tomentosa, — a small shrub, with a rose-colored
flower. That certainly cannot be the plant described by the
gentleman who has last spoken.
Mr. Anderson. — I have no doubt that I can kill the hardhack,
or any vegetable that exists. It may be more difficult to kill on
some grounds than on others. If the ground is too wet, I
would ditch it thoroughly. I think there would be no difficulty
in killing it, if kept well cut down. I have killed it, where it
has been as thick as it could grow, by one cutting.
Mr. Garfield. — Many farmers have been obliged to tear it
out of the ground, to get rid of it, satisfied that cutting it off
96 BOARD OF AGRICULTURE.
would not do it. I was not alone in the experiment. I can cite
many instances where it has been tried. We consider it the
greatest nuisance we have. We prefer Canada thistles,
altogether, to these things.
Mr. Perkins. — There are two species of plants in our vicinity
that we call " hardhack," but they are dissimilar in their blos-
soms. The plant alluded to here is neither of these two kinds,
but is a plant that you will see growing in Lee, Lenox, Stock-
bridge, Lanesborough, and Pittsficld, on moist land. It grows
up in a bush, and has yellow blossoms, with a leaf something
like that of the sweet fern, in shape.
Mr. Clement. — We had some of the Canada thistles in our
pastures, and I felt considerably annoyed, for fear they would
increase upon me, and set the men to cutting them off with the
hoe, just below the surface, so as to be sure to get all the
leaves out of the way. By adopting this method, we, in one
season, very nearly eradicated them.
J. M. Crafts, of Whately. — I was particularly struck with
the remark made by my friend, Mr. Stebbins, in reference to
certain pasture lands upon which ashes would do no good. I
don't know but it is so ; but I have never yet seen land that
* could not be improved by ashes. It is true that some soils may
contain potash to such an extent that mineral elements will not
benefit them so extensively or so readily as others ; but when a
piece of land is denuded of all vegetation, from the very fact
that the mineral elements have been exhausted, it shows a
strange kind of logic to me, to say that they cannot be imjjroved
by the application of those same elements.
A question has been raised about eradicating black moss. I
live in a neighborhood where there is an abundance of it. The
land is cold and wet, and the consequence is that black moss is
a great trouble to us. Now, as I have been engaged in the
manufacture of pottery ware, I have had occasion to notice the
effects of clay upon it. Dr. Hartwell said the way to eradicate
black moss was by the use of manures. Now, we cannot afford
to do any such thing. Where we grow tobacco for a living, to
use manure upon our pastures would be entirely out of the
question. Now, in digging the clay from the ground, it gets
scattered over a portion of the old pasture that is covered by a
complete mass of black moss ; and I have noticed that there the
SECRETARY'S REPORT. 97
black moss is killed, and good, sweet, nutritious grasses take its
place. If ashes will have no effect on my friend Stebbins's
pastures, I recommend him to use clay ; perhaps that may be
available. There are some clays that are perfectly dead or inert,
and do not have any sensible effect upon the soil ; but others
appear to be impregnated with salts, and wherever that clay
goes, good results follow. I believe that the application of such
clay, fifteen or twenty loads to the acre, for a year or two, com-
bined with the application of ashes, would make Mr. Stebbins's
worthless pastures very valuable. ^ •
Dr. Hartwell. — I said that stable manure would kill this
moss, but it was very expensive. I did not recommend it.
Dr. W. Spear, of Greenfield. — I would like to ask about
exterminating the white daisy, which injures our pastures and
mowing land, more than the Canada thistle.
Mr. Anderson. — Sheep, I believe, will kill it.
Prof. Agassiz. — I know another way. I would not recom-
mend it, but it has been very successful in my case. I have
just an acre of land round my cottage at Nahant, which was
white with this abominable weed. I have with this hand weeded
out every root ; there is not one white weed upon the place ; it
is a beautiful meadow now. I would say that it did not take so
very long, as you might perhaps suppose. In three days I did
it ; I worked from early morning until night, for three days ;
and they were as thick as I have seen them anywhere.
Mr. TiDD. — I have been very much interested in the discus-
sion that has taken place this afternoon, in relation to the
renovation of our pastures. It is a subject that we ought to
consider, and the best way that cftn be devised to do this ought
to be resorted to. I coincide with a great deal that was said by
the gentleman from Whately. Where pastures can bo renovated
without ploughing, we should all agree that that would be the
better way ; and where plaster can be applied, and is found
effective, it is a very easy way of renovating land. There is a
great deal of soil in the vicinity where I live, upon which it has
been found very beneficial indeed. It has been used to a great
extent on some of the mowing fields, and very beneficially.
Some men have almost made their fortunes by it ; that is, by
going on to farms that have been run out, as it were, by culti-
vation, and applying plaster. I have in my mind several
13*
98 BOARD OF AGRICULTURE.
instances of that kind. I remember one gentleman in particular,
who became possessed of a farm there a number of years ago ;
and the question arose in his mind how he should renovate his
pastures. He had heard that plaster was one of the means to
be used with effect, and he went to Boston, selected his plaster,
and brought it home. It was so new an idea that he was
ashamed to let his neighbors know what he had in his sleigh,
and kept it covered up ; but they found out what he had got,
and what he was going to do with it, and they ridiculed him ;
but he went on with t\\§ operation, and spread it upon his hill-
sides and upon his pastures. Very, early in the season, his
neighbors began to inquire " What has produced such an effect
upon your pastures ? " " Why, it is that rock that you ridiculed
me for bringing up." This was in the town of Barre. This
method, of course, spread very rapidly, and the land in that
town is of the character that is benefitted very much by the use
of plaster, and it has been of great advantage there ; and so it
has in the town where I reside. Still, there are some pastures
that are not improved by plaster.
It has been stated here, that mowing brush below the leaves
would be sure to eradicate it after a time. It may be so, but it
strikes me that in some cases it would be an expensive way. It
is very difficult to cut below the leaves of the low laurel, which
grows round stones. It is next to impossible to do it. Here is
the low laurel, and the little vines of " five-finger," and other
weeds, upon a pasture so thick that there is but very little grass
growing upon it. Now, I would ask, How can this pasture be
renovated but by the plough ? It seems to me that the only
way, or, if not the only way, tlie easiest way, to renovate such a
pasture is to pvit these weeds underneath by the plough, and
either to cultivate or sow with rye and seed it, and let it be fed
in that way. If it can be ploughed so as to turn the brush
under and keep them under, perhaps the latter way would
answer ; but if it cannot, it strikes me the only way is to culti-
vate it until you do kill the brush.
I have, for a number of years, practised spreading the manure
dropped by cattle, and it is practised to a considerable extent by
the farmers in our vicinity. I consider that it pays well for the
labor of doing it.
SECRETARY'S REPORT. 99
Mr. Bull. — I do not know much about pastures, for there is
not a great deal of pasture land in Middlesex County. The
people are engaged in the milk business quite extensively, and
our farmers are therefore obliged to own pastures up in the
country, especially up in New Hampshire. One of my neigh-
bors, who had a pasture up there which had formerly been
exceedingly valuable to him, but which, as he supposed, had
been overstocked for two or three years, found that it began to
fail and he did not know what to do with it. He consulted his
neighbors, and was advised to stock it with sheep. He thought
that would be the ruin of it, for the sheep is a close feeder, and
if there was too little pasture before, how was there to be enough
pasture for a flock of sheep in addition to his cows ? But con-
sidering that sheep eat plants that cows reject, and considering
also that perhaps those plants rejected by the cows were pos-
sessing the pasture, and so encroaching upon the better grasses
which formerly fed the cows, he did put in a small flock of
sheep, and to his great astonishment, his pasture improved.
He pursued that method for several years, until that pasture
was brought back to its pristine fertility, and fed the same
number of cattle that he had formerly kept upon it. I throw
out this hint for the consideration of the Board ; not that I
know anything about it, but because, if there be anything in it,
it would be a very easy and profitable method of renovating
pastures, inasmuch as you would stock your cattle and some
sheep besides.
Mr. TiDD. — There are places where it is very difficult to stock
with sheep, but where it can be done, I think it is a very effec-
tive and very profitable way. I recollect having a pasture once
that was infected with hardback, Johnswort, and a variety of
noxious herbs of this kind ; I put sheep in there, and it was
but a very few years before they were all gone, and the clover
was very luxuriant.
Mr. Perkins. — I know of no vegetable that will stand before
sheep except brakes and Johnswort. In a neighboring town
to mine, a man had a very good farm, that he kept stocked with
sheep ten or fifteen years. We called his pastures sheeped to
death. He sold his sheep, and those pastures were allowed to
lie unstocked for two years ; then he stocked with cattle, and
his pastures were better than ever before.
100 BOARD OF AGRICULTURE.
The question comes up here in relation to the kind of grass
which it is desirable to cultivate in pastures. Whitetop is not
a profitable grass to grow in pastures. It does very well up to
the fifteenth day of July, it then goes to seed, and from that
time, or from the first of August, when it has dropped its seed,
it will not keep any kind of stock any better than rye or oat
straw after the seed has been thrashed out. Herdsgrass is not
a desirable grass to be put into a permanent pasture ; it runs
out there. Redtop is the most desirable of the grasses to cultivate
in pastures ; it holds its vitality through the better part of the
season, so that the stock keep in good condition until the time
of snow-fall. White clover is a very desirable pasture plant,
and in a clay soil, it is very likely to predominate. Lime, ashes,
and plaster all have a tendency to increase the growth of clover.
Now, I wish to advance the idea that white clover is the best
quality of feed for anything that gives milk. I believe you can
produce a better quality of butter and cheese from white clover
than from any other grass.
Prof. Agassiz. — I would make a remark which I believe bears
upon a point which is not fully taken into consideration. I am
struck with the different views presented by Mr. Perkins, on so
many points, from those of other gentlemen. I have no doubt
it arises from the fact, that his land is over a thousand feet
above tide water. A difference of eleven hundred feet, in a
country like this, must make a very marked difference in the
general character of the vegetation, and I think that difference
ought to be kept in view. I know positively, that in Switzer-
land, where Alpine pasturage is very extensively carried on,
there is a complete difference in the vegetation upon which the
cattle are sustained at different heights. In fact, cattle which
are raised in the Alps are raised upon plants which they never
get as food in the lower part of the same country ; and there is
on that account a very marked difference both in the size of the
cattle and in their character as producers. I would like, there-
fore, to have the lay of the land given, with reference to its
height above the level of the sea, when any observations are
made concerning its fertility or the character of its vegetation,
because, no doubt, there must be a marked difference.
Wm. Elliot, of Greenfield. — I would like to inquire if sheep
will eat Canada thistles ? I Ijave heard that they would eat
them in preference to good hay.
SECRETARY'S REPORT. 101
Mr. Perkins. — There arc no Canada thistles in my pastures,
and I cannot say how that is ; but I know tliat if sheep arc
driven through a lot where there arc Canada thistles, they will
nip off the blossoms as they go along.
The Chairman. — I thin-k it must be apparent that the
methods of improving pasture land differ in different localities,
and that what is good for one place is not good for another.
Mr. Anderson has presented his method, which seems to have
been satisfactory so far as his farm is concerned ; and others
have presented theirs. Possibly the best view to take of it
would be that every man must be governed by the nature of the
land which he owns. I have seen pasture lands upon which
there was no grass, ploughed deep, dressed with three or four
hundred pounds of bone manure to the acre, and seeded pretty
successfully — not very ; it was a long time before the sod was
made satisfactory to the cattle. I have seen a piece of high
pasture land restored by simply hauling upon it the muck from
an adjoining mud-hole. I have seen a piece of clay land, where
grass did not grow at all, brought into a most luxuriant growth
of herdsgrass and redtop, by simply carting sand upon it, to the
depth of two or three inches, and leaving it to the action of the
frosts, the rains and the heat. It has occurred to me that,
possibly, we had better, in the first place, adopt Mr. Anderson's
rule, and not interfere with the grasses already growing in our
pastures. You cannot put any one grass, or two grasses, or
three grasses, into the best pasture land, that will entirely satisfy
the cattle, the sheep and the horses that feed upoh it ; they
want a hundred different varieties, some of them more. There-
fore I think it would be well to adopt the rule not to interfere
with the natural growth of grasses upon the piece of pasture
land which you intend to renovate. Having laid down that
rule, you will then, of course, remove all noxious weeds and
shrubs. That must be done in one way in one place, and in
another place in another way. There is no doubt that constant
cutting will destroy these things. After having accomplished
that, you will then proceed to apply to that land whatever is
necessary for its renovation. I have often thought that some
sort of an instrument might be invented, which would run
under the sod — a sort of plough that would open and lighten
the soil without destroying the sod at all. I have often seen a
102 BOARD OF AGRICULTURE.
piece of pasture roused up in that way by a simple accident ;
and an accident will sometimes furnish a rule for you to adopt.
But at any rate, after you have made up your mind that the
natural grass is all you want to improve upon, and have estab-
lished the fact that you can remove all noxious weeds growing
there, in one way or another, then the question is, what you
will apply. I remember that the Secretary of the State Board
of Agriculture once owned, in the town of Rowley, a piece of
land upon which I suppose that almost every noxious plant that
has been spoken of here grew naturally. The land was low and
flat, and you could find as much hardback as you wanted ; you
could find Johnswort, if you desired it ; you could find Canada
thistles if you were very eager for them, and almost everything.
It was low, as I have said, and it was evident there was under-
neath a considerable quantity of water. What would you do
with such a piece of land as that ? In the first place, let out
the water ; and, in the next place, if there is anything that can
be applied to it that will bring it into good grass, it is sand.
Whether it is a mechanical or chemical process I do not know,
but such a piece of land would be exceedingly benefitted by
sand.
You may find that plaster will do in some cases, but if plaster
fails, there is no reason to be discouraged. You can try ashes,
to a certain extent, with hen manure or without. Your object
should be to ascertain what kind of manure will eSect your
purpose, and then apply it. But you have forgotten one of the
most important parts of this whole question, and that is, that
you cannot stock one pasture with the same kind of animals for
a series of years, and not have that pasture suffer. Is not
that so ? I have heard that the sheep pastures in Berkshire
entirely failed at one time, and the farmers were obliged to sell
their sheep because their pastures would not keep them. But
the instant the sheep were gone, the cattle came in, and they
found feed enough. So the farmers of Berkshire would tell you
that sheep will kill a pasture, and cattle improve it. But the
simple fact was that the sheep had taken from those pastures,
for a series of years, all the grass they were willing to eat, and
they had yielded manure enough to draw out other grasses for
other animals. I would, then, change the class of animals from
time to time. The pastures would last much longer, would be
SECRETARY'S REPORT. 103
more nutritious to the animals fc^ upon them, and, in the end,
this great difficulty of the failure of pasture lands, would be, to
a certain extent, remedied.
I do not say that all lands are fit for pastures, because they
are not. There is land in the Commonwealth which is not fit
for pasture land ; but if you have got a piece of land which is
really fit for pasture land, one or the other of the processes
which I have suggested will unquestionably keep it in good
condition.
Mr. Anderson. — I don't know but it may be necessary, in
the course of ages, to make this Change ; but pastures that we
are now feeding have carried through the same kind of stock
for sixty years, and are now worth double what they were. We
have one pasture that has been under grass eighty years, and
there has been no other kind of stock upon it during that
time but neat cattle. It has been over thirty years since I have
observed this system, and our pastures have been improving all
the while, and our stock improving in proportion.
Prof. Agassiz. — I know that in Switzerland, there are pas-
tures where cattle have been raised for several years, without
any kind of improvement of the natural feed. I do not main-
tain that those lands are used to the best advantage, either. I
do not know but they might be stocked to a much greater
extent than they are.
The Chairman. — We have been talking about renovating
pasture lands. There would be no occasion for renovating such
pasture lands at all, nor those to which Mr. Anderson has
referred.
The discussion here terminated.
Mr. Perkins, in behalf of the committee appointed to consider
the question of the establishment of the Agricultural College,
stated that the committee had consulted together, in relation to
the matter, and would request to be allowed to delay their
report until the annual meeting in January. The request was
granted.
Adjourned to seven and a half o'clock.
Evening Session. — Met at seven and a half o'clock. Dr.
Loring in the chair. The Chairman stated to the audience
tliat Prof. Agassiz, who had been announced as the lecturer of
104 BOARD OF AGRICULTURE.
the evening, had kindly yielded it to Prof. Rogers, who was
obliged to return to the city in the morning. They would not,
however, be deprived of the pleasure of hearing Prof. Agassiz,
who would speak the next evening, and when they had heard
both these gentlemen, he thought they would find it difficult to
decide which had gratified them most.
ADDRESS OF PROF. WILLIAM B. ROGERS.
Thanking you, sir, for the very complimentary manner in
which you have introduced me to this audience, and most espe-
cially for a form of compliment in which I am associated with
one who is distinguished, not only on this continent, but
throughout the world and will be forever distinguished in the
history of science as its promoter and cultivator in an eminent
degree, — thanking you for this compliment, and thanking the
Board for the opportunity they have afforded me of addressing
them on this occasion, I must at the same time assure you that
I come before you entirely free from the presumption that I am
able to instruct any member of the Board or any intelligent
farmer in the Commonwealth, in the practical business of agri-
culture. I have, it is true, in connection with my studies and
my explorations in geology and in chemical science, been
brought continually in contact with the problems of agriculture,
and have learned long since to understand, not only their
immense magnitude and importance, but their peculiar com-
plexity and difficulty ; and I have, therefore, proposed to myself
this evening, in a somewhat rambling way, to present such
ideas as have occurred to me in relation, first, to the connection
which subsists between agriculture and positive science ; and,
secondly, to illustrate my views on this subject by reference to
one or two of the larger and more comprehensive relationships
which I have been enabled to trace, to some extent, throughout
the length and breadth of that portion of the Union which lies
between the Atlantic and the Mississippi Valley, in regard to
the soils, and the rocks with which those soils are associated.
The day has long since passed when the association of agri-
culture, in its largest and in its most advantageous practical
forms, with the principles of science, even in their more abstract
modes of development, was looked upon as a mere dream of the
enthusiast ; because the instructed men of all parts of the civ-
SECRETARY'S REPORT. 105
ilized world at this day recognize that science, exact science, is
but the sure application of common sense to the phenomena by
which we are surrounded. You have all, doubtless, heard the
story of the dervise in the desert and the lost camel, showing
so strikingly the truth of that long celebrated plirase of the
illustrious Bacon, in which he speaks of man as the minister and
interpreter of nature. The dervise, in his travel across the
desert, met with a party of merchants who had lost their camel.
He accosted them — " Friends, have you not lost your camel ? "
"Yes." " Was it not blind in one eye ? " -'Yes." " Was it
not lame in one of the fore legs ? " " Yes." " Had it not lost
one of its 'front teeth?" "Yes." "Was it not laden with
corn and honey ? " " Yes. Dervise, show us our camel ! "
The answer was, " I have not seen your camel. I know not
where the animal may have wandered." Indignant and
enraged, they dragged the dervise before a justice, and his sim-
ple, satisfactory plea was this : " I have not seen the lost camel,
but I saw the prints of the animal on the sands. I saw that
there was a failure in one of the steps, at each successive impres-
sion of his progress. I saw that the grass that had been bitten
where the scant herbage grew, always presented a little tuft,
uncropped in the centre. I saw by the direction of the bite that
the head had been turned obliquely ; and the busy ants on one
side and the clustering bees on the other, told me what was the
burden of the animal. Thus, then, I recognized the path of
the camel and his peculiarities ; and by the simple application
of the means of observation with which Providence has endowed
me, and the use of my own simple common sense, I interpreted
the phenomena and made the discovery."
Such is the practical application of the intellect of man in the
interpretation of nature, in all the departments in which human
discovery has been advanced. There is nothing special, there is
nothing peculiar, there is nothing mysterious in science. It is
but the multiplied, carefully renewed observation of the facts
that abound everywhere and at all times around us, and the
application of common sense, tlie ordinary principles of right
reasoning, to those facts ; enabling us to evolve the grandest
and most magnificent laws, whether those laws be such as con-
cern the dust that we tread beneath our feet, or such as link
together the starry suns, and the myriads of planets that encircle
u*
106 BOARD OF AGRICULTURE.
them. Then agriculture, as other branches of practical science,
requires the determination of our facts of observation in the
exactest form, and the proper induction of laws or principles
through tlie collation of those facts. But herein lies the great
and peculiar difficulty of agriculture as a science. I know that
some of my agricultural friends have, in former times, been
inclined to smile at me when I have said, asl am still prepared
to repeat, that what we want in agriculture, quite as much, if
not more, than anything else, are facts, — true facts, — facts in
which the most exact and precise determination is made, not
only of the result, but of all the conditions by which that result
has been brought about. It is very common to distinguish, in
ordinary conversation upon subjects of this kind, between the
philosophical or theoretical man, and the man of facts ; but the
true philosopher in agriculture, as in everything else, is the
man who is master of the largest number of the most precise
and important observations ; and until he has secured the mas-
tery of this great group of facts, he cannot philosophize. Now,
the signal difficulty attending investigations in agriculture, —
(pardon me for my seeming presumption, in speaking upon a
subject, with which you, sir, and the larger part of my audience,
are so much more familiar in detail than I,) — consists in the great
diversity, and, in many respects, peculiar obscurity of the facts.
Let us take an illustration now, in reference simply to the
phenomena of soil. We all know well tliat thei^e was a time
when not only in many parts of Europe, but largely throughout
the United States, the most sanguine, and, I may now say, the
most extravagant anticipations were formed from the applica-
tion of the doctrines of Liebig and other chemists to the affairs
of agriculture. Far be it from me in any degree to disparage
the labors of this illustrious chemist and his fellow-workers in
the field ; but the question has not unfrequently been presented
to me whether, by a knowledge of the composition of the soil,
and a knowledge of the composition of the plants that are
grown upon the soil, we cannot surely reach a successful agricul-
tural method. My answer would be, no. The composition of
the plants and the composition of the soil are only two of the
correlative facts. We must know them, but there are many
other things that we must know, which are equally essential to
be known. The soil may bo of a certain composition, and yet
SECRETARY'S REPORT. 107
the ingredients of that soil may be in such a state of mechanical
aggregation as to be scarcely at all available to the absorptive
apparatus of the plant. The conditions of atmosphere, of
moisture, and of temperature, affected always by the character
of the soil as to its mechanical composition, will have a most
marked and sometimes entirely controlling influence in regard
to the production of vegetable growth. So important is this,
that, some twenty years ago, I undertook, in association with
my youngest brother, a vefy prolonged series of investigations,
having an agricultural object in view, with the purpose of
ascertaining somewhat numerically and with necessary exact-
ness, the degree to which the solubility, and therefore the avail-
ableness, of certain mineral materials was affected by the
reduction of those substances to a state of extremely fine
comminution, and here are some of the results.
A mass of granite, which yields to rain water or to distilled
water an entirely imperceptible trace of any of its ingredients by
contact, will, when it has been reduced by a properly continued
process of reduction, to an impalpable powder, — even finer in
these experiments than wheaten flour, — at once begin to suffer
decomposition by the contact of pure water ; so much so, that
a little of this powder placed in a paper funnel, and then
exposed to the dripping, for a short time, of perfectly pure
water passing through it, will yield up a sufficient amount of its
potash, its soda, and of its lime, to make it perfectly easy to
demonstrate tlieir presence in the liquid when received in a
vessel beneath, by the appropriate tests. And so a mass of
felspar, a mass of hornblende, a mass of soapstone, or a mass of
the hardest sienite, when thus reduced to a very fine condition
of comminution will be found instantly to show the decomposing
action of the infiltrating water ; and when that water is
charged with carbonic acid, which it must be when it descends
in rain drops through tlie atmosphere, drinking up this gas as it
passes down, and still more as it sinks through the earth, it
has a double, even a tenfold power of solution in regard to
these various materials. Now see the difference in another
case. We take an ordinary mass of bone-earth, which has been
broken into the form of bone meal, by the common process of
Bogardus's mill ; we know that to a certain extent, it is soluble
by the infiltrating water that passes through it. But let this
108 BOARD OF AGRICULTURE.
material be reduced, as it can be, in a new form of mill machinery
which is at work in the vicinity of Boston, to an impalpable dust,
and it becomes quite soluble, so that the water passing through
it drinks it up in large quantities, and would furnish it most
liberally to the roots of living plants. These, then, are simple
illustrations of the enormous influence exercised by mere
mechanical aggregation on the value of soils. Of course, this
is no novelty to those who hear me ; but it seems to me that the
importance of the fact has not been duly weighed or sufficiently
recognized in practical agriculture. I might in like manner
illustrate the influence of the color of soils as aflecting their
capacity for absorbing the solar rays, and in the same connection
speak of the relative powers of difierent soils as to the conduc-
tion and retention of heat, and I might dwell on the still more
important diversities which depend on the permeability of soils
to moisture, and their power of retaining it when received ;
but I must pass over these leading considerations to ar fact of
special interest less generally known, which was first clearly
established a few years since by the great agricultural chemist
Boussingualt. This able observer ascertained that in soils con-
taining much organic matter intimately blended in the mass,
there exists and is continually evolved a marked amount of
carbonic acid in the gaseous state. He found that the air
occupying the interstices of the soil, forming often one-half of
the entire volume, was not the common atmospheric air of the
surface, but that it was air impregnated with carbonic acid,
amounting in the case of certain deep organic loams to a
considerable percentage of the whole bulk.
Now, carbonic acid, you know, is one of the materials which
contribute directly to the nourishment of plants, the substance
which chiefly furnishes the carbon, building up, as it were, the
solid framework of the vegetable structure, while the oxygen
previously combined with the carbon in the gas, is, in the pro-
cesses of the vital economy, exhaled again into the atmosphere.
Now, observe what an important element here is, which yet is
not detected by the ordinary analysis of the soil. The soil is
dried, the water is expelled, the gases it held are freed and
escape, and the soil is then analyzed as a dry, solid material,
leaving us in ignorance of one of its most important characters
— the capacity it possesses through the chemical change of its
SECRETARY'S REPORT. 109
organic contents of furnishing a continual supply'of this most
vahiable form of the food of plants.
Observe further, that not only does the carbonic acid, thus
distributed throughout such rich vegetable loams, convey
directly its important nutritious matter to the growing plant,
but it is the most powerful solvent which nature furnishesus, under
these conditions, for the calcareous compounds, and for the
various alkaline compounds contained in the granules of sub-
divided rocks ; so that the water passed through such soil
becomes freighted with carbonic acid, and thus has a powerful
dissolving action which it did not possess when it descended in
the form of rain to strike upon the surface of the ground. All
these various conditions, then, require to be taken into account,
and they must be in each particular case precisely determined,
otherwise we have not the facts. But when we do obtain all
the facts, then we are in a condition well prepared to reason
upon them, and to deduce our general laws and our practical
rules, suggested by those generalizations.
But, further than this : this knowledge of the soil, this terra
Jirma of the science and practice of agriculture does not consti-
tute its whole. We have to deal in agriculture, as we all know,
with living beings. We have all the physiological la'ws relating
to their development and growth, their nutrition and various
functions, to consider. We have in agriculture much of the
mystery, much of the difficulty and complication in our problems
which belong to the practice of the physician. We have added
to the requisitions of the most profound chemical analysis and
the largest generalizations in chemical science, a demand for
the facts and laws that belong to physiology, embracing all that
is known of the functions of living beings, in their relations to
external agencies of a chemical and mechanical nature. What
wonder, then, is it, that agriculture (pardon me for saying it,)
is a science still in its infancy, when we know well that medi-
cine, as a science, is recognized by its greatest and most illus-
trious lights, as at best, only in its nonage; and when we
conceive of the vast difficulties and the complexities of the
problems that belong to it ! Yet, we have this to console us —
that while we may not be able, for want of a thorough knowl-
edge of all the facts, and perhaps of a complete and perfect knowl-
edge of very many of them, to draw the broadest generalizations,
110 BOARD OF AGRICULTURE.
such has been the miiUiplication of exact inquiries in connec-
tion with agricultural phenomena and the relations of chemistry
and physiology to this subject of late years, that we are in a
condition to deduce many partial laws, and thus to avail our-
selves largely in practice of the lights which science, in its
various forms of inquiry, has been able to shed upon the sub-
ject. Does the view that has been presented discourage us from
the cultivation of science in its relations to agriculture ? Surely
not. It only shows us the more how necessary science is. And
let me here say, that one of the greatest advantages that can be
obtained from Schools of Agriculture, in their most enlarged and
comprehensive shape, — one of the greatest, if not the most
important result for the future progress of the science and the
art, is this : that the training which is enforced by the study of
the exact sciences, in the class-room, in the laboratory, and
among the various phenomena and objects which the naturalist
exhibits to the student, is the only sure process by which he can
be qualified for the exact determination of the facts of agriculture,
and for deducing from them scientific laws, and rules for practice.
See how it has been with meteorology ! Our fathers, for
how many generations it is not necessary to say, had been piling
up their observations, so that a library might be filled, merely by
the numbers they had jotted down as records of temperature
and other phenomena of the weather. Yet nearly the whole of
tliat vast mass of what used to be called facts has been found to
be almost valueless for purposes of generalization, simply because
the observations were not made in the right way or of the right
kind ; they were not comparable one with another ; the instru-
ments themselves were not reliable, and there was no standard
with 'which they were compared. Thus, in spite of the labor of
so many thousand observers, in recording the coldness of win-,
ters and the warmth of summers, and the varying pressure of
the air, no sufficient data were collected for determining truly
the distribution of temperature, pressure and other elements of
climate, and it is only of late years that, through the adoption
of precise methods of observation introduced by science, a sure
progress has been made in unfolding the laws of these varying
influences and phenomena. Habits of exact observation, accord-
ing to scientific methods, aiming to approach the nicety and
precision of mathematical determination, — these are the results
SECRETARY'S REPORT. Ill
of the kind of schooling wliich a student in an agricultural
college ought to have, and with which, doubtless, he will be
furnished, when such an institution shall be duly organized,
within the boundaries of this Commonwealth.
I propose, gentlemen, to say a few words in regard to certain
general aspects of the soil, as related to the rocks of the United
States, — a very broad subject it must be confessed. But before
entering on this topic definitely, it may interest my audience a
little if I show them two objects which I have before me, as
illustrating how the culture of the soil connects itself directly
with chemical inquiries, and of what an interesting character
they are. Everybody knows, of course, what clay is. It is not
a simple substance. It iisually consists of a portion of silica, in
other words, pure flint, in a state of fine subdivision, and
alumina, or pure clay. Now this pure clay consists in a very
large proportion of a peculiar metal called aluminium, so that
in this sense, we all have metallic mines under our feet, and
with every ploughshare, we are turning up large quantities of
this metallic matter. Here is the metal. [Exhibiting a small
piece of aluminium.] This is the metal which is the basis of
clay. A pure metal, beautifully resonant, [striking it upon the
desk,] hard, silver-like in its lustre, and extremely light, — a
little more than two and a half times the weight of the same
bulk of water. Many of you have, doubtless, seen it, as it is
beginning to be used to a considerable extent, in the manufac-
ture of ornaments. It exists as a very large ingredient of the
crust of the earth. The quantity of iron deposited throughout
the various strata of the globe is to be looked upon as utterly
insignificant in comparison with the quantity of this metal ; but
it is only of late years that it has been obtained from the rock
or earth in which it exists as a white oxide clay, just as iron is
found as a red oxide, in the common ores of that metal. Such,
then, is a part of the chemistry of your soil.
Here is another metal, still more curious. It is a very light
wire. Every one knows the substance called magnesia. Most
persons who have the care of a nursery, understand some of its
uses. Now magnesia is nothing more than the white rust of
this metal ; and magnesia is one of the most abundant sub-
stances in the rocky structure of the earth. Many parts of the
Vermont range of hills consist largely of magnesian slates, and
112 BOARD OF AGRICULTURE.
it is, moreover, a large ingredient of many limestone formations,
occupying extensive tracts in this and other countries. This
light metal, as you see, is capable of being made into wir6.
Now, it has a very curious property, which I shall try to show
you. [The professor here put the wire into the flame of a com-
mon lamp, and it burnt with great brilliancy.] You perceive
it burns with a very vivid combustion. The intense brilliancy
of the flame is due to the suspended particles of the volatilized
metal and its oxide produced by the combustion. This white
product which you see, is common calcined magnesia. The
process was simply this : the rusting, which is naturally very
slow, was here carried on with great rapidity, so as to combine
the oxygen in the atmosphere with this metal, and thus to
reproduce the magnesia from which the metal has been actually
manufactured. This, then, is another illustration of what we
have chemically in the soil.
I have introduced these two experiments, perhaps a little out
of place, but they serve to show how impossible it is to investi-
gate one department of physical science, independently of the
rest — how entirely reciprocal and intermingled in their laws ase
all the provinces of nature and all the parts of each. Not a
star in the visible heavens but sends its light to every other
star, and is in return the recipient of radiance from all the
rest.
In the. course of my various explorations of the geology of
portions of the United States, especially of the Middle and some
of the Southern States, I had particular occasion to observe the
relations of the soil to the subjacent rocks. I know that in
speaking to the farmers of this region of Massachusetts about
the relations of the soil in other parts of the country, they will
not consider that I am broaching a subject unfitting the occa-
sion, for we are students of the whole subject, in its largest
comprehensiveness and extent.
Now, it will be observed at once that there is a character
which marks the surface material of the New England States,
and of the Northern and North-Western States generally, which
is quite peculiar to them as compared with the States lying
further to the south. It is this : that over a very large part of
this northern area, the soil is not at all determined by the subja-
cent rock, because the surface is covered up, sometimes to a
SECRETARY'S REPORT. 113
very great depth, with the debris of the rocky materials trans-
ported from a distant region, and the material which constitutes
the soil is such, as, for the most part, does not exist in its
original form in the rocky structure which lies beneath. There-
fore the study of the rocks of a large part of such a territory is
a matter of comparatively little importance ; but the study of
the composition of this drift material, — this gravel, sand and
clay, — which constitutes the really available portion of the
surface in many districts of the north, is of course essential to
the purposes of agriculture, as it is essential to the generaliza-
tions of the scientific geologist. But when we proceed to certain
sections of the south, we pass beyond the limits of this great
northern drift, which, either through the action of glaciers, or
of vast moving masses of water, has been swept over so great a
portion of the northern hemisphere. When we pass south a
certain distance — for example, a little south of the northern
limit of Pennsylvania, — we find that this drift covering has
become very thin, and soon we find that it has entirely disap-
peared. From this, onward, the soil in general, through a vast
district of country, has been formed by the disintegration of the
subjacent rocks and has its mineral characters determined by
the nature of these rocks. Of course, in this remark I do not
include the alluvial soil of the valleys, some of which has been
transported from northern regions, — for instance, along the
northern course of the Susquehannah, — but the main soil of
the uplands, and much of that which has been deposited as
alluvion is derived from the rocky materials that occupy the
/Very surface of the contiguous land.
Let us now consider some of those great belts of soil thus
deriving their materials and qualities from the contiguous geo-
logical formations. Commencing our observations, we will
suppose; with Long Island and New Jersey, we extend our view
along that broad Atlantic plain, having the ocean on its eastern
margin, washing it continually with its wearing ripples, and
reaching towards the west and north-west as far as the falls of
the rivers, where stand Trenton, Philadelphia, Baltimore, Wash-
ington, Richmond and Petersburg, curiously enough, all located
just at the margin where this great Atlantic plain ceases, and
where the broad belt of granite and other so-called primary
rocks begins to make its appearance. Now, throughout all
16*
114 BOARD OF AGRICULTURE.
this lower and comparatively level country, we have various
sandy and loamy soils, composed chiefly of the marine deposits
of wliich the entire region is made up. Beneath the surface in
a large portion of the vast area to which I am referring are to
be found those rich resources which under improved forms of
human activity and organized industry are destined ere long to
transform the wasted fields into a garden of beautiful produc-
tiveness. The treasures are the beds of shell marl accumulated
in the ancient sea and stored up beneath the soil to serve as a
perpetual source of renovation and fertility.
The tertiary deposits of shells, sometimes of very great thick-
ness, showing themselves along the margins of rivers, and in the
ravines where they are deep enough, and found in all directions
in the interior, furnish to the land large quantities of carbonate
of lime ; and associated with this the remains of organic matter,
vegetable and animal, deposited at the same time,' materials
wliich when dug up and spread over the sands and clays, which
are seemingly sterile on the surface, enrich them in many cases
to a degree of exuberant fertility.
Let me now give a little illustration of what may here be seen
in reference to the chemistry of the soil. There is one district of
the tertiary region, north-east of Fredericksburg, celebrated now
in the history of this war, a part of the peninsula called the
Northern Neck, between the Potomac and the Rappahannock, —
where there are extensive localities destitute of shell marl,
altliough it once existed in them in enormous quantity. There,
the farmer digging with a view of finding this precious material
for manuring his fields, comes upon a mass of clay and sand,
sour to the taste and having the smell of sulphur, and which,
when applied to the soil under ordinary circumstances, produces
a poisonous instead of a beneficial effect. Look at this clay
or sand, and you will see that it contains no shells. They could
not exist in it, but would be dissolved out and removed by the
acid which impregnates the mass. But instead of the shells you
will see cavities dispersed in every direction through the clay
and sand, which a little observation will show to be what we
migbt call the spectres of departed shells. In other words, they
are the hollow moulds left by the shells which once abounded
in the mass. But what has become of the shells ? Dig down
twenty, thirty feet deeper, and you reach a stratum of clay ;
SECRETARY'S REPORT. 115
and this clay is studded all over, penetrated tlirongh in all '
directions with beautiful crystals of gypsum, in the form that
mineralogists call selenite. The history of the wliole change is
at once revealed. The acid that still lingers in the upper clays,
is sulphuric acid in a very diluted form. The whole mass of
this clay has been slowly infiltrated from above by this diluted
acid, which has dissolved out all the shelly matter, forming
plaster of Paris from the carbonate of lime, which being
arrested by the impenetrable bed of clay below, has formed the
crystals of gypsum there. The farmer who has learned this
history knows where to find the gypsum deposit. When he
discovers the beds of clay from which the shells have been
dissolved, he feels pretty sure that some twenty or thirty feet
lower down he will find what is perhaps more valuable for his
grass land than the original marl would have been, for he knows
that in this region nature has manufactured the gypsum
through the destruction of the shells.
We pass next to the belt lying west of this, in Pennsylvania,
New Jersey, Virginia, the Carolinas, and Georgia, and we come
upon the granites and gneissoid and slaty rocks, quite analogous
to those which we have here in the central and north-western
sections of New England. But in the region referred to, these
rocks have been decomposed to an extraordinary extent. The
soil there is nothing more, as it were, than effete rock, — the
residuum left by the decomposition of the strata beneath.
Tliere has been no soil transported from other districts and
spread over the surface. Therefore the study of the character
of the rock gives, in a large degree, a clue to the character of
the soil. So deep has been this process of decomposition,
through the slow agency of rain descending upon the surface
and the oxygen of the atmosphere attacking the various metallic
compounds, that in many places where the apprehension was
felt that enormous rock cuttings would become necessary in the
construction of railroads, it has proved that the pick and spade
were all that was required ; and yet, so free from violence has
been the change that the very structure 'of the mica-slates and
the talc-slates is perfectly preserved. You may walk through a
deep cut in one of those railroads, where the wall may be as
much as sixty or seventy feet high on either side, and you will
think you see solid rock, consisting of colored bands of mica-
116 BOARD OF AGRICULTURE.
slate and talc-slate, with occasionally interspersed veins of
quartz, the whole succession of beds steeply inclined, and
thereby admitting more freely the decomposing agencies from
the surface. Compact as the mass seems, it crumbles at a touch.
These rocks are thus forming soil continually. The decomposed
mass still contains some lime, some potash, and other valuable
materials appropriate to soils, and is ready to deliver them up
for the use of growing vegetables, whenever opportunity may be
presented. We may regard the mass of softened rock, as hav-
ing, to a great extent, been leached out, by the action of
rain-water, and thus largely deprived of its lime and other
soluble ingredients. Now, it is an important remark, in con-
nection with this change, that the lime and the soda and the
potash belonging to these rocky matters in their original solid
aggregation, may be looked upon as cementing materials, and
that the moment you separate these from the rocky substance,
you break up the cohesion of its parts, and, as in the case of
granite, it tumbles down in earthy particles, forming a white clay,
mixed with the quartz and mica which remain, comparatively
unchanged by the action of these agents.
Advancing a stage further towards the west, we come upon a
continuation of our Vermont range, the Green Mountains,
which, with very little interruption, run down as far as the mid-
dle of Western Georgia. This mountain belt may be traced,
indeed, in geological continuity, from the banks of the St. Law-
rence, through that portion of Canada which is contiguous,
along through Vermont, through New York, — constituting the
Higblands, — through New Jersey, — having the same name, —
through Pennsylvania, under the name of the South Mountains,
until it comes to the grandly classic region of Harper's Ferry,
where it takes the name of the Blue Ridge, and continued in
south-westerly course forms the great backbone of the central
portion of Virginia ; whence it passes out to form the Iron and
Smoky Mountains of North Carolina, whose grand summits tower
even many hundred feet above Mount Washington itself; thence,
prolonged still further; it declines, and is lost about the centre
of the line of division between Georgia and Alabama. Here is
a great range of rocky materials, in many respects analogous
throughout its whole course, and associated with soils derived
from the decomposition and having analogous characters. On
SECRETARY'S REPORT. 117
the west of this great mountain range, in Vermont and in New
Jersey, and again in Pennsylvania, Virginia, North Carolina,
East Tennesee, and Alabama, we have one grand continuous
belt of formations, perhaps one of the most superb agricultural
and mineral regions of the habitable globe ; a belt overlooked
on either side by mountains, prolonghig itself through a distance
of more than a thousand miles, and covered from end to end with
limestone rock, and furnishing all the resources of a limestone
region in its springs, its metallic ores, its grass-producing soils,
and the rounded outlines of its topography. And then, when
we pass still further west and north, we encounter ranges of
slate and sandstone and calcareous rocks, in a parallel succes-
sion of lofty hills and deep valleys, abounding in useful ores,
and furnishing a diversity of soils, corresponding to the strata
from which they are replenished. Beyond this rugged belt of
the Appalachians we reach the margin of the far-extending coal
measures, made up of sandy, slaty, marly, and calcareous strata,
interleaved throughout with vast sheets of coal and covered
with a soil springing directly from these materials.
Such, on a great scale, are the facts which illustrate the inti-
mate association, throughout wide regions, of the soils, with the
rocks or other deposits which lie beneath or around them ;. and
they clearly show, that in all future migrations in that direc-
tion, for the extension of American enterprise and the develop-
ment of American industry, under more happy auspices, a
knowledge of the geology of the country will furnish the best
clue to the fundamental facts connected with its agriculture.
THIKD DAY.
Morning Session. — Met at ten o'clock. Paoli Lathrop, of
South Hadley, was elected President, pro tern.
The first subject assigned for discussion was
CATTLE HUSBANDRY.
The Chairman. — I will say that I do not think there is any
particular breed of cattle that is best for all places and climates.
A man who is selecting cattle should select the best animals for
breeding that he can find, without much regard to cost, with
reference to his situation, — according to his soils and his means
of feed. I would not advise any man who is going to breed
118 BOARD OF AGRICULTURE.
cattle to go into the expense of buying high-bred cattle unless
he expects to take care of them. No man can afford to
keep his cattle, hogs, and sheep, unless he keeps them constantly
growing. There are many of our farmers who commence the
winter with a herd of cattle, feed out the whole of their hay and
grain, and in the spring, their cattle are worth no more than
they were in the fall. Now, if they would add to their feed
and keep them growing, they would gain something ; if they
will not do this, they will get nothing for their feed but the
manure ; and from poor cattle, the manure is as much poorer
as the cattle are poorer.
Dr. LoRiNG. — The subject as presented to the meeting is
somewhat novel in its phraseology, and it was so presented by
the committee for the express purpose of allowing a large lati-
tude of debate. You will observe that nothing is said about
breeds, but the topic is intended to include all those classes of
cattle that have, to a certain extent, become acclimated, and
have become almost a distinct breed by themselves ia certain
localities in New England.
I suppose that one important point in the discussion would
be the most valuable class of animals for New England farming
purposes. It was very properly remarked at the opening of the
meeting, that there is no one distinct and definite breed of ani-
mals universally adapted to New England agriculture. We
have great diversity of soil and climate here. We have pastures
of every description ; high, hilly pastures, covered with short,
sweet feed, and the luxuriant pastures of our river valleys.
We find these various kinds of soil and these pastures in almost
every State. The State of Maine, including a very large terri-
tory, has almost as great a variety of feed in it as all the rest of
New England. There is as much difference between the feed
along the valley of the Aroostook and the Kennebeck as there is
between the valley of the Kennebeck and tlie Connecticut.
There is as much difference between the pastures of the north-
ern part of that State, and the pastures about Portland and the
southern part of the State as there is between the pastures of
Essex and Franklin Counties. So of New Hampshire ; so of
Vermont ; so of Massachusetts ; and so of Connecticut and
Rhode Island. It must be evident, then, that the same rule
holds good with regard to cattle here that does in many parts of
SECRETARY'S REPORT. 119
•
Europe. The traveller through Switzerland is sometimes aston-
ished to find that the mere boundary between two cantons will
make as much distinction in the cattle to be found in those two
cantons as if that dividing line were a thousand miles wide. It is
owing partly to the fact, that for a long series of years the cattle
planted upon these various sections of Switzerland have estab-
lished for themselves a distinct identity, and adapted themselves
to the special agricultural peculiarities of the cantons in which
they are produced. Now, the same^law, of course, applies to
New England ; and when I hear any gentleman advocating any
distinct breed as adapted to all New England, I have only to
point him to that country, where they have been planted, and
where they have established distinct families, adapted to the
peculiarities of soil and climate in which they live.
I suppose that in New England, especially, the dairy is about
the most important point to which the breeding of cattle can be
devoted. I tliink a dairy cow, a cow adapted chiefly to the
purpose of producing the most butter and cheese, or milk, if you
are near a milk market, from the least amount of food, is, in
the long run, the best cow for a New England farmer to own.
I have no doubt that there are certain sections of the States,
perhaps, of Massachusetts, in which large, heavy cattle can be
raised to profit. There are unquestionably certain sections
where butter and cheese especially are manufactured, where it
is an object to the farmer to reduce his feed, with due regard
to thrift, to that point which will most economically carry a cow
through the vacation of winter, — that is, from the end of tlie
dairy in autumn to the beginning of the dairy in spring, — and in
those sections, larger-sized cattle are advantageous. There are,
therefore, certain sections in which the heavier animals can be
reared with profit; — large milkers, beginning in the middle of
May, and going on until the last of feed in autumn, producing
a great quantity of milk, whicli are profitable cows to the farmer,
and which can be wintered economically upon the rough fodder
which grows so abundantly in many parts of this State. That is
one branch of farming that is unquestionably attended with
profit. It enables the farmer to furnish himself witli manure
in winter, and at the same time it furnishes him with an oppor-
tunity, in case of accident to such a dairy cow as that, to convert
her into an abundance of beef during the next season following.
120 BOARD OF AGRICULTURE.
I make these remarks because I know that a great many
farmers in the Commonwealth pursue that branch of business,
with that class of cattle, to advantage. How many herds of
cattle we know of in this valley of the description I have spoken
of, one side of which commenced with the best blood to be
found either in this country or in Europe, properly crossed
upon the best animals here, until at last they have established
themselves, and have brought themselves up to a type of
animal which is entirely worthy of the best breeder of the best
animals in England or anywhere else. They find no place in
the Herd Book ; they have not sprung from any royal family ;
I grant that on their mother's side they have nothing to boast
of, except that their ancestors were pretty good cattle ; but on
their father's side they get to the fountain-head, and by years
of breeding in that way, they have really established for them-
selves a type adapted to this soil and climate, and a type which
I am almost inclined to say, and I don't know but I might say
with truth, better adapted to the soil and climate in which they
have grown up, than any imported animals we can conceive of,
considering the fact that our soil and climate differ so materially
from those of any other country where herds of animals of that
description are raised. They are acclimated, they are almost
indigenous, they are natives, they know exactly what they are
to meet with in winter, they understand our pastures in
summer ; and they have that kind of bone and muscle and
digestive organs, and that organization of heart and lungs,
which make them peculiarly adapted to the farming of this
section of New England.
Now, there are a great many farmers, I think, who find it for
their advantage, under the circumstances I have described, to
select animals like those of which I have spoken. Gentlemen
who propose to keep such animals must have just as good pas-
tures and winter feed as some of those persons who spoke
yesterday of the condition to which they have brought their
pastures by careful renewal have got. Such animals will not
browse on barren hills ; they cannot live on sandy plains ; they
cannot live in mud holes. These animals must of necessity go
to the good farmer who takes care of his pastures, and especial
care of his mowing land.
SECRETARY'S REPORT. 121
Then we have another class, and that is the smaller animal of
which I spoke in the beginning. Not exactly the kind of
animal we now have. This question is of different " kinds " of
animals. Now, sir, we have one kind of animal in New Eng-
land, the special utility of which I have never been able exactly
to ascertain. I think they may be pronounced the poorest
" kind " that was ever heard of. We are told that they sprung
from ccrtai* animals brought here by the Puritans. If the
Puritans did bring them here, they were the poorest thing they
brought. They have no sort of shape that is satisfactory to a
judge of cattle ; their whole external outline is in violation of
every rule of breeding ; their whole physiological condition in
violation of every law laid down by those who have studied the
animal physiology, with reference to breeding. Their prominent
point, apparently, is their horns. No intelligence in their eyes,
nothing fine about their muzzles, no indication that they have
any qualities except those dull, heavy, stupid, inanimate qualities
which enable them to go through the dullest toil on the poorest
conceivable farm known on earth. Their heads and horns will
almost outweigh all the rest of their carcases. You find them
with bad crops, broken off behind the shoulders, raw-boned and
rough ; their skins as hard as a stove-pipe, nothing mellow about
them ; their hair as hard and inexpressive as the stubble of the
grass that was mown in the middle of the drought of last
summer. Now and then you find some person who owns one
of these animals, who will say to you, " I have got a cow that
will give twenty quarts of milk, and she is a native, too." He
never tells how much it costs to get the milk, or how much food
it takes to keep her in that condition. She presents herself
with a tremendous capacity to carry food, and she ought to do
something in return for it ; but she is an exception. If you
will examine the picture of the Oakes cow, which, fifty years
ago,, was a famous cow in New England, you will find that
although she was a profitable cow for the dairy, she had no
point to recommend her. She was a mere accident, and never
transmitted any of her qualities. You will find there is not a
single representative of that cow now that is of any sort of value
to any farmer of New England.
Now, that is not an extravagant description. Those gentle-
men who were with me on the pleuro-pneumonia commission,
16*
122 BOARD OF AGRICULTURE.
know perfectly well the kind of cattle they too often met with.
There were some herds of good cattle, but I would like to ask
you, sir, [Mr. Lathrop,] how many scores of yearling and two-
year old steers and stags that would have had but little to
recommend them, were found in the region visited by that
dreadful disease. It seemed to me that they would hardly pay
for wintering. They undoubtedly converted a large quantity of
coarse food into manure ; but I doubt if they themselves were
worth much more in the spring than they were in the autumn.
Any of you may find the same thing in other parts of the "State,
and too often in the hands of farmers, who, in other respects
manage their farms well.
I do not think these animals are creditable to the agriculture
of Massachusetts. There is no reason why, from the eastern
boundary of Maine to the southern boundary of Connecticut
and Rhode Island, there should be found animals of that
description, for we have scattered all over New England male
animals of the "best description, offered to farmers at the most
reasonable prices ; and if gentlemen examine those places where
the best animals have been produced, they would find that it has
been done by the infusion of good blood, brought there by some
enterprising and careful man. Go up to Berkshire — not a very
promising part of Massachusetts — not a place in which you can
plant corn and sit at your doors and see it grow ; not that part
of Massachusetts where the frosts cease so early in the spring
and keep off so late in autumn, that the farmer has a long and
luxuriant season before him ; where there are good pastures, it
is true, but not what would be called an easy, fine, or luxuriant
farming country, — go up there, and what do you see ? Why, in
one of those towns, by the introduction of a good Shorthorn
bull, has been established a race of animals which has brought
wealth into the town, and has made the farmers prosperous.
Go, not four miles from here, and what do you see ? By the
careful introduction of that kind of blood which has been so
prudently bred and husbanded in this valley, a herd of cattle
has been secured, which, although not in the Herd Book, will
vie with any herd in or out of it that can be found in the world.
In New Hampshire, in. Connecticut, and in Eastern Massachu-
setts you find the same thing.
SECRETARY'S REPORT. 123
Now, that is the kind of animal that is worth having in New
England ; I will not say the breed, for I will not undertake to
define which hreed is best adapted to any given locality ; let
every farmer judge for himself. There are men here who know
perfectly well that the introduction of a Shorthorn bull into
their region is a perfect blessing to them. I see plenty of men
who know that the introduction of an Ayreshire bull into their
region is a little more than a blessing to them. Let every
farmer judge according to his necessities, and you will then
have, not the poor kind of animals I have described, but good
kinds, each of a good quality, and each adapted to the locality
in which it is produced. If there is any section of the State in
which large, heavy cattle can be produced to profit, let them be
produced there ; and those of us who live in a section where
the pastures are shorter, where it is important that the milking
powers of our animals should be kept up almost the season
round ; where we are obliged to feed good hay to our cattle
and some grain ; where the temptation of a milk market is not
to be resisted, even if a little money is lost in the winter, — ^in
these sections, we must have an entirely different kind of animal.
Let this be the rule, — a sort of universal rule, — we will have a
good kind of animal, at any rate ; a kind and description
adapted to the climate, soil and location in which we live.
Now, then, what is this kind ? There are certain rules which
you cannot violate. You may breed for one thing or another,
but there is a certain shape of animal which belongs to a proper
and good kind, which you cannot violate in any way. You
cannot make a good cow out of a poor one ; at the same time
there are certain rules by which you can judge of the different
kinds of animal the farmer may adopt. For instance, you
begin at the head. Every man knows that there is no animal
0/1 the face of the earth that has not just as much expression in
its countenance as any man, according to the class to which it
belongs ; and that is almost the first pre-requisite. I do not
mean to say that I would have animals with a fine-drawn, small-
sized, or admirably-chiselled head, but I would have heads that
present indications of strength ; width of forehead ; not a great
preponderance of horns, but the horns nicely set on ; great
length from the root of the horns down to the eyes ; width
between the *eyes ; the face below the eyes not brought down
124 BOARD OF AGRICULTURE.
and tapering to a point, but gradually approaching a good,
luxurious, ample muzzle, expressive of a vigorous appetite and
good nutritive functions ; and, at the same time, that degree of
brightness and patience and amiability about the eyes that is so
agreeable in all living beings, — the horse and the cow, man and
woman. I would have a clean, thin, finely-shaped neck, not too
long nor too short, with a certain depth down through to the
brisket, which indicates strength of circulation. If I am told
that the male of such a cow would have an effeminate, cow-like
neck, I pause there. I want a masculine, not an effeminate-
looking bull. I want a firm, strong, well-rising crest to the
neck, indicating that he has got the will as well as the power to
protect the females of the herd. As to the shoulders, you want
the animal snug, compact in the shoulder, for beef. If for the
dairy, you cannot be too particular about the compactness with
which the shoulder-blade is set on the top, and the uniformity
with which it comes up there ; neither can you be too careful
to have the bone of the lower part of the shoulder prominent
and well-developed ; not round and tight and snug, but long
from the elbow to the point of the shoulder, and, as the animal
moves, free and easy in its motion. Then, when you come back
to the ribs, you want a rib springing with grace from the spine ;
not a flat-sided animal, nor one with a round, thick-feeling rib.
You may be sure there never was a good dairy cow that had
what is usually called a round rib. I speak of the rib alone
and not of the shape given to the carcase by the ribs. If such
a cow gives you twenty quarts one day, in three weeks she won't
give you six. On the top of the spine, the processes should be
loose and open. As you come to the hind-quarters, let the line
from the hip back to the tail be as straight as a water-level can
make it. Then you want a well made, solid hind-quarter, not
too thin nor too thick, but well muscled ; and a hind leg strong,
firm, that looks as if it would stand the wear and tear of fifteen
years of hard labor. And the legs should be well-defined, finely
drawn, and looking as if there were strength and nerve in
them ; not legs particularly round, but in which all the cords
and muscles stand out with vigor, as if they had good blood
behind them to keep them in good order. The skin should be
soft, the liair lively. The matter of color is not of great impor-
tance. If you will adopt this rule, I think you wHl find that
SECRETARY'S REPORT. 125
no animal made up in that way will fail to feed well. And this
is the reason why Jerseys, which as a "breed are not well made,
are unprofitable feeders, as compared with other breeds known
to have better forms, and consequently better constitutions. If
you govern yourselves by the character of your pastures, you
need not be afraid that such an animal as I have described will
fall to pieces in the summer. If the size is what is adapted to
your land, they will know how to take care of themselves. So,
then, as a general rule for New England, let us adopt some
such system as I have advised, and let each man, or let the men
of each locality, govern themselves by the necessities of the
case. I am confident that more attention to the structure and
quality of the animal, and less devotion to large, imposing size,
would be advantageous to most of the farmers of New England.
Medium sized, well-shaped animals seem best adapted to our
farming.
Adopting that rule, and being guided by the light which that
throws upon you, you can all arrive at the same thing which I
have described. I do not mean, however, to say that it would
be to the advantage of every man to enter into cattle husban-
dry ; I am describing what should be done by those men who
would go into it ; and as we must all go into it more or less,
let us adopt the rule that we will have the kind adapted to the
soil and climate in which we live, and to the neighboring
markets. Then I think the whole class of animals will be
improved here, and we shall not, as now, be compelled, of neces-
sity, as officers of agricultural societies, to bestow premiums
upon animals that are not worthy to be driven to an agricultural
show. If I have succeeded in opening the debate, Mr. Chair-
man, I have accomplished just what you requested me to do.
Mr. Perkins. — It is the feed that makes the animal, to a great
extent, and we cannot get good animals without good feed.
The suggestion has been made here that cattle can be kept a
little short in winter. That is not the experience of the people
up our way ; and my observation is, that where the cattle are
close kept, the people complain of hard times, and the cattle
show it ; while those that are well kept show good times, and
the people think that the times are good, too. In order that
cows may do well during the summer season, they should be
well kept through the winter. The farmers up our way in
126 BOARD OF AGRICULTURE.
Berkshire County, who are most successful in their dairies, keep
their stock the best. I used to think, a good many years ago,
that if stock were kept a little short in winter they would grow
enough more in summer to make it up ; but if an animal grows
one or two pounds a day in winter, it is more likely to grow
three or four in summer than if it had not grown at all in the
winter. The quality of the milk is an object in making butter
and cheese, and a dairy cow that is well kept will raise more
cream than a cow in a low condition, and make more cheese.
The agricultural qualities of Berkshire County have been
called in question here a little. Representing a part of that
county, I must stand up in its defence. I believe we have as
good land in some parts of that county as there is in the State
of Massachusetts, or in any other State in the Union. To
illustrate that, I will say that I have in mind a man who last
year raised sixteen acres of corn, without any manure, with the
exception of a little plaster and ashes put in the hill, and sold
eight hundred bushels, and kept what he wanted to use, and
lie has a large family, and keeps a large stock of cattle. That
corn was raised at an expense of only about fifteen cents a
busliel for labor. I have in mind another man who has raised
eight acres last year, and got between ninety and a hundred
bushels to the acre. I have in mind another man there who
lias raised his sixty acres in one body. What the result will be
I cannot tell you, but it will be something, with corn at $2 a
bushel. And tliat was raised without manure.
Mr. Stedman, of Chicopee. — I think we shall all agree that
the question how to obtain the best dairy cow is of the first
importance to Massachusetts farmers. I would suggest, as my
opinion, that the best way this can be done is by selecting
the best common, or native cows, and crossing them with a
thoroughbred bull, and so continuing, using none but thor-
oughbred bulls, of some one of the breeds. And in the
selection of a bull, we should not only be sure that he is a
thoroughbred, but that he is descended from a milking family,
as it is well known to those who are conversant with these
matters, that there is a vast difference in eacli of the breeds in
different families ; some of the families of the Shorthorns, for
instance, having cows that produce scarcely milk enough to
SECRETARY'S REPORT. 127
feed their calves, while others yield a generous flow, and for a
great length of time. This matter has been greatly overlooked.
As 1 said, the dairy is of the first importance, yet, at the
same time, we must keep in view the production of meat.
When good cattle are worth upon the foot $10 a hundred,
it is very doubtful whether we can afford to lay aside this
consideration entirely, destroy all the male calves, and give
our attention wholly to the dairy. I believe the production
of meat is a source of profit, and should be connected with the
dairy ; and having this in view, it is desirable that we should
select animals that possess qualities for the production of meat,
size being one, as it is well known that well-proportioned, large
animals, bring a larger price per pound than small ones, while
they can probably be reared with as little expense. So that in
those sections of our State where large cattle will grow to
advantage, it is better that we should introduce some of the
larger breeds ; and I am free to say that I have found, in most
sections of the State, cattle of this description. In Berkshire,
in Franklin, in Worcester, and, I believe, very generally,
throughout the State, we have pastures that will carry these
cattle through the summer, and it seems to me that the great
Shorthorns are, upon the whole, about the best cattle for the
largest section of our State.
Prof. Agassiz. — I had some thought of taking up for the
subject of my lecture this evening, the physiological principles
of breeding, with reference to what may be done to improve
our various kinds of domestic animals ; but as I see that tliese
lectures are attended by ladies as well as by gentlemen, I may,
perhaps, take this opportunity to make a few remarks upon this
subject, which are akin to the present subject of discussion.
In the first place, I would say a word with reference to the
advantage of small-sized cattle. Allusion has been made to
the cattle of Switzerland. In the days when I lived in that
beautiful country, I paid little attention to the cattle, or other
domesticated animals, or to subjects akin to the objects of this
Board, but I have distinct recollections, and one of those
recollections bears upon the subject under consideration. It
is important to know why we have such extreme differences in
the size of our cattle. There is no doubt, that with reference
to the production of meat, we should have as large individuals
128 BOARD OF AGRICULTURE.
as possible ; with reference to the production of milk, we
should have the largest amount of production of that kind
with the smallest animal, requiring the least amount of food.
Now, there is one striking feature in the distribution of cattle
through Switzerland : that in the interior parts of the country,
in the Alpine districts especially, the cattle are all small, while
in the western part of Switzerland, in the subalpine districts,
and in the Jura, the cattle are all large. When you inquire
into the possible circumstances which produce that difference,
you have at once the answer if you look at a geological map ;
and here geology appears in direct connection with agricultural
pursuits. In those districts of Switzerland which are entirely
made up of granite rocks, with talc and mica slates, and
gneiss — primitive rocks, as they are called — you find nothing
but small cattle. In those regions where the subsoil is formed
of limestone, the cattle are large. You see at once the expla-
nation. In the one district, the animal has a large supply of
limestone with which to build up its bony frame ; in the other,
the supply of lime is small, and the animal cannot build up a
large frame.
Now, let us apply that fact to our purpose. I say, if it is an
object to produce a large kind of cattle, you must provide your
cattle with lime, that they may build up a large frame. But
we have no limestone in Massachusetts, and how shall we do it ?
I propose to the intelligent farmers who are interested in this
matter an experiment. Let them put some crushed lime in the
food of their cattle, and see how that will answer. Let them
try in what shape and manner they can increase the size of
their cattle by adding chalk to their food, so that they may have
the elements out of which to build a large, bony frame. I have
no doubt, from the interesting remarks I have heard yesterday
and to-day, and the large amount of information I have been
able to collect from the lips of so many practical farmers, that,
having these suggestions, they will at once know how to apply
them. I do not know how to do it. I have never been inter-
ested in raising a single cow, so I do not know how to take care
of cattle, and would not know what to advise ; but I am a
physiologist, and know what are the principles of physiology,
and I am satisfied that to raise large cattle, you must introduce
into their systems, with their food, a sufficient amount of lime-
SECRETARY'S REPORT. 129
stone to build up a large, bony frame, and tbat you must do
this artificially, where nature does not provide the cattle with a
sufficient amount of lime in the waters from which they drink,
and in the rocks against which they rub themselves, to make
their bones. With us, in the Jura, or in the canton Freiburg,
in the Alps, which is a limestone country, every pail of water
contains a large quantity of lime in solution, and every cow
that drinks, drinks in bones, or at least lime, with which to
make bones. That lime we must supply.
Now, with reference to breeding. And here breeding comes
in for a share in making these good kinds or poor kinds of
cattle. Let us examine what the native animal is ; — and again
I say, that when you have these principles before you, I know
that, in a very short time, whatever value they have will be
applied to the promotion of agricultural improvement. I
believe that all our discussions are a little too loose ; that we
don't understand all the elements of the question sufficiently to
know by numerical value what there is in one and what there
is in the other proposition that is discussed. I hear the charac-
teristics of a dairy cow spoken of in contrast with those of a
beef animal ; but I want to know what there is that makes up
two such different animals. Differences in form have been
alluded to, and differences in situation have been alluded to
also, and these ought to be considered separately ; but there are
differences in substance of which I have heard nothing said. I
should like to ascertain — and for that experiments must be
made which we have not on hand — what is the percentage of
bone in the best animal to fatten or to raise for beef, what the
percentage of skin, of horn, of hoof, of blood, of lymph, of liver,
which goes to make up the sum total of the weight of the ani-
mal, and how far there is a difference in those respects between
the different kinds of cattle which we raise. No work gives us
these facts yet ; but now there is growing up in Cambridge a
Museum of Comparative Zoology, in which there is a special
department devoted to domestic animals, and I am trying to
bring together there, to begin with, skeletons of the different
varieties of animals which we raise. I have not been able to
get, thus far, any but the- common kinds of these animals, with
the exception of a few valuable horses, known as distinguished
trotters ; but I should like to obtain for that Museum animals,
17*
130 BOARD OF AGRICULTURE.
the qualifications of which, during their lifetime, Irave been
known, and when such animals die, I wish that gentlemen inter-
ested in having these things recorded, would have the kindness
to let me have the carcase, especially where the death is acci-
dental, because then, when the animal was in full vigor, it will be
possible to weigh it, and ascertain its total weight, and then go
on to an analyzation, by which it can be ascertained how much
the skeleton enters into the weight, how much the flesh, how
much the skin, and how much every part, so that we may know,
after a number of such experiments, whether there is, in the
development of certain portions of the system, a leading influ-
ence in producing those qualities which we require. As long
as we speak generally, we have no means of ascertaining in what
direction our efibrts in breeding or raising cattle must go, in
order to secure the animals which we want.
Now, with reference to breeding. In breeding, we must
remember that every animal has a number of elements in it by
which it may be distinguished from every other animal. All
the individuals belonging to one kind of cattle, all cows and
bulls put together, with their calves, or the whole race of cattle,
for instance, have certain properties which distinguish them
from the horse, the donkey, the sheep. Now, the primary
peculiarity of all animals is that they transmit, generation after
generation, that sum total of qualities. Inheritance or trans-
mission of qualities is the primary feature of all animals ; and
this transmission consists not only in transferring, generation
after generation, the general qualities of the whole race, but in
a difference which is fundamental. There is always a certain
proportion of male and female. Whatever be the qualifications
or the peculiarities of the kind of animal, there is that primary
difference at once established ; there are so many males and so
many females of each kind born, by which the process of repro-
duction is maintained. That is one of the primary laws of
organization, and that essential difference extends throughout
the whole animal kingdom and throughout the whole vegetable
kingdom. There is that essential, primary difference between
one set of individuals and another set, — that one certain ratio is
male and the other is female ; and these two elements combined
constitute the means of the transmission of those qualities
which are common to them all as a whole. You must, there-
SECRETARY'S REPORT. 131
fore, always take* these two elements into consideration in the
propagation of animals, — tlic qualities of the two sexes.
Now, individual animals, again, have some very important
share in this. If I look at this assembly, I see no two indi-
viduals alike, and if I go out of doors, the same impression
continues. I see no two men nor two women alike ; and if I
go. to the farm, I see no two heads of cattle alike. Besides
these common features which go to make up humanity, or
which go to make up the cow world, the horse world, the
donkey world, the sheep world, the pig world — besides these
common features, there is individuality noticeable everywhere,
and that individuality is marked. Every shepherd knows how
to distinguish every individual of the flock he owns.
Now, this individuality is not altogether transmissible, as the
general properties which go to make up the whole race are ; only
a part of these peculiarities of the individual being are trans-
mitted, generation after generation ; for you will notice that the
children of one family are not all like the father, nor are they
all like the mother, nor are they all even a mixture of the two.
And what is true of man is true of animals. Everv individual
born from the same parents may differ from both parents, or
may have a certain degree of resemblance to both parents.
Let us, therefore, not forget this second law of reproduction,
which consists in a partial transmission of individual character-
istics, while there is a total transmission of those general
features which go to make up the kind of animal. We never
expect to have a horse born from a cow — we expect a calf,
a young cow or a young bull ; and we expect that, within a
certain limit, that calf will share the properties of either the
mother or the father, but we know tliat it will not do this fully.
Now, what can we do to ascertain what we shall get ? — for it is
on the assumption that, having a male of certain qualities and
a female of certain qualities, we can get the best animal out of
the two, that we proceed in introducing a certain distinct
animal into a herd, with the expectation of improving the
progeny of that herd. We may make tremendous mistakes
in so doing, and I want to point out the basis of these mis-
takes, because they are the foundation of all our disappoint-
ments. I am not prepared to tell you how to remedy all these
disappointments, but I will point out their sources that you
132 BOARD OF AGRICULTURE.
may, in your practical wisdom, devise tlie means to obviate
them.
An individual, however distinguished he may be in himself,
has, in consequence of tliis law of inheritance, combined in
himself a variety of elements which may reappear in his
progeny. Now, remember that an animal may be as distin-
guished an individual as you could wish to have as the head
of aMesirable progeny on your farm, and yet, notwithstanding
these apparently eminent qualifications, he may be vitiated for
the purpose for which you want him because of some character-
istics of his ancestors. An animal is not made up of the
elements of his father and mother alone ; he has also the ele-
ments of his grandfather and of his grandmother, and he has
the elements of his whole race behind. Now, within certain
limits, these ancestral elements come up again, and they come
up again especially in the third generation. There is a singu-
lar law which pervades male animated nature throughout,
which is recognized as a physiological principle, and that is,
that some features of an animal are transmitted, not so much
directly to his immediate descendants, but to his grandchildren,
to the third generation. You must, therefore, before you can
be sure of proceeding in the right way, know the ancestry of
your breeding animals for at least three generations back ;
otherwise you may have cropping out the characteristics of
the grandfather or grandmother where you least expected
them ; and the grandfather or grandmother of that distin-
guished individual may be the last animal you would want
to have on your farm. Do not, then, trust animals that are
trumpeted all over the country as distinguished animals, before
you know what were their grandparents, otherwise you may be
greatly disappointed and deceived. That is the first condition
of successful breeding. You must know that you have a family
which has ancestral qualities to be depended upon before you
introduce that animal as an element of growth into your herd.
I am glad that I do not know any of the valuable and cele-
brated animals in the community, because I am able to speak
with a degree of independence which I should not possess if I
knew my friend A, B, or C had a valuable bull, or a valuable
horse, which yielded him so much income, and whose reputa-
tion it was desirable should be kept up. I liave no such friends,
SECRETARY'S REPORT. 133
I am happy to say here, and, therefore, I can speak upon prin-
ciples, and shield you, by those principles, from the mischief
you might do by trusting too indiscriminately to representations
which* may be, after all, very indifferently founded. I think
that the criterion of success will be the progeny of successive
generations. I would trust such animals as have descend-
ants, and as show a fine family in several generations, and out
of such a family I would select my individuals for further
propagation.
Now, this matter of the partial transmission of qualities con-
sists of other elements besides this male element, — there is the
female — and there are other elements besides those of ancestral
inheritance, which are to be considered. There are the qual-
ities of herd, there are the qualities of species, there are the
qualities of race. And here we must again inquire into two
very different subjects. The qualities of breed and the quali-
ties of species are totally distinct, and I think that the proper
distinction is not always made. My friend, who spoke so learn-
edly, so fully, and with such an amount of experience, yester-
day, on the culture of the grape, made, in one of his statements
a mistake (if I am not mistaken myself,) in that very particu-
lar, when he used an expression which should apply only in one
given sense and not in an indiscriminate one. A hybrid is only
the offspring between two different species. A hybrid can never
be produced between two varieties of the same species.
Mr. BtJLL. — I used the common horticultural term.
Prof. Agassiz. — I know, sir ; but let us be careful to intro-
duce into our discussions only such definite language as makes
misapprehension impossible ; for we want to have that precision
which shall be beyond the possibility of cavil from misapprehen-
sion, and beyond the possibility of misinterpretation from loose-
ness of statement. How shall we secure this with reference to
these different kinds of animals ? By using just such terms as
will designate the one we want to designate, and that only.
Now, species are formed in nature, with all qualifications ; they
are God's creations. Breeds are formed under the fostering
care of man, and differ according to the circumstances under
which they have been raised, — they are human manufactures.
That is the difference between a breed and a species. AH our
cattle are of one species, and they produce nothing but cattle ;
134 BOARD OF AGRICULTURE.
and every species produces notliing but its own kind. Breeds
are the result of the interference of man with these creations of
God, in the manner wliich will suit his peculiar pursuits or
objects, and they are his work. Men have made breeds. They
are not God's creation, they are man's production; while
species man never made. We have found them in nature ;
we have subdued them, we have appropriated them to our pur-
poses ; they have been endowed with certain peculiarities which
are pliable, and they are capable of being impressed in various
ways by man — one species more than another — so that different
breeds, more or less different, can be obtained.
Among dogs, which are more pliable, physically, than any
other of the domesticated animals, the breeds have a range
which is astonishing. Compare a bulldog with a greyhound, a
King Charles' spaniel with a mastiff, — what an extraordinary
difference ! There is no such difference among cattle or horses.
And why ? Because by nature this species was more pliable to
influences than others. Now man has to apply himself to that
pliability, and impress upon these animals those peculiarities
which are useful or desirable for him.
Now, these specific differences and these breed differences are
of a different kind. A species transmits its characteristics
unmistakably and always, and the sum total of its specific char-
acter is transmitted. A breed, being the product of man,
transmits its peculiarities, its qualifications, only partially, and
only as long as those things which produce them or maintain
them are at work. Cease to take care of these animals in the
way in which the differences produced may be maintained, and
the breed itself runs out. You cannot perpetuate them without
taking at least care that those conditions which will maintain
the breed differences as they have been produced, are continued.
Now, when you propagate animals, ther*e is a certain limita-
tion to the fecundity. Only individuals of the same species are
absolutely fertile with one another. Individuals of one species
witli individuals of another species have only a limited fertility.
You may be sure to see individuals of the same kind bring
forth individuals of that kind and no other; and these individ-
uals, you may be sure, will be capable of reproducing their kind
in turn, generation after generation. But cross individuals of
two different species with one another, and you at once obtain
SECRETARY'S REPORT. 135
hybrid ; that is, what we call hybrids, or what we call mules ;
and these hybrids or mules always propagate individuals of two
different kinds, and their fecundity is limited ; sometimes so
extremely limited that even the first generation is sterile ;
sometimes partially fertile by a return to the parent stock.
Between themselves, the individuals born from two different
species are hardly ever fertile ad infinitum. I will quote an
example to show what I mean more distinctly. The horse is
one species, the ass is another species. Horse with horse pro-
duces horse, ad infinitum ; ass with ass produces ass, ad infinitum.
But horse with ass produces a mule, or a hybrid. Now, that
hybrid always has part of the character of one parent and part
of the character of the other parent. It is not a representative
of any species, but it is a half-breed. And here the English
names designate truly the characteristic of that animal. It is a
" half-breed," or a " hybrid," or a '• mule." Those three names
apply to that kind of animal, and they should never be used to
designate any other. The word " hybrid," the word " mule,"
and the word "half-breed," should never be used except to
designate the progeny between two different species. And that
progeny will differ according to the character of the father or
the mother. The offspring of the male horse with the female
ass is not the same as the offspring of the male ass and the
female horse, by any means. What is commonly called a mule
is the offspring of the jack with the mare. We do not raise the
offspring of the horse with the ass ; but in France they are
sometimes raised, and are known there as bardots. Now, the
bardot is a very different animal from our mule ; it has a greater
resemblance to a horse, only it is a small-sized donkey. The
form of the head, the hoof, and the tail are those of the horse.
Now, the reverse is the case with our mule, which has the size
of the mare ; but the 'form of the head, tail, and hoof, of the
donkey. May we not, by these crosses, ascertain, in a measure,
what kind of character the male will transmit to his progeny,
and what kind of character the female will transmit to her
progeny ? I suppose that a thorough analysis of the difference
which exists between the bardot and the mule, as compared
with the horse and the ass, would give us a large number of
very valuable hints as to what we may expect in the transmis-
sion of the qualities of the male and of the female to the
136 BOARD OF AGRICULTURE.
progeny ; for we have not yet made the experiments in breed-
ing that will enable us to ascertain that with any degree of
certainty, because, in all the experiments of which I have been
able to find any record, the breeding individuals have been taken
as if they had no ancestry — as if no qualifications could be
transmitted to the progeny besides those of the mother and of
the father. And yet, if we look to this law of ancestral trans-
mission, we know that any progeny may show characteristics
which are neither those of the mother nor of the father, but
those of a remote ancestor, three generations back.
Now, therefore, we must begin our experiments with refer-
ence to the transmission of qualifications from the male or the
female, if we would have at all a trustworthy basis. And how
shall we proceed ? Here I propose one problem for solution. I
have no results to give, gentlemen, and you will at once see
how difficult it will be to obtain a result at all ; what extraordi-
nary, costly and difficult conditions must be met in order to
obtain a result that shall have any value whatever. But I think
the time has come when we must stop arguing on a loose basis,
when we must begin to riiake experiments that shall have all
that scientific accuracy on which we can rely. I am snre that
Massachusetts farmers are the men to do this work for the
progress of agriculture, for I see from their discussions that
whatever tliey do, they do thoroughly ; that whatever operations
they enter into they analyze to their satisfaction. Now, if they
would ascertain what are the laws of inheritance, or in reference
to breeding, let them first secure individuals from which they
have eliminated the elements of ancestral transmission. That
is the first thing to do ; just as when astronomers compute their
observations ; they begin by looking over the observations, in
order to know which they are to take into account, and which
not. There are observations made by unskilful hands, and if
they were taken into consideration, in a computation in which
a thousandth part of a minute is an element of great impor-
tance, you sfce at once that a single incorrect observation would
vitiate all the results of the good ones.
Now, the first thing an astronomer does when he goes to work
on his observations, is, to see how the observations were made,
and on looking over the books, he sees at once that here are
observations tiuit he must leave out, page after page ; and here
SECRETARY'S REPORT. 137
are observations that look as if they had been made with the
proper care, and these he will take as the basis of his computa-
tion. Now, you must proceed in the same way, and when you
read of satisfactory results obtained by some experiment, you
must not shrink from the painful investigation as to whether it
was made with proper care, and a due consideration of all the
elements which should enter into the computation. Therefore,
tell your friends, and tell yourselves, when you are satisfied that
they and you have made mistakes, that these previous observa-
tions are good for nothing, and go to work. Learn to tell your-
selves that what you have done is worth nothing, and then you
will be on the road of progress.
It is difficult, but it is the advantage the scientific man has over
the practical man. The training of scientific men consists in
nothing else but in learning how to set aside their own doings,
to criticize their own observations, so that they shall know what
is worth listening to and what not. That is the source, of our
strength, that is the foundation of our value in community —
that we learn (and that is our special office,) how to criticize
whatever we do. Now, I think, from what I see here, that you
will learn that very soon, and when you have learned that, you
will proceed witli confidence. The first thing to eliminate in
this experiment concerning the transmissibility of the qualifi-
cations of any animal is the ancestral element.
How will you do that ? By breeding one or two generations
in-and-in, without affinity. Here I state a limitation which is
not perhaps understood, and I will explain. In order to have
stock on which you can make a sound experiment, you must
breed together individuals as closely allied as possible, but which
shall have no family ties. There is one important element
when you speak of breeding in-and-in. I have never heard the
distinction referred to that I now make. Breeding in-and-in
may mean, according to the way in v/hich I hear it discussed,
breeding brother and sister, or father and mother, as well as
breeding together individuals which resemble one another very
closely. Now, there is a vast difference between these two
modes of breeding in-and-in. Breed Anglo-Saxon with Anglo-
Saxon, does not mean that brother and sister should intermarry
The breed of Anglo-Saxon is improved by the intermarriage of
Anglo-Saxons, but of Anglo-Saxons who have no family ties ;
18*
138 BOARD OF AGRICULTURE.
but the breed will be spoiled if you breed in-and-in Anglo-
Saxons, brother and sister, or mother and father. One is a
moral crime ; the other is the foundation of national superi-
ority. You see at once the difference. Now do the same thing
on your farm. Breed in-and-in, but do not permit incest among
your animals. Breed in-and-in those who are of the same kind,
but do not breed in-and-in those which have such close family
ties that you would breed disease in them by the closeness of
the blood. That distinction is the first fundamental distinction
of all good breeding. You must breed in-and-in, to have the
proper stock to experiment upon, for several generations, so
that you shall have animals that will hold the same ancestral
relation to one another. You see, therefore, that to procure a
proper animal for experiment will take you several generations.
You cannot get that easily with cows ; you may get it more
easily with sheep ; and in a series of experiments which I have
proposed to some of my friends, I have advised them to take
sheep, in order sooner to have the elements upon which to make
sound and valuable experiments.
Now, when you have the third and fourth generation obtained
in that way, by the connection of individuals closely allied to
one another, but which have no blood relation to each other,
tlien you have individuals from which you have eliminated
the ancestral element that might re-appear in the next gener-
ation. Suppose you prepare in this way a number of coarse-
wool sheep, so that you have male and female individuals which
have no blood left except that of their own, and you prepare
in the same way another number of merino individuals. Now,
you cross them both ways — merino ram with coarse-wool ewe,
and, vice versa, coarse-wool ram with merino ewe, and you will
very soon ascertain what is the transmission of one male with
one kind of female, and of another male with another kind of
female. You will then have experiments which will begin to
be valuable with reference to the law of transmission of the
peculiarities of breed through breed ; of that crossing between
breed and breed which is so different from the intercrossing of
individuals of two different species. The law of the transmis-
sion of qualities from breed to breed, in crossings of breeds, is
yet to be ascertained. We have nothing but guess-work about
it so far.
SECRETARY'S REPORT. 139
The discussion of the question was continued by Mr. Fisk of
Shelburne, Dr. Loring, Mr. Stedman, and others, till the Board
adjourned.
Afternoon Session. — Mot at two and one-half o'clock. Mr.
Lathrop in the chair. A lecture was delivered on
THE PIABITS OF INSECTS IN THEIR RELATIONS TO MAN,
«
BY MR. FRANCIS G. SANBORN, OF BOSTON,
Ento7nologist to the Board.
Mr. President and Gentlemen, — I have been requested to
address you at this time, upon the subject of Economical Ento-
mology, or the science of insects, their habits and transforma-
tions ; with a view to ascertain the easiest mode of destroying
such species as are proved injurious to our crops, or of protect-
ing and cultivating those which are practically our friends.
In the very outset of my task, I am met with the barrier
upraised by popular prejudice, and the general contempt for, or
ignorance of the nomenclature of this science. With no desire
to, be hypercritical, I cannot ignore the fact that those very
persons who would be the first to notice, and ridicule such
misnomers as the " Devon horse " or the " Southdown bull,"
speak with the most perfect complacency of the " rosebug," the
" seventeen-year locust," and the " flying grasshopper ; " terms
which sound to the full as ludicrously in the ear of a naturalist.
This condition of affairs cannot be reformed at once, and yet
the prospect of a general knowledge of natural history grows
brighter from day to day. When we shall have learned to teach
the results of the past, and the details of the present, instead of
the details of the past, and the minutiae of the remote, we shall
have accomplished more for the advancement of that knowledge
which is power, than the most sanguine apostles of practical
education ever dreamed of.
Is it the most important to the embryo farmer, to acquire and
retain the names of the founders of Rome, and the number of
rivers emptying into the Caspian Sea, or to be able to distin-
guish between the sorghum and the Indian corn, the hawk and
the robin, or the cutwc^m and its destroyers ?
140 BOARD OF AGRICULTURE.
In our excessive devotion to antiquity, we seem to me to
resemble tlie captive, who, after weeks of toil has succeeded in
digging his way through the walls of his dungeon, to liberty
and light, but who delays his escape, in order to count the frag-
ments of rock he has left behind him. Not that I would attempt
to decry the advantages of a so-called liberal education ; not that
I derive no practical lessons, nor worthy examples from the
history of man's life and deeds in years bygone ; but that I
would devote at least an equal proportion of time to studying
the works of the Creator which are the past, the present, and
the future. Let those subjects with which the learner must
grapple in his every-day life, be i\\Q first inculcated. Let him be
taught not to look at, but to see, and let the simple facts of
natural history take the precedence of vague traditions of the
world's childhood, and superficial accounts of foreign countries.
Thus only will he be enabled to solve, the now impenetrable
mysteries of his surroundings, and to distinguish between the
foes and the friends of his prosperity. We cannot afford, God
help us, to laugh at each other's ignorance, but our descendants
will not hear those constant misnomers that have shocked my,
perhaps, too sensitive ear, and may reasonably smile at the m'an
who, after forty years' experience of cattle, discovers that they
have no front teeth in the upper jaw. For ourselves, we must
glean what information we can in the intervals of labor, and
guard our crops as best we may.
The universal search for an insect elixir mortis, of easy appli-
cation and speedy effect, bids fair to be rewarded in the sea of
petroleum or coal oil, which now floods the country. This
immense supply of material which has given a new impetus to
the inventive genius of our mechanics, and drawn already to
a great extent on the resources of the chemist, ought not to be
neglected by the agriculturist. Its cheapness and efficacy in
destroying insect-life are unanswerable arguments in its favor.
Are you afraid that it will injure your fruit ti^ees, or render the
soil unfit for the growth of your crops ? You have only to try
it ; experiment faithfully with its different modifications and
combinations for a year or two, and do not confine it to a single
crop, nor application. Then, if you |ire not satisfied of its
utility and necessity, discard it, and not iill then, I speak
advisedly. I have had personal experience of its u js for 'several
SECRETARY'S REPORT. 141
years. I have applied it to nests of the tent-caterpillar, the
apple-tree pest, and effectually dislodged them. I have poured
it around the roots of vegetables, attacked l)y various maggots,
and prevented their ravages without injuring the plant in the
least perceptible degree. I am fully satisfied that a large num-
ber of noxious insects, especially those infesting our root crops
and fruit trees, may be successfully treated with this oil in the
crude state, or with a soap made from it and diluted with water
to the same extent as that prepared from whale oil ; namely, for
trees of thick bark, a pound of the soap to a gallon of water,
and for leaves and roots, the proportion of water may be
increased to five gallons.
Upon the bark of various fruit and shade trees, arc found
minute scale-insects belonging to the genera Coccus, Lecanium,
and Aspidiotus. In the spring, about a week after the bursting
of the leaf buds, their eggs are hatched, and the tender young,
spreading over the tree, commence sucking the sap. A thorough
painting of the bark, with the petroleum or its soap, for two or
three days after the escape of the young, will be found an infal-
lible remedy. The borers of the apple, quince, and peach, may
be prevented from laying their eggs by the same application, or
if already laid, these niaj^ be destroyed in tlie same manner.
It is highly desirable that an extended and thorough trial be
made of this substance upon different crops, throughout the
State, and that reports be furnished to the State Board of its
effects, its proper strength, and mode of application, in order
that we may obtain additional facts, and circulate the results
more widely. I shall proceed to give a concise account of some
of our native insect enemies, their history, and mode of attack,
with suggestions as to the best methods of repelling them.
Among our fruit trees, we find the apple attacked by a number
of insects of different groups, varying in the locality of their
ravages from the roots beneath the soil to the extremities of the
branches, the leaves, and fruit ; some of them subsisting solely
on this tree ; and others, common to the pear, the quince, and
even to some forest and shade trees.
When the leaves turn to a paler or yellowish hue, without any
perceptible cause, and the tree seems to be enfeebled, a removal
of the earth immediately about the roots, will frequently discover
numbers of minute plant-lice or aphides. This is the plural
142 - BOARD OF AGRICULTURE.
of aphis, a Greek word, meaning an exhauster or depriver of
strength, belonging to the genus Pemphigus , of Hartig, the
Eriosoma or woolly-bodied aphides, mentioned by Dr. Harris.
These are busily engaged in sucking the sap, and if they have
been at work for more than one season, there will frequently be
excrescences of solid wood, varying from the size of a mustard
seed to two or three inches in diameters, growing from the
roots of the tree like bunches of small potatoes ; these are
caused by the punctures of the plant-lice, in the same way as the
galls upon the oak, and swellings of the stem of the golden-rod
by other species of insects. Among these tubers, and clustered
around the roots, are the young, or larvce, of a light color, and
about one-twenty-fifth of an inch in length, having a small
thread, of a whitish substance, extending from the tip of the
abdomen. At the close of the season, the adult insects of about
one-fourth of an inch in length, and furnished with wings, will
be found. These are of a black color, but almost covered with
a bluish-white down, upon the upper surface, resembling fine
wool ; their wings are transparent, and folded over the body like
a roof. Their fecundity is a marvellous theme, and is a part of
the history of the race of plant-lice. According to Reaumur,
one aphis may become, in a single season, the progenitor of over
five thousand millions of descendants. The egg deposited in
the fall is hatched in the spring, each one producing a female ;
she in the course of a few hours becomes a mother and gives
birth, not to an egg, but to a living daughter, who in turn, may
be in a week from the commencement of her existence, a great-
grandmother. This continual propagation of females continues
through the summer, when the males again occur among the
births, and both sexes then acquiring wings, copulate and
deposit eggs for the spring brood.
With such enormous powers of multiplication, we might
reasonably apprehend the speedy destruction of all our crops
by this little creature, were it not that their insect enemies and
other causes tend to reduce their numbers materially, and keep
in check this vast army of suckei^, or exhausters, as they are
significantly named. The little black-spotted red beetle, which
children call the lady-bird, the lace-winged fly, or golden-eye,
and the black and yellow-striped flies of the Syrphus tribe, as
well as internal Ilymenopterous parasites, are continually feed-
SECRETARY'S REPORT. 143
ing* upon them. In fact, the autlior previously alluded to,
considers them " the very corn " sown for the use of other
insects. "We, however, prefer to compare them to herds of
cattle, inasmuch as on the other hand they are protected and
cherished by the ants, who are repaid by the honey-like excre-
tions of the aphis, yielded at the lightest touch from two small
tubes near the extremity of the body. In turning over a stone
in the field, who has not seen the busy and anxious ants remov-
ing, with the utmost care, not only their own defenceless young
to a place of safety, but also showing an equal regard and
solicitude for the little whitish oval plant-louse, whose six
minute feet are barely able to support her, and totally unfitted
for running away. Tenderly picking her up in their mandibles,
her sturdy guardians make off at a rapid rate, and after all are
in safety, and the bustle caused by the sudden unroofing of
their residence has subsided, the little aphis is reassured by the
gentle caresses of her protectors, and gives down her honeyed
milk to their skilful manipulations. The species infesting the
roots of tlie apple is called Pemphig-us pyri; a very similar
species which lives upon the roots of several annual plants, has
received the name radicis ; these and some other species living
beneath the surface of the ground are almost invariably accom-
panied by ants in the manner referred to, and inasmuch as the
laws of warfare class all who are not avowed friends or neutrals
as enemies, we need not hesitate to deluge the little cattle and
their keepers with strong soapsuds or lye, and by whelming the
whole in one common ruin, save our trees a large unnecessary
expenditure of sap. Two or three other species of this same
tribe are found in immense numbers drawing their subsistence
at the other end of the -line. On the young shoots and small
green leaves of the apple-tree, are found the Aphis mali, of
Fabricius ; the tender shoots and flowers of the cherry are fre-
quently swarming with the Aphis cerasi of Fabricius. Those of
the plum, the peaches, and other fruit trees, are often attacked
in the same manner by other species. The aphis of the apple is
quite dark-colored, with a greenish abdomen ; that of the cherry
almost or entirely black. Others, as the aphis of the rose, are
of a pure green color. The aphides of the leaves and twigs are
attended, like their brethren of the roots by an escort, or rather
guard of ants. Tiiese cannot pitch their tents like the keepers
144 BOARD OF AGRICULTURE.
of the root-lice, in the immediate vicinity of their flocks and
herds, but are obliged, like larger owners of stock in outlying
pastures, to make frequent visits to their proteges, and as from
their exposed situation these are liable to the attack of enemies
unknown to the subterraneans, their protectors maintain a con-
stant watch, both by day and night, relieved with great regu-
larity. Their duties are to remove the cast-off skins of their
charge, and to drive away any marauder. It is a task of some
difficulty, in many cases, to prevent the active and wily ichneu-
mon-parasites from inserting their eggs in the bodies of the lice,
and even the winged advantages of the former scarcely enable
her to come off without the loss of a leg, left in the jaws of the
enraged ant, while the lady-bird, the syrphus-fly, and the lace-
wing are obliged to deposit their eggs at some little distance
from the colony to avoid awakening suspicion, and trust to
Providence for the safety of their future young. The latter
insect, for the better preservation of her eggs, deposits each
upon a slender stem of stiff and elastic silk, spun frOin her abdo-
men, of such a length that the ants cannot reach it, and so fine
that they can neither cut it with ther powerful jaws, nor climb it.
How often, in passing a solitary hickory tree in the month of
June, do we hear a buzzing as of hundreds of bees among its
branches, and on looking up discover them, with wasps and
flies without number, continually hovering and alighting and
starting back from the green leaves, where no blossom or other
supposable attraction is visible ? Closer examination will dis-
cover myriads of minute plant-lice constantly ejecting the sweet
honey-dew in such quantity as to stain and render the leaves
absolutely filthy'with this excretion. Ants innumerable, stream-
ing up and down the trunk, and covering the leaves, now strok-
ing the backs of their little purveyors, and now rushing valiantly
forward to the great discomfiture of some eager wasp, who
hoped to make a delicious repast on the abundant sweets, and
had not the slightest intention of injuring the feeble aphides.
This tree, after nightfall, becomes a centre of attraction to
various moths or night butterflies, and furnishes a " rich col-
lecting ground " to the entomologist, who, armed with his net,
attached to a stout pole, jars from its boughs a shower of deli-
cate creatures of various plumage, and captures them for future
study. The leaves, on trees and other plants attacked by the
SECRETARY'S REPORT, 145
aphis very generally attract attention by being more or less
curled or turned backward, and their surface, as well as that of
the twigs, frequently becomes blackened and dirty. Dr. Fitch,
of New York, in his invaluable report states that washing the
bark with a solution of sal soda, not only removes this filth, but
being absorbed by the sap, the tincture becomes unpalatable to
the aphides, and causes them to desert the tree. A writer of
some experience recommends syringing the trees with lye, or
soapsuds, which destroys all insects that it touches, but as many
are protected by the curled leaf from the action of these prepar-
ations, the bending down of the branches where practicable into
a tub of strong suds, is more certain in its effects. Rubbing
soft-soap about the trunk and limbs, two or three times during
the season, is approved by some. A small garden engine, or
even a cheaply constructed syringe that can be made by any
prentice tinman, is a convenient instrument, a tube, fifteen to
twenty inches in length, and two and a half in diameter, closed
with a perforated cap of tin at one end. The piston or plunger
can be whittled out in a few minutes, an old broom or hoe-
handle, wrapped with tow or rags, answering every purpose.
This simple machine will be found very useful in throwing
various solutions upon foliage that could not, otherwise, be
reached, and will last, with proper care, for years.
On the bark of the apple, the pear, the plum, and the grape
we find, frequently, minute and singularly formed creatures not
so much resembling an insect as a scab or scurf, and so closely
adherent to the bark and resembling it in color as to appear like
a mere evolution of its cuticle. These little animals are called
Coccidcc, or scale insects, and are arranged in different genera or
groups according to their structure, habits and metamorphoses.
Although differing in external appearance so greatly from the
aphides of the roots and branches, they are yet of the same
class and derive their sustenance in the same manner from the
sap of the tree, being furnished with beaks or siphons of a pre-
cisely similar construction. The species inhabiting the apple, is
of the form of the muscle-shell, about one-tenth of an inch in
length, and of a brownish color. Their eggs are laid or rather
extruded beneath the body of the female, which then shrinks
up into the concave shell, and in death continues to protect and
shelter the future brood. They hatch about the last week
19*
146 BOARD OF AGRICULTURE.
in May, or a little later, and the young scatter in different direc-
tions npon the trunk and limits. This seems to be the time to
remove or destroy them to the best advantage, as their tender
bodies are very susceptible to such applications as soap-suds or
lye. Some, however, prefer to brush or scrape off the parent
shells and the loose, rough bark together; a hard rubbing of the
smaller infested limbs with coarse cloths, if faithfully attended
to is very efficacious. Dr. Harris recommends the application of
a wash made of " two parts soft-soap to eight of water, brought
to the consistency of thick whitewash by the addition of lime ; "
" a solution of two pounds of potash or a quart of common 'salt
in two gallons of water will also destroy them." The grape is
attacked by an insect of this family, of a larger size and of a
more reddish brown color and rounded form than the apple
scale ; these will be frequently found at the junction of the
smaller branches with the stem. In the State Cabinet there are
specimens of scale insects both from the vine and the pear tree,
which are very closely related to, if not identical with the Coccus
cryptogamus of Dalman, and may have been introduced from
Europe upon imported fruit trees. The actual shell of the
female is quite small, of a reddish brown color ; but the object
which most readily attracts attention is the flattened scale seem-
ingly composed of a dirty white wax, very thin, and of a more
rounded outline than the apple scale, resembling somewhat in
form one valve of the oyster shell ; one extremity of this carries
the female's body-case, and other shells are seen scattered upon
and adhering closely to the bark in the vicinity. Dr. Harris
considers these the pupa cases of the male. The whitish scale
is composed of the excretions from the body of the female, and
serves to shelter the young in the same manner as the entire
case of the female apple scale. The adult males of most if not
all of the CoccidcB are extremely minute, but furnished with
wings and other organs as perfect in their microscopic details as
those of the largest insect. Our oaks and other forest trees are
frequently attacked by other species of these little sap-suckers,
varying somewhat in form, but all easily recognized as belonging
to tliis class, and the remedies to be applied are the same
already recommended for those of the apple. Some insects of
this group are extremely useful to mankind in the arts and
manufactures. The Cochineal, a bright red dye too well known
SECRETARY'S REPORT. 147
to require description, is produced from the bodies of the little
Coccus cacti of Mexico. The Shell-lac, from which sealing-wax
and several valuable varnishes and cements are n[i^de, is the
secretion of i\\Q Coccus ficus, and the sweet and nutritious manna
of eastern fame is deposited by the Coccus manniparus.
In continuing our investigation of the insect exhausters upon
the apple-tree, we occasionally discover a light brown, flattish
bug, of gigantic size compared with his congeners we have been
examining, being about half an inch in length, and furnished
with the invariable weapon of his tribe, a jointed tube bent
beneath him, or inserted in the tender twigs, and sucking busily
away as if his life depended on it, which indeed it does. He is
intimately related to the squash-bug, and to those other delicious
morsels which we often eat on blackberries and raspberries, and
has, like them, a sort of Ethiopian odor, of which he makes no
secret when handled. He is of rather angular outline, approach-
ing a pentagonal or five-sided form, and belongs to the large
group called Pentatompides from their peculiar cut, and to the
still larger one Scutata from the immense size of the scutel or
shield-shaped plate which fits into the triangular space between
the thorax and the folded wings, and in most insects is of very
insignificant dimensions. In his case, however, it is about one-
half of the breadth of his whole body, and not far from a third
of its length. His wings are neatly folded over each other at
the point, but if we raise them with a pin, we find that the half
of the upper wing nearest the head, is of a firm, stiff texture,
and the rest as fine and thin as those of fly or wasp. From this
in connection with his other idiosyncrasies we learn that he
belongs to the true bug-order, the Hemiptera or half-wings of
some authors, and the Heteroptera or dissimilar-wings of others.
If he were subject to like passions with ourselves, he might well
be proud that his order had furnished the popular American
title of bugs to so many other insects which have no legal claim
to that distinction. Far from exhibiting any vanity, however,
he is merely thinking of making his escape ; and if not checked
in his mischievous career, by the timely pressure of the thumb
and finger, or if his captor be fastidious, the boot-heel, will be
off in an instant to some other tree to found a new colony. On
the lower side of a green leaf his spouse makes her preparations
for the expected addition to the family.
148 BOARD OF AGRICULTURE.
" Unseemly stains succeed ; which nearer viewed
By microscopic arts, small eggs appear,
Dire fraught with insect life ; alas ! too soon
ffhey burst their filmy jail and crawl abroad,
Bugs of uncommon shape — "
*very much like their respected parents, in all but size and
wings ; and blest with a remarkable appetite. This they imme-
diately set about satisfying, and never being weaned, keep up a
continual sucking, till overtaken by the fatal shower of soap-
suds or kerosene. These deadly poisons to their whole race will
reach them, even if snugly clustered beneath the broad leaves
of the squash-vine, or clinging to the topmost waving twig of
the apple-tree. Even their more active cousins, the leaf-hoppers,
who feast uninterruptedly upon the succulent leaves of the vine,
and at the slightest alarm, spring off in a glancing shower, may
yet find their shady retreats invaded by an oily flood they can
neither stem nor stomach.
But the exhausters of the sap are only a part of the great
army that forage upon our apple-tree. While these are levying
contributions upon the milk and honey, another detachment is
cutting off the wood, another stripping it of its foliage, and still
another drawing an extensive internal revenue from its fruit.
Let us look, for a time, to the main body, who, by their heaps
of saw-dust, must have been long engaged. Near the surface of
the ground, we find little concretions of reddish castings adher-
ing to the bark, or piled up in a heap, on the ground, beneath a
small hole, from which the sap is exuding. These are chips,
and the excretions of the apple-tree borer, the two-striped or
white Saperda, a very handsome, long-horned beetle, of a bluish-
white color, with three chocolate-colored bands upon its back,
extending from head to tip, and a little less than three-quarters
of an inch in length. He is not so often met with in his beau-
tiful adult condition, because he flies only by night, and after
his change from a motionless pupa to a winged and active beetle
is effected, he waits until after dark to make his exit from the
larval burrow. If a sharpened wire, barbed near the point, be
inserted in the small opening indicated by the castings and
twisted about, it will very often bring forth the fleshy, whitish
larva. Or, by cutting away the bark and the wood, around the
hole, with a knife or gouge, the grub may be exposed and
SECRETARY'S REPORT. 149
extracted. It is supposed to continue in its young or larva state
from two to three years after the egg is deposited, nearly all of
this time being employed in gnawing away the wood of the tree,
and enlarging its residence. In this stage, it is a pale-yellow,
cylindrical grub, less than an inch in length, and a quarter of an
inch in diameter, at the broadest part, just behind the head.
This is of a polished brown, furnished with black jaws or man-
dibles, and with a few scattered hairs. On each side of the
body, nine spiracles or breathing pores, of a brown color, are
distinctly visible. It is sought with eager avidity by the wood-
peckers, who, by tapping on the tree, discover the hidden bur-
row by the hollow sound, and with their powerful beaks soon dig
it out and devour it. We can greatly assist the woodpecker in
relieving our apple-tree of the borers, if we rub the bark with
soap in early spring, not once, but repeatedly, especially after a
rain. And we should not confine this operation to the lower
part of the trunk, but make a faithful application also to the
axils of the lower limbs, for this borer, if eggs have been laid
thickly near the ground will not risk the danger of starvmg its
progeny by adding other mouths to the superabundance of
eaters at this spot, but seeks other places higher upon the tree.
These corners or notches, also, are the favorite haunts of other
species of harmful insects, and the simple application of soft-soap,
rubbed well into the bark, will not only destroy such eggs and
larvee as may be already there, but will also deter others from
depositing their young in a place which their instinct shows
them to be unsafe.
Another borer of different appearance, the Buprestis femorata ;
a flattened oval metallic beetle, with much shorter antennas and
feet than the preceding is frequently found in the same locali-
ties. Its habits are so similar to those of the saperda that the
same remedies prescribed for that will be found available also
for this. The larva is much more flattened than that of the
other, and its outline bears a striking resemblance to that of a
battle-door or round-headed gimblet-screw, rapidly tapering as
it does from a broad, flat segment back of the head to a narrow
and rounded tip. It is of the same yellowish color and fleshy
character as the last described. These two borers belonging,
the one to a group nearly related to the snapping beetles, the
parents of the destructive wireworm, and the other, a type of
150 BOARD OF AGRICULTURE.
the longicorns or long-horned beetles, are good representatives
of a numerous and highly injurious class of insects. All of
these attack, in a not dissimilar manner, the fruit, forest, and
shade trees.
One of the most hurtful parasites of the peach is the Buprestis
divaricata, a burnished, coppery beetle, of elliptical form, with
wing covers, which spread apart at the tips, measuring about
four-fifths of an inch in length. This insect attacks also the
wild cherry, and sometimes is found beneath the bark of the
common cultivated varieties. The largest species of the group
inhabiting the United States is found quite commonly in New
England, preying upon the different species of pines, and aver-
ages over an inch in length. The first specimens on record
were received from Virginia, by an English collector of insects,
Dru Drury, who described and named it from this circumstance,
Buprestis virginica. The beetles of this class may be readily
distinguished by their compact and more or less elliptical form,
their short, stout feet, and their short, saw-toothed antennae.
They are in general of a brilliant metallic lustre, and some of
our own species, as well as in a greater degree those of tropical
countries, resemble precious- stones, from the wonderful beauty
and variety of colors with which tliey are adorned. The long-
horned beetles are very numerous in their species and forms, but
can scarcely fail to be recognized as belonging to the borer family,
by any one who has devoted a few weeks, even, to the collection
and study of insects. Some of the most insidious enemies of
the pine-tree belong to this class, and two or three of our New
England species have antennae of three and four inches in length.
The largest species known is found in South and Central
America, and frequently measures from the tip of its fore feet to
the end of the abdomen, ten or twelve inches. We do not
dwell at any length upon these borers, because the mode of
attack and the signs of their presence in trees are so much
alike that the means of destroying them need be but little
varied. Pcrliaps one of the little group of bark beetles has
made a lodgment beneath the bark of our apple-tree, and per-
forated it with numerous little punctures, as if made with a
pin. On removing the bark, which is easily done, for the little
creatures have almost separated it from the wood, we find an
infinity of small cylindrical burrows, running between the bark
t SECRETARY'S REPORT. 151
and the wood, and in them many httle reddish-1)rown and hlack
beetles, scarcely one-tenth of an inch long, very much resem-
bling a very short bit of fine wire, so closely does the thorax fit
to the wing covers, the head being almost concealed and the
feet very short. This insect has been named by Dr. Fitch,
Tomicus mali, or the bark-beetle of the apple.
Another of this group, the Tomicus pyri, of Peck, or pear-
blight beetle, injures the trunk and the twigs of the apple, pear
and other fruit trees in a similar way, and even continues its
excavations deeper into the wood, commencing its operations
close to a bud where the egg is laid. It is of similar appearance
to the last species, but about twice its size. Some of the bur-
rows and galleries mined beneath the bark by this group of
minute creatures are of singular regularity, one excavating a
perfectly straight gallery for several inches, and then con-
structing little cells, or short burrows on each side, like courts,
leading into a main street. The burrows of another species from
their reseml)lance to letters, have obtained for it the name of
ti/pog-raphus, or the printer bark-beetle. In some cases, the
injury done by these little animals is so great that the only
remedy seems to be the cutting off and burning of the limbs
affected, but where the possibility of preventing it occurs, we
shall find the thorough painting of the twigs and branches with
thick soap-suds especially useful. With low branching trees, this
may be easily done before the leaves have made their appear-
ance, and the dipping of the ends of the shoots into a pail of
the mixture, will better insure this reaching into every joint
and crevice. When the tender leaves unfold their green sur-
face to the spring sun, and begin to breathe in the warm and
exhilarating atmosphere through every pore, starting the sap to
renewed life, and increasing in size and beauty every hour,
we find hundreds of hungry creatures, ready and anxious to
begin their work of devastation and revel in the rich supply of
succulent food spread out before them. Among the first are
the little web-worms, or tent caterpillars, who have escaped
from their winter quarters a day or two before the leaves, and
have been living since then upon the nutritious gelatine, which
their mother provided some eight or ten months before for the
double purpose, and spread over the embryo brood to serve as
a warm blanket through the winter, and two or three days
152 BOARD OF AGRICULTURE.
rations in May. These leave the cluster of eggs, and advancing
to the nearest fork select an eligible camping-ground, and pitch
their modest tent. The leaders then depart on a foraging
expedition, being very careful to leave behind them a delicate
silken clue, that they may find their way home when they have
obtained supplies. They soon discover the delicate foliage, and
fall ravenously to work, reinforced every moment by stragglers
from the rear, directed along the limb by the silken thread of
their bolder brethren, which increases in breadth and thickness
with every traveller, who is particularly careful to keep up the
condition of the highway. In a few hours they are stuffed to
repletion, and are obliged to return to camp, and let out their
now outgrown uniforms, which they do by splitting them down
down the back, and leaving them in a corner of the tent.
Having fallen upon a fertile source of supply, their extrava-
gance increases, and their tent must be enlarged, while their
cast-off garments, and the refuse of their meals are scattered
through it in every direction. A few days elapse, and detach-
ments are sent out in various directions, with instructions to
subsist on the country, and hold the outposts. No rations are
furnished them, for supplies are already becoming exhausted,
and the energies of the oppressed foliage are taxed to the
utmost, while the almost invisible, silken footpath has grown
to a broad highway, stretching like a silver ribbon up the
branches, and already sending off lanes and by-roads, in various
directions, one, in particular, (3f respectable proportions,- down
the main trunk from the camp to the spreading lower branches,
or, still further, to the flourishing growth of suckers springing
up from the roots of the persecuted tree. New camps appear
as if by magic in unexpected quarters, and if the approaching
aid of the long-handled mop, dipped in kerosene or some other
timely preparation be delayed, the crop is doomed. The naked
branches, sprinkled with the ashes of departed leaf and blossom,
and the ghastly standing tents of the destroying army, ragged
and fluttering in the breeze, occupy the place where ruddy and
golden fruit would else have gladdened the eye and pocket of
the proprietor. But let him know in December the immense
significance of those little varnished bulbs of eggs on the
slender leafless twigs, so clearly seen against the skj^, and
with his ladder and pail, or close-woven basket, he mounts
SECRETARY'S REPORT. 153
the tree, and forestalls the intentions of the embryo invaders
by collccthig and depositing them safely in tlie kitchen fire.
Then, when his less informed or more indolent neighbors are
lamenting their vanished prospects, or hurriedly snatching an
ill-spared moment to endeavor to arrest the wholesale destruc-
tion, he can enter calmly into the various employments of the
spring, while his fresh and blooming trees all the greener and
fresher by the contrast, proceed to fulfil the promises of autumn
wealth.
These ravenous insects pertain to a group called Bombycidce,
or silkworm moths, which are generally distributed through the
globe. The adult insects are frequently of the largest size, and
of variegated and brilliant colors, the wings of some containing
large membraneous transparent spots, devoid of scales, and
presenting a singular appearance ; the species from whose cog-
coons the silk of commerce has been hitherto obtained are of
plainer colors, generally approaching a dirty yellowish white,
and of smaller size. Experiments which have recently been
made in this country, seem to prove that one or more of o^lr
common native attaci are capable of producing silk of the finest
texture and great strength. Dr. J. G, Morris, of Baltimore,
has been very much interested in developing the capabilities of
the Attacus cynthia, which feeds upon the ailantlms tree, and
M. Trouvelot, of Medford, in this State, has demonstrated that
the Attacus polyphemus, which feeds upon our commonest forest
trees and shrubs, produces a beautiful silk in greater quantity
than the original silkworm, and at far less expense to the
cultivator.
Our apple-tree is frequently attacked by the largest American
Bombyx, the Attacus cecropia, which appears in the form of a
peagreen worm, or larva, about three inches in length, orna-
mented with little knobs, or warts, on the back, of blue and
red. It seldom occurs in sufficient numbers to prove very
injurious, but one larva devours several pounds of foliage
before coming to maturity, and when discovered should receive
the usual treatment of an enemy. It is rare, however, that
more than one or two are found upon upon a single tree. The
moth frequently measures six and a half inches from tip to tip
of its expanded wings, and is-of a dusky grayish brown color,
spotted and banded, with a variety of colors, the most con-
20*
154 BOARD OF AGRICULTURE.
spicuovis of which are dull red and white. The antennae of
hoth sexes, are finely pectinated or toothed like a comb, on
both sides, those of the male being very much the broadest,
and resembling some beautiful fern-leaf.
One of the vaporer-moths, the Org-yia leucostig-ma, which is
very hurtful to the elms, horse-chestnuts and other shade trees,
is occasionally found upon the apple in sufficient numbers to
prove mischievous. Its larva is one of the most gaudily attired
of all caterpillars, being of a bright yellow, clothed with fine,
long yellow hairs upon the sides, with the head and two little
warts, toward the end of the body, bright coral-red, and three
spreading black plumes of long hairs, two just back of the head,
and one at the other extremity. The male moth, on the other
hand, is of very plain, almost quaker-like appearance ; having
ashy gray wings, variegated with somewhat darker bands, and a
small white spot on each fore-wing near the hinder angle, from
which it derives its name ; its antennas are of a widely pectinated
form, curved like a bow. The femtde is wingless, like that of
the canker-worm moth, of which we shall presently speak.
She deposits her eggs on the surface of her hairy cocoon, and
covers them with a white, frothy matter of a water-proof char-
acter, never stirring from the spot where she has lain as a chrys-
alis save to provide for her future progeny and die. The empty
cocoons and the eggs may be readily distinguished during the
winter and should be removed and burnt. The elms on Boston
Common are much infested by them, and men are regularly
employed by the authorities to brush them off, and wash the
bark of the trees with a mixture of clay and soap-suds.
In August and September we sometimes find a whole branch
stripped of its leaves by a swarm of round, yellowish larvae with
darker longitudinal stripes, and black heads with a yellow
collar ; if disturbed, they raise both ends of the body from the
leaf or twig, clinging only by the two or three pairs of feet
about the middle. These are produced by the Ewnetopona
lyiinistra, a buff-colored moth, with brownish bands upon the
wings, and a rich, dark brown or reddish velvety patch just
back of the head ; who lays a score or more of white, rounded
eggs upon the under side of a leaf in July. Attacking the
leaves in the same manner and at the same time as the last, is
frequently noticed a very prickly caterpillar, black, with yellow
SECRETARY'S REPORT. 155
and white stripes, and with a curious hump rather forward of
the middle and the head of a bright red. The thorny prickles
are black and disposed in four rows, two quite regularly upon
the back, and a shorter irregular one upon each side. The
parent moth of which, both sexes, are winged, is of a light
brownish color, the wings somewhat darker, with a gray margin.
The lappct-moths, whose caterpillars are of a singular, half-
round form and of a grayish color, resembling, and so closely
adhering to, the bark, as to appear like a mere swelling or pro-
tuberance, are sometimes guilty of preying upon the apple, but
on account of their scarcity need not be much dreaded.
A far more terrible and destructive enemy, not only of the
apple but of almost every other tree and shrub in the localities
where it has established itself, is the canker worm, Anisopteryx
vernata, of Peck. It has long been known, and hundreds of
remedies, more or less fallible, have been proposed and tested
for its extermination. Their failure may be attributed in most
cases to the want of a thorough acquaintance with, or a neglect
of taking advantage of the habits of the insect. As the period
during which the wingless female emerges from the ground and
ascends the trees to meet the winged male, and deposit her
eggs, extends from the last of September, through the mild
■ndays of winter and the month of March, it is evident that
impassable barriers must be kept up during the whole of this
time to make the remedy effectual. And as the young larvae,
when hatched from the egg, are of totally different form and
structure from their parents, the same obstacles will not avail
to prevent their ascending the trees and commencing their work
of devastation. Accordingly before the first of May the trunks
of such trees as have been effectually protected by troughs of
oil, collars of tin, or belts of tar, must be thoroughly soaped or
washed with the soap or oil from the point occupied by the pro-
tector to the ground, to destroy the eggs which have been laid
on that portion, the clusters of eggs upon the fences and build-
ings in the vicinity removed and burned, and all shrubs or
unprotected trees carefully examined or treated with the prepar-
ations before recommended. The children can be readily
taught to discover and remove the eggs in their leisure hours,
and will take a hearty interest in this sanitary measure, espec-
ially if a small sum, by way of reward, be offered for an ounca
156 • BOARD OF AGRICULTURE.
or a pint of the eggs. They are laid in clusters, and a thin-
bladed knife, removing also a chip of the bark or wood to which
they are glued, will be found the most convenient instrument
for the purpose of separation. It should be distinctly impressed
on the minds of the children that the eggs must be sought for
on all woody shrubs and trees, as well as on all perpendicular
objects, such as fences and buildings, and that if any are dropped
or spilled on the ground in the process of removal, they should
be collected with the others in pails, boxes or tight bags, and
burned. A single season's trial faithfully carried out will con-
vince any one of the efficacy of this somewhat tedious, but
simple remedy. As the canker worm, fortunately, spreads but
slowly through the country, many of those present have not had
actual experience of their ravages or even seen the insect itself.
The male moth has light gray silky wings expanding about one
inch and a quarter, the front pair darkest, and banded with
blackish and white zigzag lines. The female, as has been
stated, is wingless, with very slender feet and antennse, of a
li^it gray color beneath, and darker above, about a third of an
inch or more in length. The larvae, or worms as they are vul-
garly called, vary much in color. The young are of a dusky
hue above, striped with yellow on each side, and whitish
beneath. When fully grown, according to Harris, some arcjt
" ash colored on the back, and black on the sides, below which
is the pale yellowish line. Others of a dull, gi-eenish yellow,
and others of a clay color, with slender, interrupted blackish
lines on the sides and small spots of the same color on the back.
Some are green, with two white stripes down the back. The
head and feet partake of the general color of the body. They
are about an inch in length, and move by drawing the hinder
part of the body toward the head, thus forming a loop. The
insects which have this habit are called Geometers, measurers,
or span-worms, and are a numerous group of great destructive
powers. The cheapest, and perhaps most convenient applications
to prevent the moths from ascending the trees, are strips of
paper or cloth covered with tar, or what is better, melted Indian
rubber, daubed on with a brush, and tied about the trunk three
or four feet from the gi'ound. These applications must be kept
soft and sticky, for if a pellicle or skin forms on the surface,
they will prove no obstacle. Several contrivances have been
SECRETAEY'S REPORT. 157
invented, more or less expensive and ingenious, to effect the
same end, such as troughs filled with oil or salt water, conical
collars of metal, &c. I have lately examined a very neat, and
apparently effectual collar, composed of glass of the form of an
inverted gutter, and attached to the tree by an iron hoop and
tent of cloth, the im'ention of Mr. Benjamin Merritt, Jr. This
will, no doubt, prove very valuable, as it opposes a practically
impassable barrier to the female moth, if the expense does not
prevent its introduction. If we are successful by any of these
appliances in preventing the ascent of the mother, we must, as
previously stated, remove the eggs outside this cordon, before
the first of May, or all our labor and expense may prove in
vain.
Notwithstanding our patient care and perseverance has pre-
served the tree thus far, we are still liable to the depredations
of certain little creatures which attack the fruit.
A moth, nearly related to the destroyers of our furs and car-
pets, deposits her eggs in the calyx or blossom end of the young
apple, about the end of June. The eggs in a few days give
birth to small, white caterpillars, with blackish heads, which
burrow into the core and open a hole on the side, through
which they eject theii castings. This injury causes the fruit in
about three weeks to become prematurely ripe and fall to the
ground, soon after which the grubs leave it and make their
cocoons in crevices in the bark. The first record we have of its
depredations in this country, is by Mr. Joseph Tufts, of Charles-
town, who discovered it in a St. Michael pear. It has since
proved very destructive also to cranberries. The moth is
described by Mr. Tufts as having the upper wings of a light
slate color, crossed by wavy bands of a darker shade, towards
the tips of each, an oval spot of a burnished coppery lustre will
be seen, the feet, antennae, and body beneath, are of a light
gray ; it expands about three-quarters of an inch. The thorough
rubbing of the trees with soap or the scraping and brushing off
the rough bark in the late fall or early spring, will be found
very serviceable in ridding ourselves of this insect ; but the
collecting daily of all worm-eaten windfalls, boiling them, and
feeding to the cattle or swine has proved most effectual. A
small, white, tapering, polished maggot is v5ry destructive to
some varieties of the apple. I have found it most abundant in
158 BOARD OF AGRICULTURE.
the Porter, and not uncommon in several other kinds when ripe,
especially those of thin skins. It is the young of a dipterous
insect, or two-winged fly, belonging to the same order as the
pernicious Hessian fly and wheat-midge. Dr. Fitch has described
this insect under the name of Molohrns mail, or the apple-midge.
• The adult is little more than an eighth of an inch in length,
almost black above, yellowish beneath, with hyaline, smoky
wings. They are supposed to attack only those apples which
have been previously penetrated by the last mentioned insect,
the coreworin, so that the same remedies will be applicable to
both cases.
Within a few years it has been noticed that the common plum-
weevil or curculio has extended its depredations to the apple,
and several other fruits, as well as to that from which it derives
its common name. The perfect insect is well known to the
majority of horticulturists as a dark brown or blackish beetle,
with long snout, about a fifth of an inch long, and simulating
death when disturbed, folding its feet and beak beneath the body
and presenting the appearance of a bud. The larva is a small,
whitish, footless grub, which bores into the interior of the fruit,
producing the same effect as that of the coreworm. The reme-
dies hitherto proposed, have been to syringe the fruit with
whitewash, strong soapy water, or other offensive preparations ;
to collect and treat the fallen fruit as recommended for the core-
worm^ to jar them frequently from the trees, turning in the
swine and poultry at the same time, &c. If, as Dr. Fitch sug-
gests, however, the larvee live during the winter, beneath the
outer bark of the smaller limbs, their presence may be easily
detected by the crescent-shaped marks on the outside, and the
spring brood annihilated by burning the limbs or thoroughly
ru})bing them with soap.
I have mentioned already only a part of the insects which
infest our fruit-trees, and have endeavored to give some idea of
the great variety of habits, among the number of voracious crea-
tures, for the support of which the farmer and gardener are
annually taxed. But as my space is limited, I will proceed to
recapitulate a few of the best methods of destroying these pests,
or preventing their ravages by rendering their food unpalatable.
Firstly, we shoifld make ourselves acquainted with the partic-
ular species, and the time and manner of their transformations,
SECRETARY'S REPORT. 159
(by actual experience if possible,) in order to take them in the
weakest and most accessible condition.
Then, if caterpillars attacking trees, remove and burn the
eggs, or thoroughly soap the trees to prevent their being laid,
kill them if already laid, or hang bottles of sweetened water
about the trees to entrap and destroy the perfect moth.
If borers in the trunk or branches, soap the bark, (soft-soap
made cold is, perhaps, the best preparation, and if mingled with
a strong decoction of tobacco it will not be less effective.) Dig
out the borers with knife or gouge, or pour boiling water, or
petroleum, into their holes, making sure that it reaches the
insect.
If insects on the leaves or fruit, syringe the trees wdth any of
the preparations previously recommended, soap-suds, tobacco-
water, &c. Jar them frequently, giving the pigs and poultry a
chance to pick up and devour those which fall. Hang pieces of
cloth or paper dipped in kerosene, in the branches, renewing
them every few days.
For insects upon roots and bulbs, sprinkle petroleum along
the row«, or water them with strong soap-suds ; for onions,
mingle common soot, or pyroligneous acid with the solution.
For squash and cucumber vines, (fee, scatter paper-rags, saw-
dust, or other absorbent materials, soaked in kerosene, about the
hills, sprinkle the leaves with road dust, air-slacked lime, ashes,
or powdered herbs known to be offensive to the insects. The
Persian insect-powder, which has proved quite useful of late
years, is composed of the pulverized leaves and blossoms of a
species of fever-few, the Pyrethrum carneum, closely allied to
the common camomile. It would be really worthy of experi-
ment to collect, dry and powder the flowers of our common ox- *
eye daisy, or white weed, so common through the country, and
ascertain the effect upon insects and slugs which attack our
broad-leaved plants, as well as upon the moths which infest furs
and woollen cloths.
Chloride of lime, freely scattered upon the ground among
growing vegetables, gives off a gas which is extremely noxious
to most insects, without injuring the plants. Coal tar is also
quite serviceable in some cases.
For field crops, the most feasible plan is, by rotation, to starve
out the destructive millions that prey upon one variety, devoting
X60 BOARD OF AGRICULTURE.
the land to some other crop for two seasons before returning to
the original one. Small fields of wheat, rye or oats may some-
times be saved from immediate injury by building a line of fires
on the windward side, and burning scraps of leather, wet straw?
and such substances as emit a thick, offensive smoke. Two
persons, on opposite sides, with a cord reaching across the field,
have swept off and destroyed some insects by drawing the
tightened cord across the heads of the grain.
It is highly necessary to bear in mind the importance of faith-
ful and concerted action in experimenting upon the destroyers
of our crops, as the labor and expense bestowed by one farmer
in ridding his land of these pests will avail but little if his
neighbors do not second his exertions. We must ourselves try
various remedies, and thoroughly test even those backed by the
best authorities, before discarding them as too expensive or
laborious. But one fact is indisputable, namely, that the birds
are our friends. Let them take a few of our early fruits, or
devour a part of our grain, they restore it a hundred fold.
Yqtj few of us, perhaps, have not already learned this, but
those that still persist in destroying and driving the birds from
their premises, will eventually acquire this knowledge in the
dear school of experience. Moles, toads, and snakes, are all
feeders upon insects, and never claim any part or reward in the
vegetable productions of the farm.
In conclusion, I would say, that, although the insects men-
tioned in the foregoing remarks are not a tenth part of the
enemies of our crops, I have endeavored to select, as far as
possible, representative cases to illustrate the transformations
and ravages of the class. To all who may wish to pursue this
' subject further, I shall be happy to afford any information in
my power, by identifying specimens or otherwise. Communica-
tions may be addressed to me at the State Cabinet, Boston, and
specimens preserved in vials of alcohol, or pinned in boxes, will
be very acceptable to the instructive collection I am engaged in
preparing.
SHEEP-HUSBANDRY.
The subject of sheep-husbandry was then announced for
discussion.
SECRETARY'S REPORT. 161
Mr. Perkins. — I am not prepared with any definite remarks
on this subject. In relation to the breeding of pure blood
sheep, I shall leave that mostly to those who have had greater
experience. It is not possible, probably, for us all to breed
pure blood sheep, at pure blood prices ; because those who con-
sume mutton must have mutton to eat, and they cannot afford
to pay Vermont prices for Merino sheep to put on the table.
They do everything up in Vermont but eat sheep. They do not
eat full-blooded Merino sheep, when they can sell them for from
$50 to <f 1,000 apiece — and the |50 ones are exceedingly scarce.
The prices they get for sheep there are perfectly astonishing.
One man was offered, lately, 1)10,500 for eighteen yearling ewes,
which he refused, and was afterwards offered $13,000, but held
them at $18,000. The sale of sheep, this fall, has exceeded
everything that has ever been known before. In the town of
Orwell, the average price put upon the sheep by the assessors
was $50 a head. Now, the average price here in Massachusetts
is put down at only about $27. Sheep, under these circum-
stances, are worth infinitely more, in Vermont, than real estate ;
and, as I have remarked, we cannot all be growers of full-blooded
sheep at these prices, and still supply the cities with mutton. I
am satisfied that a person who wants to get the greatest return
for his money and labor will deal in Merino sheep. I don't
think that an epicure can tell Merino from Southdown mutton,
if both are equally well kept. I keep the common, open-faced
Merino ewes, and I have put a coarse-woolled buck with them.
When wool was worth from thirty cents to sixty cents, my wool
brought forty-seven cents. These sheep would shear from three
to three and three-quarters pounds apiece, besides bringing
their lambs ; and these lambs, when coarse-woolled lambs were
bringing $3 for mutton, would bring $2.50. My opinion is,
that seven of these large, coarse-wooled ewes will eat about as
much as ten of those I have. I believe the Merinos are the best
to keep. They will cluster together like pigs. If a man is
keeping a large lot of sheep, he must have some Merinos, or he
will not be successful. I got an average of $3.35 for the wool
from my ewes this year, and $4.80 for the lambs for meat, which
makes about $8. There is no fictitious value in these sheep ;
it is the market value of wool and mutton. It is a thing that
we can all go into.
21*
162 BOARD OF AGRICULTURE.
Now, in relation to the cost of keeping sheep, I had the plea-
sure of listening to a lecture from ex-Governor Boutwell this
fall, and he stated that a man in Wilbraham, thought they could
be kept for one dollar and fifty cents a year, but he was satisfied
they could not be kept short of three dollars. A few years ago,
I could hire them kept through the winter for a dollar a head ;
this year, I can hire them for from two to three dollars a head.
The expenseof summering them, where I live, is merely nominal.
I think I can make more money by dealing in sheep, by buy-
ing and selling, raising mutton and lamb for sale, and selling
wool, than I can by breeding. If I go to breeding, I cannot
buy and sell with my neighbors. I believe it to be for my
interest, and for that of a great many, to traffic, but it is for the
interest of some to deal in these thoroughbreds, and I presume
there are those here who are dealers in them.
Mr. Smith, of Middlefield. — I think the Merino sheep are the
most profitable to keep in the western part of Massachusetts,
where land is cheap, and they can have a large run, but in the
eastern part of the State, it is altogether different. I have taken
some pains in breeding Merino sheep, and I am fully satisfied of
their hardiness. I have taken the ground always, that if a man
wants to keep a large number of sheep, he had better keep the
Spanish Merino. I think they are the most profitable, I have
tried the Saxony, the Silesian, and the French Merinos, and I
am fully satisfied the Spanish Merino is the best we have. I
have gone somewhat extensively into the improvement of sheep
for my section, and I have used a Vermont buck. The sheep
in our section are not so far behind the Vermont sheep, after
all, as we are apt to think. I do not claim that they are as good,
but the difference is more in the attention and care they receive
than anything else. I had occasion .at one time to send to Mr.
Hammond for a buck ; and for my own gratification, I ordered
a ewe. This was when my sheep were at the highest point to
which I had ever got them, and I sent for this ewe to see how
their sheep would compare with mine. It was six years ago,
and I paid twenty-five dollars for the sheep. Such a sheep
would sell readily now, I presume, for one hundred dollars, and
perhaps more. I thought I would know the value of this sheep.
I served her just as I did my other sheep. We live in a country
where we cannot raise grain ; it is grass, and hardly anything
SECRETARY'S REPORT. 163
else but grass. We raise pretty good cattle and sheep, but we
raise them on grass almost entirely. I put this sheep in with
my flock, and let her run. In the spring I sheared her with
the rest, and she sheared the most of any, with the exception of
one ; but you see she had been kept in Vermont until the middle
of November. Well, she went- out to my pasture the same as
my other sheep, and the next year she did not shear quite up
to the average of the flock. I kept her two or three years, and
I did not consider her an average sheep. She certainly was not
an average in the quality of her wool ; and I have generally
found, that our sheep in Western Massachusetts yield a better
quality of wool, nicer, softer wool, than they get in Vermont.
There are exceptions to that, but tliat is the general rule. A
great deal is owing to the care. I don't do as well by my sheep
as I think likely it would be profitable to. I think if we kept
less cattle and sheep, and kept them better, we should make
more profit. That is the great secret of the superiority of Ver-
mont sheep. Now, in regard to our sheep, we let them run
about as long as they will live, and then put them up and feed
them with hay. We let them run in rain storms, which are
worse for sheep than snow storms. In Vermont, they house
them in storms ; and if a person is situated so that he can, it
will pay, but he cannot with pastures from two to seven miles
from home. This care adds a great deal to the weight of wool.
I presume there are men within the sound of my voice who
have bought bucks that have sheared enormous great fleeces,
and yet they have never been able to get them up to the point
they had reached before ; they do not understand keeping them
up to it, as the Vermont breeders do.
One great point to be looked at in selecting sheep is to see
that the wool runs all round them. You can get about as good
wool on the belly as on the back, if you work at it carefully.
It is a matter requiring a great deal of care and attention, like
everything else in good breeding. One of the first things I
thought of, was to get the wool on the belly long. I didn't see
why there should not be wool on the belly as well as on the
back; I found there was a difference in sheep in that respect,
and so I selected with reference to that, and I have ha d sheep
that I have never seen excelled, in that respect.
164 BOARD OF AGRICULTURE.
I don't think the largest Merino sheep are the most profitable
for raising wool. I want short-legged, compact sheep. They
are more quiet, more apt to do well, and it is less trouble to
take care of them than of the long-bodied sheep. I have
sheared between six and seven pounds from a carcase that
would not weigh more than forty pounds. Take one of these
sheep that shear twenty-five, thirty, or forty pounds of wool,
and you would think such a fleece would clothe all your
family, but when you cleanse it, and bring it down to the
cards, you get but little wool. I think that four pounds
would be a very large average of cleansed wool for the cards.
Possibly there may be six pounds, but I should doubt it,
exceedingly. So you see, there is not, after all, the real
value in these heavy shearers, so far as the wool alone is
concerned. There is no question, however, that it is profit-
able to buy them for the purpose of crossing with other sheep-
I have seen it recommended in one of the governor's messages,
that more sheep be kept in Massachusetts, as a matter of good
husbandry, to bring up poor land. That was contrary to my
experience, and to the experience of the farmers in our section.
I once believed that sheep would improve a farm anywhere, but
I have come to a different conclusion now. It is just as it is
with all other stock. You want the kind of stock that is
adapted to the locality. I am convinced that sheep are ben-
eficial to some lands, but to other lands, to loamy, rather heavy
soils, where we do not plough, they are decidedly injurious.
I know they are a sure remedy for the white daisy. I defy
a man to find any of the white daisy on a pasture that has been
occupied by sheep for two years. Ten years ago, our people
began to get sick of sheep, though they had made a good deal
by keeping them. I don't think sheep manure is as good as the
manure of cattle. Our grass grew short and fine on lands
that are fed with sheep. Where the sheep manure was composted,
I don't think it had that effect, but where it was not composted,
our grass grew short and fine, and did not head out well. I
think if a man wants to improve his farm, he had better keep
cattle instead of sheep.
Prof. Agassiz. — I would like to ask whether there is any food
which has been found by experiment, to increase the amount of
wool produced by sheep.
SECRETARY'S REPORT. 165
Mr. Smith. — I believe wheat will make the most wool, but, of
course, we don't want to feed wheat. If I was going to feed to
make the greatest amount of wool, I should feed oats ; and you
want a certain amount of lime to make a good growth of wool.
Prof. Agassiz. — Has the fineness of the wool been measured
microscopically, with the micrometer, so that you can ascertain
the fineness or thickness of a single thread of wool, and what is
the pf oduction to the inch ?
Mr.- Smith. — Yes, sir. The number of hairs of wool on a
square inch has been determined, on different sheep, a great
many times. I cannot give the figures now ; my memory does
not serve me well. The production of our sheep has been
compared with that of European, and I believe it has been
determined that we have sheep in this country that produce
a larger number of hairs to the square inch than any that have
ever been found in Europe.
Mr. Huntington. — I would like to inquire if the pods of
beans and peas are not good for sheep. I believe they are very
fond of them.
Mr. Smith. — Yes, sir ; and they are very good. The best
sheep-growers in Vermont take up their ewes in October, and
begin to feed them oats when they put the buck with them, and
continue this right through until they lamb. That helps them
to get a strong progeny.
I would like to make one remark in connection with what
Prof. Agassiz said this morning with regard to the food of cattle.
I have tried some experiments in supplying the deficiency of
lime. I found that some of my cows, every season, after the
middle of summer, began to chew bones, if they could get them ;
and I noticed this fact, that the cattle that did that, didn't seem
to be very well ; they seemed to be running down. In reading,
I found what the trouble was. A great proportion of milk is
phosphate of lime, and in making that every day, they need the
food that gives it. They do not get it from our soil, because it
is not there. I noticed tliis fact, also, that oxen never did this.
I presume nobody ever saw a healthy ox chewing a bone ; it is
most generally cows that are in milk. Well, I went to feeding
bone meal. I always keep a barrel of bone meal, just as regu-
larly as I do my salt, and I feed it with my salt. I put in about
the same quantity of bone meal that I do of salt. In winter,
166 BOARD OF AGRICULTURE.
when they are eating hay and roots, there is not so much neces-
sity for this. I have never had any trouble since I have done
that.
Mr. Stebbins. — I will state, in regard to the manufacture of
manure from sheep, that I have repeatedly made a big ox-cart
load of manure with one sheep. The sheep is bedded thor-
oughly, and occasionally during the winter, tobacco stalks are
put in ; and it makes as fine a bed of manure as the sheep jvould
make if there was not a particle of matter put under it.
Mr. FiSK. — So far as my experience goes, I am altogether in
favor of coarse-vvoolled sheep. Not that I expect to get so much
money for the fleece as I should from fine-wool sheep, but our
object is the rearing of lambs. Nothing has been said with
regard to the profit of raising early lambs for the shambles.
Now, the coarse-woolled lambs in Shelburne bring six dollars a
head, when they are three or four months old. The last sum- _
mer, I sold every lamb of mine, the first of July, for five dollars
and seventy-five cents. They were dropped from the first of
March to the fifteenth. Now, a Merino lamb must be kept all
summer long, and then, as a general thing, must be sold for
three and a half or four dollars.
A few years ago, I bought five Cotswold sheep, and gave oi^
hundred dollars for them. I took them off nine miles, and put
them on one of the highest patches of ground, but a good pas-
ture, and they wintered there. They had a barn to go to out
of the storms, but they almost always laid in the yard. They
never had a particle of water until they commenced to have
their lambs, about the middle 'of March, and then we carried
them water. Previous to that time, they ate the snow, like the
birds. Last winter, a friend of mine wanted to take a few sheep
to winter, and I sent him up thirty coarse-woolled lambs, and
thirty Merino lambs. They were kept on the same fare pre-
cisely, but last May, when I went up for them, the Merinos were
all dead but ten ; while only two of the coarse-wools had died.
I had to bring iiome the balance of the Merinos in my wagon,
and they seemed to be struck with death, and some of them did
die after they got home. A few only lived to linger out a mis-
erable existence. Tiiey look badly to-day ; while the others
have done remarkably well.
SECRETARY'S REPORT. 167
With regard to pastures, I am altogether in favor of stocking
with sheep. Tliere is no need of keeping one -kind of animal
on a pasture for a hundred years, as we have been told they do
in Berkshire. I would not be guilty of pasturing cows or sheep
three, four, or six years on the same pasture. Put your sheep
into the cow-pasture, and your cows into the sheep-pasture, —
make a rotation m that way, and you benefit your pastures at
once. There is no kind of fertilizer that is equal to slieep
manure, — it is of great value.
I have not been in the habit of keeping an exact account of
how much it costs me to raise my sheep, but I know it don't
cost me, to raise a Cotswold lamb, that will weigli, when dressed,
one hundred and fourteen pounds, anything like the figures
that have been produced here this afternoon. That is not an
uncommon weight at all for a good Cotswold, but what I like
full as well is an Oxford Down, which was produced, some years
ago, by crossing a Southdown ewe with a Cotswold buck.
That is the best sheep I know of. I find that it does not injure
a Cotswold, Southdown, or Oxford Down ewe to have a lamb
when she is a year old, only the lamb must not be allowed to
run too long with its mother.
A discussion followed in regard to the present dog law. The
general sentiment expressed was, that it was inefficient, inas-
much as there were so much trouble and expense necessary in
order to secure the compensation provided by the Act, that
farmers would prefer to lose their sheep rather than undertake
to get pay for them in that way. Several instances were men-
tioned, in which selectmen had required such an amount of
testimony as practically to nullify the operation and purpose
of the statute. It was suggested in the course of the debate,
that if the towns were made responsible for all sheep killed by
dogs, without reference to the amount of tax collected from the
owners of dogs, the town authorities would see that the law
was enforced. It was also suggested, that if the farmers of the
State would make up their minds that they must have sheep,
dogs or no dogs, and that tliey would defend their sheep against
dogs, there would be no trouble. Yermont was pointed to as
an illustration of this point. Nobody, it was said, ever heard
of a dog law in Yermont that amounted to anything, and yet
168 BOARD OF AGRICULTURE.
there were millions of sheep in that State. The reason was, that
there, sheep were superior to dogs, while in Massachusetts dogs
were superior to sheep, and the farmers had made them so.
The discussion terminated by the appointment of a committee
of three, on motion of Mr. Smith, consisting of Messrs. Loring,
Taft and Stockbridge, to memorialize the legislature upon the
subject of a dog law. The meeting then adjourned, to meet at
half past seven o'clock in the evening.
Evening Session. — Met agreeably to adjournment. Dr. Loring
in the chair. The hall was well filled by the ladies and gentle-
men of Greenfield and vicinity, attracted by the fame of the dis-
tinguished gentleman who had been announced as the lecturer
of the evening.
ORIGIN OF AGRICULTURAL SOILS.
BY PROF. AGASSIZ.
Ladies and Gentlemen, — I propose this evening to introduce
the same subject which was discussed here yesterday — the
origin of the agricultural soils of the Northern States. And in
so doing, my intention is to show you how different may be the
manner of treating the same subject, and with how different
topics we may have to deal when inquiring into the same
matter. During these few days, in the discussions of the State
Board of Agriculture, I have witnessed a frequent disagreement
in the statements of the gentlemen present who have taken
part in the discussion, owing chiefly to the fact, that one class
of facts related to one place, and the other class of facts to
another place ; and I want to lay before you the evidence, that
the differences on our subject-matter may be owing to the fact,
that though we treat of the same subject, we are considering it
with reference to one locality, and not to another. Yesterday,
Prof. Rogers gave you an account of the origin of the soil of
that great belt of our country, which extends from the Atlantic
across the Alleghanies into the great West. I propose to give
you an account of the origin of the soil of the more Northern
States; and you will see that I might have introduced this
lecture by saying that I would discuss before you the glaciers
of Switzerland. Tliese two sulyects seem to have no connection,
and yet they are most intimately allied.
SECRETARY'S REPORT. 169
But before I enter upon the subject of my discourse, allow
me to make a few rambling remarks concerning our scientific
wants, or the wants of the community witli reference to scien-
tific matters. A few centuries ago, there were no schools in
the OM World, In Europe, the mass of the people were
deprived of education. What was then called education was
the privilege of the few who had better advantages in society,
and was chiefly of a religious character. What changes have
taken place in that respect, especially on this continent! Here,
in these United States, public education is one of the objects for
which public munificence knows no limits. In the State of
Massachusetts alone, there is spent annually for public educa-
tion at least a million and a half of dollars ; and for the moral
education of the community, I take it the amount expended is
quite as large. And yet, what do these two objects cover, of
the matters of interest in which the community is concerned ?
The knowledge of our God and our relations to Him, and the
knowledge of the concerns of man, as far as dealing with that
which man can produce by his mind, acting with reference to
himself. What is done for the promotion of a knowledge of
nature? Hardly anything. A few years ago, by an act of
unexpected liberality, the legislature of the State granted
$100,000 for a Museum at Cambridge. It was au evidence
of such unheard of progress in these matters, that the fact
has been echoed all over the civilized world. Europe recog-
nized that we were making a stride beyond her, because we had
done that. Now, allow me to tell you what is the impression I
have about this matter. I say it is a good beginning, but a very
small beginning. It is hardly worth while to speak of it, if we
look at what ought to be done, and what I hope may be done
very soon. Do not think, while I speak so, that I am not truly
grateful for what has been done, and do not fully appreciate the
high-mindedness with which that first step has been taken.
But why should there be less done towards teaching men what
nature is than there is done towards teaching man what God
has done for mankind? Why should there be less done for the
knowledge of nature than is done in our schools to prepare men
to appreciate the works of the human mind ? I hope the time
will come when the State of Massachusetts will spend annually
a milliou and a half of dollars for objects connected with the
22*
170 BOARD OF AGRICULTURE.
study of nature, and when we shall not speak of one College of
Agriculture in the State, and that endowed with a mere pit-
tance, but when we shall have a temple thrown open, wherever
there arc a few hundred men gathered together, in which the
works of nature shall be studied with the same degree of pre-
cision and devotion with which God's Word is studied in our
community. That is what we must aim at. That is one of the
objects which we have before us, and we must, from this time
forward work in that direction. The natural world must be
studied, and in order to study it properly, means no less com-
prehensive than those which arc bestowed now on any part of
our education should be, shall he forthcoming, if I have learned
to know anything of the character of the people with whom I
have mingled.
Gentlemen, this is a matter of national importance. It is a
matter in which the future destiny of the nation is involved ;
it is a matter in which the relation of this country to the Old
World is involved. What is our position now ? I speak of " our
position," because I am glad to say I am now an American citizen.
It is this war which has made me an American citizen. I lived
here peacefully, not caring for public affairs, during fifteen
years, until these troubles broke out. Then I asked myself,
What better can I, a simple individual, do, to show my sympathy
for the country, and to show my confidence in the present and
in the future, than to become an American citizen ?
And that I have done. I have done so, ladies and gentle-
men, because I believe in the future of this nation ; I have
done so because I trust that the tables are turning, and that the
position in which we stood a few years ago, with reference to
Europe, in respect to the higher branches of knowledge, will be
entirely changed. Now-a-days, if one of our college graduates,
in high standing, wants to. obtain a knowledge of those higher
branches of science, which are not taught in our schools, what
is he to do ? If he would become an accomplished chemist, he
must go to Liebig, or Wochler. If he would become an accom-
plished astronomer, he must go to Bescl or Gauss. If he would
become an accomplished physiologist, he must go to Bepp or
Grimm. If he would become an accomplished naturalist and
cmbryologist, he must go to Paris, and attend the lectures of
Cuvier, and so 'on. That is now the position of America in
SECRETARY'S REPORT. 171
comparison with Europe. Now, wc must change that. We
must change it to such an extent, that all our institutions for
public education shall be so superior to those of Europe that
the European student must come here to fniish his scientific
education. At least, that is what we must aim at; and
that is what we have the means of doing. The time is propi-
tious for that. It is just now that we must strike. It is now,
when thinking men are considering what is at stake in our
troubles, what may grow out of them, and what is the part we
are to play in the progress of humanity. And when they
understand that, believe me, the liberal men of Europe, the
liberal men of the Old World, will want to send their children
here to finish their education, under the influence of these
liberal institutions, rather than send them to Oxford or
Cambridge, to be snubbed by the nobility.
You have it in your power to do that, but, in order to do it,
there is one thing which must be done with reference to the
matter of public education. No longer go on boasting as if our
public education was the greatest blessing the world has seen,
because it is good in its elementary parts. No longer go on boast-
ing as if they were perfect institutions — these institutions which
arc only superior in the places where they are, because there
are no others by their side. No longer go on boasting of our
libraries, as if tiiey were doing marvels for education and the
progress of learning, because tliere are a few thousand volumes'
there. Let us remember what the Old World has done, and
continue our efforts in that direction, with unabated energy and
devotion, until our institutions have really become superior to
to those of the Old World ; until they are not only ))ctter
endowed, but have brought together that number of men who
will possess more knowledge and stamp an intellectual character
upon them superior to that of the institutions of the Old World.
I trust that the character of our free institutions will make it
possible for us to accomplish tliat. I believe it, from what 1
have seen in these few days, in my intercourse with the farmers
of this neighborhood. I never learned anything in my inter-
course with the farmers of the Old World. They do not think
on what they are doing. Tiiey go on in the old routine that has
been transmitted to them from a thousand years back. The
plough which the old Grecians used is the plough still used in
172 BOARD OP AGRICULTURE.
the Ionian Islands. There is hardly anything done in the Old
World, in the way of agricultural labor, in which the mind
takes part. Here, I see, on the contrary, that what would else-
where be merely manual labor is intellectual labor combined
with handwork, and in this I see the chance of progress.
The first thing to be done is, to endow all these institutions of
learning on an entirely different scale from that on which they
have been endowed heretofore. This war has taught us one
great lesson ; and I hope its influence will be extended to every-
thing which is done for public education. It has taught us that
great things cannot be done with small means ; that a niggardly
expenditure will not bring about great results ; and if we would
have universities that can compete with those time-honored
institutions of the Old World, they must be better endowed
than they are now ; and those who are devoting their lives to
public education must be at least as well paid as a clerk in a
counting-house. The professors in Cambridge now receive
meaner salaries than men who have none of the attainments
necessary for those who occupy such positions. Indeed, it is not
just to this class of men, to place them in a position in which
they cannot live respectably. And yet they do their work,
because it is a work of love ; and only in so far as that work is
done as a work of love can it be in any way successful. You
may select your brightest man, and give him as high a salary as
you please, and you do not make him a professor in that way.
Unless he has made himself a professor before by hard study,
he is not fit to occupy the place to which he may be appointed,
and the salary of which he may pocket every quarter.
But I have said enough on that subject, and now allow me
to turn to my topic, — the origin of the soil in these Northern
States. It has been brought down from the high north. It is
all of foreign origin. There is hardly any particle of it that has
been derived from the disintegration of the rocks on which it
lies. There is a difference in this soil from that of most other
countries where the soil has been generally derived from the
disintegration, decomposition, and comminution of the rocks
which form the basis of the country. The origin of that bed of
soil which fills the bottoms of the valleys, and which has evi-
dently been brought down by currents of water is a different
matter ; I speak of that loose soil which covers equally the liills
SECRETARY'S REPORT. 173
and slopes of the mountains and the rolling country between
the river basins. All of that, I say, is of foreign origin, and
you will at once perceive how that is connected with those huge
masses of loose boulders which are scattered over the country ;
and when you stand at a place where those large boulders are
actually mixed with similar but smaller material, you very soon
become satisfied that the cause which transposed those large
masses of loose rocks, different from the rock underneath, is
also the cause which has transported the mineral material which .
has accompanied these large boulders, the whole of which is
called " drift," and the large boulders " erratic boulders."
Now, the cause which has transported these loose materials has
produced that drift, which, modified by the plough, by the inter-
ference of man, has furnished our agricultural soil ; and the
question which it is proposed now to consider is, Whence did
these materials come, and how were they transported ? And in
order to explain that, I must go very far out of the way ; for,
iii themselves, these materials hardly furnish us the means of
ascertaining how they have been transported.
There is one fact which is unmistakable, and that is, that all
these loose materials rest upon the surface of rocks which are
generally smooth, polished, grooved, and scratched uniformly ;
and these marks upon the surface of the rocks, which are
immovable, and from the foundation of this drift, trend north
and south, — deviating somewhat to the east and west. Evi-
dently, therefore, the movement which transported all these
loose materials was from the north, southward. Now, various
theories have been found to explain the transportation of these
loose materials. Inundations, floods, currents, have, been sup-
posed to have swept over the country and to have carried
forward in their course all these loose materials. There is one
fundamental and radical objection to that theory ; and that is,
these loose materials are not arranged as water would arrange
them. "Water, acting in any way that water can act, either as
a tide, as currents moving in one direction, or as a freshet, will
carry the finer material to a greater distance in the direction in
which the current flows, and drop sooner the larger materials.
The larger materials will sink first to the bottom, and on top of
them, the smaller materials will gradually be accumulated,
until the most minute materials form the top of the accumula-
17i BOARD OP AGRICULTURE.
tion. That is what water would produce, and what we find
everywhere where its agency is unmistakable. And then,
within the mass where water has been active, we find unmis-
takable drift stratifications, — tliat is, the materials arranged in
layers or beds. If the water was not very active in its flow,
then we have i:.egular beds, resting one above the other, in suc-
cession. If the materials were carried forward by a current,
then we have a dove-tailed set of beds, interlocked with one
, another, and overlapping one another in various ways, but the
eye traces the arrangement in layers or beds. Now, such an
arrangement no man has ever seen in our drift. Another thing
is characteristic of all the loose materials which are accumulated
under the agency of water. Upon these layers, there are other
materials besides inorganic masses accumulated. Leaves may
be deposited upon them, the carcases of animals which are
floated by the water, and all the animals living in the water,
will each form such deposits. Wherever we find, for example,
gravel and sand and mud deposited on the seashore, we find
them full of the remains of shells, crabs, fish. All kinds of
living beings that inhabit the sea are found accumulated in
those deposits. In our drift, we have no trace of such remains ;
another evidence that they were not accumulated by the agency
of water. And yet, from the want of a proper explanation,- it
has been supposed that water was the principal agent in trans-
porting these materials. It has been supposed that a great
flood, arising from some disturbance in the ocean, swept vio-
lently over the whole continent, and that this flood, carrying
devastation before it, would, in the end, accumulate these mate-
rials, and Jeave no trace of organized beings in those deposits.
That may be ; but then, how can the absence of stratification be
accounted for, where water is introduced as the agent? for
water, actir.g on loose materials, cannot deposit them otherwise
than according to the laws of gravitation ; that is, the grosser
and heavier materials necessarily fall to the bottom first, and
the lighter materials are carried further forward. Now, in the
drift, there is no such arrangement. Wlioever will examine a
bluff of our drift, anywhere in the Northern States, or in the
British Provinces, from the coast of the Atlantic to the Rocky
Mountains, north of latitude thirty-six, will find that this drift
consists of all kinds of loose materials mixed together, without
SECRETARY'S REPORT. 175
any discrimination of size or weight or nature of the materials,
and without a trace of stratification. Such a bank of drift,
when examined carefully, will be found to consist of large
materials below as well as on top, and such materials in the
centre as well as on top and below ; and between them, mate-
rials of all sizes, from pebbles of the size of your fist, down to
smaller pebbles, and finally small sand, and may be, impalpable
loam, all of which is mixed pell-mell, with no trace of stratifi-
cation, to the very summit. And all of these materials will be
found not rounded, but hafing their surfaces more^ or less pol-
ished. They do not present the character of beach shingle ;
they are not washed clean ; they are loamy, and the loam upon
them is the sticking loam, which adlieres to these boulders, —
they are, as it were, cemented together by the intervening loam ;
while all the sand which is found along-shore is washed clean of
all these fine materials. When we find a deposit of clay, we
find it by itself, where the water throws ashore only these
minute materials ; we do not find loam, sand, and pebbles
mixed together, as in our drift, in any shore deposit.
If you examine some of these pebbles or these boulders, which
have not suffered at the surface from decomposition, you will
sec that the surface is very polished, shining ; it has not the dull
appearance of beach shingle ; it does not seem to have been
rounded, but rubbed and polished ; and these polished surfaces
exhibit also scratclies in various directions, as if at some time
these materials had been held fast, as in a vice, while a mov-
able rasp was passed over them,' and then, having been turned
over, they had received another hard rubbing, which scratched
that surface ; and, as if all that had been done at the same time
that the surface was being polished with minute powder. This
is the character of all these materials ; and above this mixture
of all kinds of materials, you may find the largest and most
colossal boulders, and they will be angular, showing no sign of
abrasion. Now, conceive, for a moment, water passing over
that. You see at once that all these heavy, loose materials will
fall to the bottom, and that the lighter material will be carried
forward, or, in the end, accumulate on the top of the other.
You must find another agent than water, then, to account for
the transportation of these loose materials. Now, what can this
agent be ?
176 BOARD OF AGRICULTURE.
Let me say here, that it is these accumulations of loose
materials that constitute, all over the Northern States, the soil.
It is this material, more or less altered by vegetation, it is this
material, ploughed and worked by man, which has become the
basis of our agricultural pursuits. It is that material, the
origin of which we must now- try to explain ; and it is the
arrangement of that material which we must seek to understand
fully, in order to appreciate why there is more gravel or more
quartz in one region than another ; why the soil is poorer in
one tract of country than another. You will see, in the end,
that these differences arise from the manner in which these
materials have been brought down from more northern regions.
Now, let me state, further, that always, wherever the underlying
rock has not sustained extensive alterations by exposure to
atmospheric agencies, the surface is polished, and it is so polished
that it shines like a marble mantel-piece which has been worked
to the height of polish that it can receive ; and upon that pol-
ished surface is engraved a system of lines which are always
straight, and always running north and south, deviating some-
what to the west ; and not only scratches and thin lines, but
grooves and furrows, sometimes very extensive and broad, which
have worked quite deeply into the solid rock. This is the basis
on which these loose materials rest, and there can be, at first
sight, little doubt that the cause which transported these
loose materials is also the cause which has polished, scratched,
grooved and furrowed the underlying rock ; that these
phenomena go together, and that the same cause has at the
same time transported those huge boulders which rest on the
whole, and which are still uncovered. Your cause must, there-
fore, work in a very strange manner. It must touch the
bottom, and be powerful enough to abrade it, to polish it, and,
while polishing it, to groove and scratch it. It must, at the
same time, be able to turn this curious mixture of loose mate-
rials over, to be polished and scratched, on the other side ; and .
it must be of such a character that at the same time it carries
forward, on the vet-y summit, and nowhere else, huge angular
materials. Now, such a cause is not known to act anywhere in
the regions where drift is found now. The drift is the result of
the action of a cause which has passed by, at least, within the
limits within which it is observed ; and the question arises
SECRETARY'S REPORT. 177
whether we have anywhere a cause, which, in our day, produces
that combination of phenomena, so that no link shall be want-
ing ; and, if that be found, whether it is possible that, at some
time or other, that known cause should have acted on a larger
scale, and have been productive of those same effects in regions
where it is no longer known.
Now, I believe that such a cavise exists. I believe it may be
seen doing these very things to-day. I believe that that cause,
which is now limited within a very small area, was once much
more extensive, and, in fact, worked wherever we find drift ;
and that cause, in my estimation, is the glaciers which are found
only in the high mountains of Central Europe, in the high
mountains of this hemisphere, within certain limits in the Arctic
regions, and in the Antartic regions ; and it is to an attempt to
prove to you that there were once fields of ice covering the
whole of this blessed country, extending not only over the
colder and more temperate part of the Northern States, but at
least to latitude thirty-six, it is to an attempt to prove that such
a state of things has existed here, that I will devote the remainder
of my time this evening.
Now, what is a glacier ? I wish I could open to you the scene
as we have it in the region where glaciers exist now. It would
go very far to elucidate the subject which I propose to consider ;
or, at any rate, give you some idea of the colossal dimensions
which glaciers exhibit even now, though they are reduced to
such an extraordinary extent from wliat they were in' former
times. A glacier is not frozen water, resulting from the con-
gealing of the Alpine streams, but it is the result of the slow
and gradual transformation into ice of that snow which falls
every winter in high mountains. That process of transforming
snow into ice, we may witness every winter in our streets. When,
after a snow fall, the temperature rises a little above thirty-two
degrees, the snow becomes moist, and, in consequence of this par-
tial melting, it is very soon transformed into a mass of ice grains,
which are loosely cohered, or entirely incoherent. Let a frost
come, and these grains are frozen together, and the whole mass
becomes one pudding-stone of ice, if I may express myself so.
It is a mass of ice, not consisting of layers, as results from the
freezing of water in successive sheets, but it is a mass of ice
resulting from the congealing of the grains of ice which have
23*
178 BOARD OF AGRICULTURE.
been formed by the partially thawing snow. Now, a mass of ice
formed in this way is constantly changing its relations to its
parts ; and upon a slope, in consequence of this change of parts,
it is moving, and it is moving at a rate which is quite consider-
able. I will take the facts as they are in the Alps, where you
may see along the slopes of the Alpine valleys, the onward
movement of such masses of ice, resulting from the transforma-
tion of the snow in the higher regions into ice. That motion
may be two or three hundred feet a year ; it may be less or
more, according to circumstances ; but there are conditions
which determine the rate of this movement.
Now let us consider one particular case, so that we may have
these facts very clearly before us. There are in Switzerland
three chains of mountains, about the same distance apart — the
Finster-Aarhorn, the Schreckhorner, and the Wetterhorner.
Upon the slopes of each of these mountains, there is a large
accumulation of snow. Suppose, at one point, we have nine
thousand feet above the level of the sea. Above this level, all
these masses of snow retain, more or less, their character of
snow. The level is too high for frequent thawings to take
place ; too high for rains to fall, or for the moisture in the
atmosphere to fall, in any form except snow. I have, at that
elevation, witnessed a fall of snow, in the early part of August,
which left, as the result of one night's fall, two feet on the
ground. You see, therefore, that when it rains in the lower
regions, we have snow in these higher regions, and that snow
has not so frequent chances to pass into ice as it has lower
down, where the temperature being higher, there are more
frequent oscillations above and below thirty-two degrees. At
this point, the temperature is very constantly below thirty-two
degrees. Lower down, about the level of six or seven thousand
feet, there are frequent alternations above and below thirty-two
degrees. Further down still, say at five thousand feet, the
temperature is, during summer, always above thirty-two de-
grees, and only during winter below thirty-two degrees; so
that we have the most diversified climatic conditions in . a. dis-
tance which is small, but which is made great, practically, by
the difference in height. "We have there, without travelling
more than an hour or so, differences which amount to the
difference you observe when, starting from here, you go to
SECRETARY'S REPORT. 179
Greenland. You pass from a New England to a Greenland
climate, in these mountains, in an hour's walk — owing merely
to tl^e difference in height. Now, this is the condition under
which the snows which accumulate in the higher regions may,
passing down to a lower level, be transformed into ice ; and the
motion of this whole mass will vary according to the amount
of moisture which results from the partial thawing, and to the
progressing of the freezing and the moisture. Now, without
entering into details, let me at once put down some of the
results. At the height where the process of thawing is very
slow, the motion in a year may be ten or twenty feet. Lower
"down, at an elevation say of nine thousand feet, it may be forty
or fifty feet. At seven or eight thousand feet, it may be as
much as one hundred and fifty or two hundred feet. Where
the level is about six thousand feet, we have a movement which
may be two hundred and fifty or three hundred feet a year.
Now comes a singular change. Further down, the motion
becomes less and less. And why ? The ice is compact. It
is so compact that there is no thawing within, but there is
melting on the surface. There is a slight moisture penetrating
into this mass, and in consequence of this, a little expansion,
so that in proportion as the ice begins to be so compact that it
can no longer receive water in its interior, and expand by the
freezing of the water, the motion is reduced ; so much reduced,
that at the lower end, the movement may be only sixty or
seventy feet a year. When it started at the snow fields in the
higher regions, it had an initial movement of ten or twenty
feet ; it increased to two or three hundred feet, and was finally
reduced to a movement of seventy feet, on slopes which are the
same, or which do not present any great difference in steep-
ness— showing distinctly that this motion is not determined by
the slope, but by meteorological influences ; that is, by climatic
influences, — by the amount of moisture, and by the frequency
of thawing and freezing.
Now, these differences of climate you may have, on a level,
in different latitudes ; and a glacier, or mass of ice, or sheet of
ice, may move on a level quite as much as down hill, if on one
side of the mass there is frequent thawing and freezing, and on
the other side only a continued accumulation of snow ; and I
have satisfied myself, by a process which would be too long
180 BOARD OF AGRICULTURE.
to explain, that the northern ice-fields move southward, not
because they are resting on a surface inclining from the north
southward, but owing to the fact that it is colder further jiorth
than further south. Further north there is more snow accu-
mulating, further south there is more ice forming, in conse-
quence of the frequent thawing and freezing, and these alter-
nations of thawing and freezing. That is, from the north
southwards, we have all the conditions which we have very
high up and down in an Alpine valley. There is one fact
to show us that this is unquestionably so. Every year the
Atlantic is covered by icebergs. Now, these icebergs are not
frozen sea-water ; they are masses of arctic land ice, which
advance to the ocean by their own periodical movement, and
which, when pushed over into the ocean, having no further
support, break off from the land ice, and are floated south.
That is the origin of icebergs. The fact has been observed
by all Arctic travellers. It has been satisfactorily observed
off Spitzbergen by a friend of mine, who knew the glaciers
before going there, and who saw these glacier icebergs break
off from the land ice, which had its own movement, similar to
the movement of the glaciers of the Alps.
Now, what is such a mass of ice doing in the way of mechan-
ical work, while it moves in that manner ? What is the
mechanical work done annually by the glaciers of the Alps in
their descent from the higher mountains to the lower valleys in
which they terminate. Mount Blanc, fifteen thousand feet high,
is on all sides covered at the summit with snow ; further down,
with glaciers which terminate in the valley of Chamouni. In
the valleys on the southern side, we find glaciers, the lower
ends of which are only three thousand feet above the level of
the sea. They are masses of ice which have come down eleven
or twelve thousand feet, from the summit of the mountain down
to the valley. You find the glacier of the Grindelwald, and all
the other glaciers of Switzerland, commencing at heights vary-
ing from twelve to fifteen thousand feet, and terminating in the
valley, at heights of five, four, or three thousand feet above the
level of the sea.
Now, these glaciers, when they come down, are all the time
rubbing over the surface of the rocks, and rubbing, bruising,
crushing, polishing, and grinding, in a very efficient manner,
SECRETARY'S REPORT. 181
owing to another series of facts, to which I will now call your
attention, I have measured the depth and thickness of the
mass of ice in the chain of mountains to which I have referred.
I have been under it ; I have been in it ; I have seen it in every
possible way ; I have let myself down into the crevasses to the
depth of several hundred feet ; I have walked up the streams
which flow out from below, so that I can speak from personal
observation of the character of the facts to which I am now
alluding. In some parts, this mass of ice is about a thousand
feet thick ; in some parts, it is three or four miles wide ; at its
lower end, it is about one mile wide, and the length is about
seventeen miles. This, however, is not one of the great glaciers.
It is a dwarf in comparison with some of the Arctic glaciers
observed by Dr. Kane. The Humboldt glacier is one hundred
times larger than that. And yet you have here a surface of
ice seventeen miles in length, with an average width of over
two miles, an average thickness of many hundred feet, and at
least a thousand feet high. You will conceive, therefore, that
this mass of ice, moving down that valley, will produce some
mechanical effect ; and it will be evident that it will produce
the more mechanical effect, when you consider that there are
constantly particles of rock disengaged from the sides of the
valley and falling upon the surface of the ice and penetrating
under the ice, and finally down to the rock over which the ice
moves, so that the under surface of the ice, which rests upon
the rock, is in the end changed into a rasp, — studded all over
with pebbles of all sizes, which are immovably set in the ice.
When under the glacier, I have seen fragments of rock one,
two, and three feet thick, set in the ice, immovably, and pebbles,
of the size of your fist down to small grains of sand, all set in
the ice. These fragments would form, then, a part of the under
surface of the glacier. Now, the whole mass moves forward,
and conceive what a rasp it is ! Passing over rocks of the
greatest hardness, there will be, among these fragments of rock
set in the ice, some fragment or other which will be at least as
hard, if not harder than the rocks over which it moves, and the
result is, that in the end the whole surface of the rock is
abraded to an extraordinary extent, and while the minor parti-
cles polish these surfaces which are abraded by the larger
materials, the larger materials make scratches, grooves, and
182 BOARD OF AGRICULTURE.
furrows. You have here, then, a combination of circumstances
which explains the simultaneous formation of polished surfaces,
grooved, scratched, and furrowed, and the formation, over
these surfaces, of materials which have pressed against one
another, occasionally turning in their sockets, changing their
surfaces of abrasion, and thus becoming polished, grooved, and
scratched ; but the materials are so set that they do not change
their positions in a way to bring the heavier to the bottom and
the lighter above, or to impart to them anything like a regular
stratification.
This is what is going on underneath a glacier ; and I can add
that I have seen the bottom of a number of glaciers, and I have
found there a kind of paste (made up of loam and sand,)
coarser and finer gravel, pebbles of all sizes, and boulders
of all sizes, rolled up together, and mingled in a confused way.
Occasionally, a large mass of rock, will separate from the soil of
the mountain, fall on the ice, and remain on its surface, and as
the glacier moves, that boulder is carried along, remaining on
the surface of the ice, and undergoing no abrasion ; rubbing
against nothing, but being carried smoothly along, while all this
grinding is going on underneath. Now, suppose for a moment
that the glacier melts away, what will be the consequence ?
This accumulation of loose materials, put together pell-mell,
remain where they are, and these large angular masses, which
have been carried on top of them, rest on these loose materials,
but do not sink to the bottom with them. We have, then, such
an accumulation of loose materials as we actually observe in
the drift ; the mass of the drift being a conglomerate of all
kinds of materials, mixed indiscriminately together, and on top
of them rest these large angular boulders.
This, in itself, would be sufficient to satisfy a skeptic that
there is some foundation for considering glaciers as the possible
cause of the transportation of materials like drift, but I should
like to carry the comparison a little further, and to show you
a little more fully that there can be no other cause so active as
this, and that we have, in the fields of ice of our northern
latitudes the true cause of the transportation of our drift, and
of the grinding by which it has been brought into its present
condition.
SECRETARY'S REPORT. 183
When these loose materials which fall on the surface of the
glacier are, with its movement, bronght down to its lower end,
they accumulate at the point of its termination, and form at its
lower end a hill across the valley, in which the glacier termi-
nates. Now, these circumscribed hills of loose materials mark
the boundary of the glacier, and within that boundary the
whole surface of the rock underneath presents the character
I have described. But let us examine a little the sides of the
valley, above the present level of the glacier. ' We find that
they are polished like the rock underneath. They are polished
in the same way, and scratched and ground in the same way, as
if the glacier had had, at one time ti higher level ; and beyond
its present termination, in the same valley, I find there are
such concentric hills of loose materials. They are not arranged
a§ a river would arrange them. A river deposits such materials
in the centre of its course, but these are all arranged in concen-
tric moraines, across these valleys. Now, take this glacier of
which I have spoken, at the head of the valley of the Alps, ter-
minating near the Grimsel, where the hospice stands, which is
the stopping-place for travellers from the Bernese Oberland into
Italy. Now, the distance from the origin of this glacier in the
Alps to the chain of the Jura, is over a hundred miles, follow-
ing the sinuosities of tlie valley, and all over this tract, we find
these concentric moraines. That is, this glacier must once
have extended over eighty miles beyond the limits wh?ch it
occupies now. No doubt it ojice reached the Jura, for boulders
identical in character with those which we see dropped from
the summit of the Schreckhorner, — talc slate boulders, which
are unmistakable, and cannot be confounded with any other
rocks along the whole of this track, — will be found three thou-
sand feet above the level of the plain, on the crest of the Jura.
It would seem, then, as if the ice had once occupied all that
space. Let us look at the valley of the Aar. When you go
from the higher part of the plains of Switzerland into the Alps,
you have a deep cut, and there the level of the valley is about
two thousand eight hundred feet above the sea. On the sides
of this valley, you have these polished surfaces, to a height of
nine thousand feet. That gives you the thickness of the ice
there at about six thousand feet, when the glacier, whicli we
now know to be about one thousand feet thick, extended forty
184 BOARD OF AGRICULTURE.
odd miles further on, and it was over three thousand feet thick
where it reached the Jura.
These were the facts which I had observed. Well, it occurred
to me that it was impossible that these facts should have been
brought about without a change in the climate of the earth ;
without an extraordinary change in the condition of the temper-
ature of Europe, at least ; and I set out to ascertain, within
these limits, the changes which took place. These evidences of
the gradual extension of the glaciers had only been traced within
the borders of Switzerland. Now was the time, I thought, to
ascertain whether any evidence of glaciers existed beyond those
borders. I at once went to 'England to seek for the marks of
ancient glaciers. When I arrived there, in 1840, every geolo-
gist laughed at me, said I was on a wild-goose chase, and dis-
countenanced my pursuit as a chimerical one. One geologist,
however, who had confidence in my methods of observation and
appreciated my purposa, Dr. Buckland, said he would accom-
pany me to Scotland, where he was better acquainted than I, as
a foreigner, was, and we went on together ; and there, in the
first valley to which we penetrated, we found, according to the
prediction I had made from looking at the Alps, moraines across
the valley, the sides of the valley polished, and every sign of
the former presence of glaciers, as within the Alps now. Thus
. appeared the evidence that the change of climate had not only
occurred in Central Europe, but that there had been a general
change of temperature throughout Europe. Soon after that, I
came to this country, and as soon as I arrived at Halifax, I ran
away from the steamer to a hill near by, and there I saw the
same marks of the existence of glaciers, — these smooth surfaces,
these grooves and these furrows on the rock, and that peculiar
drift, with all its marks ; so that I became convinced that the
same changes must have taken place here, and that all this drift
must have been accumulated where it is by an agency similar to
that which no\v-a-days produces similar accumulations, which I
have no doubt to be the glaciers.
In a full presentation of this subject, I shall attempt to
remove the slight objections that arise against this or that inter-
pretation of the phenomena. I believe I could do it easily, but
time will not allow me to enter into these details. I might
attempt to say something concerning the causes of these great
SECRETARY'S REPORT. 185
geological changes and changes of temperature ; and I might,
perhaps, be able to reconcile the view I have presented with the
fact, in which I have full confidence, that our earth was once
warmer than now, though I say, too, that it must once have
been much colder than now. I think I could explain, in a
measure, the cause of these great oscillations. I would have
only to recal to your mind the fact that in the Arctic drift we
find buried elephants, rhinoceroses, and other animals only
found in the tropics, to give you the full evidence that the
climate of the earth was once warmer than now. I ought now
to add, that these carcases arc found covered with flesh, and
that they are so well preserved that dogs and wolves have eaten
their flesh, to show that the changes which took place were not
such as to produce decomposition of these animals, (and we all
know what a good preserver of meats ice is,) and in that way I
think I could satisfy you, that chimerical as this theory may
appear, it is founded upon a series of well connected facts,
which leave no other alternative than the conclusion that this
Northern Hemisphere has been once covered with a sheet of ice,
extending from the Arctic regions to the limits where we find
connected drift, to latitude thirty-six ; and that it is to the
mechanical action of that sheet of ice we must attribute the
source of our soil.
You see, ladies and gentlemen, that in considering this
subject, I have had to resort to a different explanation from that
which was given yesterday in relation to the formation of the
soil in more southern latitudes. I believe, we are both right,
although we have to attribute to so entirely different agencies
the production of one and the same phenomenon.
:Mr. Perkins. — 3Ir. Chairman, I feel that this State Board of
Agriculture have been pleasantly together here, and that much
of the pleasure of these interviews has been due to the fact
that we have had the use of this hall for our meetings. I move
that the State Board of Agriculture tender to the authorities of
this town their sincere thanks for their liberal bestowal of the
use of this hall for our meetings.
This motion passed, unanimously, and the Board adjourned,
sine die.
24*
186 BOARD OF AGRICULTURE.
ANNUAL MEETING AT BOSTON.
The Board met in accordance with adjournment, at the office
of the Secretary, in Boston. Present, Messrs. Agassiz, Adams,
Bull, Clement, Garfield, Grout, Hartwell, Homer, Huntington,
Johnson, Keith, Lathrop, Loring, Moore, Perkins, Phinnej,
Saltonstall, Sewall, Smith, Stockbridge, Taft, Thompson and
Tidd.
In the absence of his Excellency, the Chairman, Mr. Lathrop
was requested to preside, and accordingly took the chair.
The first day was occupied in the reception of the reports
of delegates appointed to attend and report upon the exhibi-
tions of the County Agricultural Societies.
These reports will be found on a subsequent page.
On Friday the 27th, the attendance being the same as on the
first day, with the addition of Mr. Stedman, Mr. Bull, of
Concord, was requested to preside, and accordingly took the
chair.
The reports of committees on special subjects being in order,
the first presented was the following :
ON GARDEN VEGETABLES AND BOOT CROPS.
BY MR. T. G. HUNTINGTON.
The Committee chosen to report on root crops and garden
vegetables, on looking over the field assigned them, soon became
convinced that a proper treatment of these subjects would
require a larger space than is usually devoted to these reports,
besides involving an amount of time and research incompatible
with other engagements. They have ventured, therefore, to
drop altogether the matter of root crops ; and they were the
more ready to do this on recollecting that an elaborate report
was presented to the Board but a few years since on this
subject.
Although the conclusions arrived at in this report are such as
your committee hardly feel ready to accept, yet as far as the
argument is concerned, it must be admitted that the author has
good ground for his opinions.
The economy of root-raising is, to some extent, still a
mooted question, and your Committee have no facts, or rather
not enough of them to throw into either scale to cause a pre-
SECRETARY'S REPORT. , 187
ponderance in favor of, or against their cultivation. Probably
if it is ever settled, it will be found that location, the cost of
land and labor, with the comparative facility of raising the
cereals, corn, and other forage crops, will have much to do with
its decision.
Leaving out then root crops, and taking only garden vegeta-
bles, our subject is still a most comprehensive and important
one. It concerns every man who l^as a rood of land, and has
more to do with the health, comfort and thrift of our homes,
than most people are willing to admit. Al^iough no advocates
of an exclusively vegctffble diet, we firmly believe that a well-
kept garden, furnishing a good variety and succession of fruits
and vegetables through the season, will be found to lessen
materially the expenses of the family, to secure its more
uniform and better health, as well as to lubricate the machin-
ery of its life generally. We may form some idea of their
importance in our social and political economy by a reference
to some statistics of Massachusetts in connection with one or
two of the other States. It appears from these that until 1860,
or near that time, there was but one State in the Union that
exceeded Massachusetts in the value of the produce of her mar-
ket gardens, and that was New York. She now stands only the
third State, New Jersey being the second, and exceeding her by
some two hundred thousand dollars.
The population of Massachusetts in 1850 was 994,514 ; in
1860 it was 1,231,066. The rate of increase from 1850 to 1860
was 23.79 per cent.
The increase in the production of her market gardens is as
follows :
In 1840 it was . . . . $283,904 00
In 1850 " . . . . 600,020 00
In 1860 " . . . . 1,397,623 00
More than doubling every ten years. The increase in the
State of New York was in about the same ratio. So it appears
that while our population increased for the last twenty years at
the rate of less than twenty-five per cent, in ten years, the pro-
duction of our market gardens has increased one hundred per
cent, in the same time.
188 BO^RD OF AGRICULTURE.
But the growing value of this interest will better be seen
if we compare it with some of our other productions. Massa-
chusetts produced in 1860 : /
Of Butter, 8,297,936 lbs., which, at 16| cts., = $1,382,986 00
Of Potatoes, 3,202,517 bush. " " 331 cts., = 1,067,506 00
Of Corn, 2,157,063 " " "75 cts.,= 1,617,795 0(J
•
It will be seen, therefore, that taking the three important
staples of butter, jDf tatoes and Indian corn, the yearly produce
of our market gardens exceeds that bf the two first named,
while it very nearly equals that of the latter.
But this is not all. The corn crop, while it increased from
1840 to 1850, has, since that time, decreased. The potato
crop has steadily decreased since 1840, while the increase in
the production of butter for the last ten years has been but
slight, and this while the production of our market gardens
has increased almost fivefold. Indeed it is probable, that at
the present time, there is but one single agricultural production
in the State that exceeds it in value, and that is the grass or liay
crop. These figures are instructive. They show us what
direction our industry is to take as the resources of the State
become further developed. While the production of grass and
hay will always claim a prominent, perhaps the chief place in
our regard, the produce of our gardens and orchards bid fair
soon to outstrip all others in importance. We are led to this
opinion, not only by the figures we have adduced, but in
looking over the statistical tables we find the groiving inter-
ests in this direction, viz., fruit-raising, wine-making, sugar-
making, (to.
It becomes the intelligent farmer, then, to watch this tendency,
and while he is careful not to run rashly into new experiments,
still to be ready to avail himself of any opening in this direc-
tion ; even if he should anticipate, to some extent, the public
want, he can hardly be a loser in the end.
Having said thus much on the importance of vegetable pro-
ductions, a few general remarks on the requisites for successful
cultivation, may not be out of place.
One of the first of these is a proper soil. This is what is
called a warm or quick soil. It is true that there are certain
SECRETARY'S REPORT. 189
vegetables which grow well in that of an opposite character,
but for a market garden, or even for one jnerely for the family,
there is hardly anything that will compensate for this. We
say, then, that when the usual variety of vegetables are culti-
tivated, if the soil is not naturally of this character, in order to
secure the best results, its defects should be remedied, as far as
possil)le, by artificial means. These will, of course, be draining,
and if the soil is stiff and retentive, a mixture of sand, lime,
&c., to break it down and render it friable.
The next point is abundant manuring. For this purpose,
probably nothing is better than well rotted barnyard manure.
Green manure, as it is called, produces good results in some
cases, but the general effect of it is to give a coarse plant with
a disagreeable flavor. In lands recently devoted to garden pur-
poses, manuring should be abundant. The object should be to
create a large supply of rich mould, for it is in this that vegeta-
bles luxuriate. In order to increase this, well rotted turf is
excellent, or the deposits of leaves in the woods. If these last
are taken and used abundantly as bedding for stock, and
then composted with the droppings, they make one of the
best dressings for garden or vegetable culture. In connection
with barnyard manure, there are special fertilizers suited to
various crops, which may be used to good advantage. Guano is
excellent, in many cases, especially when used with plastelf
though it requires care in using. The latter is good alone for
leguminous crops, such as peas, beans, etc. But, perhaps, there
is no single article suited to a greater variety of crops than pure
bone superphosphate, that is, ground bones dissolved in sul-
phuric acid. The writer knows of striking results from the use
of this article, both in garden and field crops.
We pass on to a third requisite in successful gardening, viz.,
cultivation. This, though the last, is by no means the least
point to be considered. In fact, it is just here that success or
failure most often hinges. Any tyro in vegetable culture may
select a suitable spot of land for his purpose, or, by the proper
means, he can make it nearly what he would have it. He can
supply manure in the greatest variety and abundance, and of
the best quality. He may even so manipulate with these two,
as to put them into the best possible condition for the reception
of the seed, and yet, if his proceedings thereafter are at fault,
190 BOARD OF AGRICULTURE.
partial, or even total failure may be the result. Sometimes a
single misstep may di3stroy the hopes of a season. It is here
that experience is an invaluable guide. She observes and treas-
ures up a thousand trifles which are not thought worthy of a
place in books, and yet, trifles as they seem, they often contain
within themselves the secret of success or failure. In many
instances the choice of a variety, the selection of seed, the man-
ner or the time of planting, are things of the first- importance.
We have known beans to be so planted as never to come up, or
to have expended so much of vital energy in the process as to
accomplish notliing afterward. So, too, a slight difference in
the planting of corn has, in the end, made the difference
between a fair crop and almost total failure. It is so through
the whole round of vegetable culture ; while there is much to be
learned from books, there is nothing like personal contact with
nature, to wrest from her the secret laws of vegetable life, so
that she may be aided in converting the unpromising seed into
so many and useful forms to meet the wants of man.
Having said thus much upon the subject of vegetable culture
in general, and called attention to its growing, importance, we
propose in what we have further to say, to take up two or three
of the more prominent articles, and treat them somewlTat in
detail, deeming such a course more useful than an attempt to
gl) over the whole ground of garden culture in our prescribed
limits. We have selected for this purpose onions, cabbages and
winter squashes.
ONIONS.
The importance of the onion will be conceded by all. It not
only enters largely into our home consumption, but is becoming
an article of export. In the year 1853, the value of this crop
exported was over two hundred thousand dollars, — a little more
than the value of apples exported the same year. It is both
wholesome and nutritious, and is especially valuable as an anti-'
dote to those diseases incurred by a too exclusive diet of salt
meats, &c., such as is used in the army and at sea. As an
instance of the increasing demand for this esculent, it may be
stated that one of our inland towns has lately commenced its
cultivation, and tliough there is no large market in the vicinity,
and the ground devoted to it is becoming extended every year,
SECRETARY'S REPORT. 191
it has never been a drug, but, on the contrar}', tlie price has
been continually rising.
Dr. F. Unger, in his sketch of the plants used as food by
man, published in the Patent Office Report of 1859, says that,
" the onion is probably indigenous from Palestine to India,
whence it extended to China, Japan, Europe and North Africa.
It was highly prized by the ancient Greeks, the Jews, and the
Egyptians. The island Cimolus was endowed with the surname
of Onion, because onions of remarkable excellence were culti-
vated upon it." Unfortunately we have no means of knowing
what was the method of cultivation then, or whether it was to
this or some peculiarity of soil or climate that their superiority
was owing. Consequently in treating of its cultivation we
shall have to confine ourselves to the best practice of more recent
times. The first question that presents itself is, what is the
most desirable soil ? To this it may be replied that they admit
of considerable range in this respect. We have seen them
growing well, both as regards quantity and quality, the past
season, on a great variety of soils ; on newly cleared, light,
plain lands ; on the alluvial bottoms of the Connecticut River,
on "rather cold, clayey loam, and on old gardens. This in
Hampshire County, where their culture has recently been intro-
duced, and where the crop compares favorably with its old home
in Essex County.
Writers on the subject, who are good authority, say that the
soil best suited to it is a dark sand, or one rather inclining to
sand than clay. Manure should be applied in great abundance,
as there seems to be little danger of over-feeding the crop, and
it is a point of great importance to give the plants a vigorous
start, as well to secure a healthy growth as to prevent the
attacks of the maggot. As a main dependence there is nothing
better than manure from the barnyard or hogpen, and if well
decomposed or composted, so much the better. In some parts
of Essex County, where comparatively little barnyard manure is
made, a compost of peat, seaweed, and night soil is used with
great success. As special fertilizers, fish guano, superphosphate,
and ashes are excellent, — the two latter to be applied to the
drills after sowing.
Having soil and manure, the next important thing is good
seed. If the cultivator fails here his failure is likely to be
192 BOARD OF AGRICULTURE.
irretrievable. Seed that " won't come " is acknowledged by all
to be a nuisance, but it is not so generally known, that seed
which will only just come is but little better. Indeed, the prac-
tical effect is sometimes worse in the latter case than in the
former. A few straggling plants, coming up irregularly, like lag-
gard and undisciplined soldiers endeavoring to form a line, is apt
to beget a hope, which, however, almost always proves illusory,
that the ground will finally become stocked. So between hoping
and waiting, the opportunity is lost for replanting. The stand-
ing plants show but a puny growth. Their unpromising
appearance leads to neglect in cultivation ; weeds take posses-
sion of the ground, causing a more diminutive product, and so
the whole operation ends in disappointment and perhaps loss.
Let all care, then, be taken to get seed that is uniformly plump
and sound, such as will not exhaust itself in pushing its germ
into sunlight, but waits only the proper conditions to start up
into a vigorous and unimpeded growth.
A marked illustration of the importance of good seed, came
within the experience of the writer the past season.
A plot of ground was prepared, all of it in precisely the same
way. In sowing, the seed fell short by some half dozen rows.
It being inconvenient to get more of the same seed, the want
was supplied from another source, and the sowing finished. In
due time the plants on the part first sown, came up with a fine,
healthy look, which they kept through the season, m'aking a
crop fair in quantity and most excellent in quality, with very
few of scullions, although it was the first time the ground had
been used for this crop. The appearance of the other part of
the plot was in marked contrast to this through the season.
But a small portion of the seed came up ; the germination was
slow and feeble, the plants through the season seeming to lack
vitality. The bulbs were coarse in texture, and the scullions in
much larger proportion than the others, making in all not more
than half a crop.*
* To save seed, select the best bulbs ; set them out in April, in rows two and
a half feet apart, and one foot apart in the rows. As the plants grow, tie them
up to stakes. The seeds ripen in August, when the heads assume a brown
color. They should be cut off, thoroughly dried and threshed, when they can
be put away for use.
SECRETARY'S REPORT. 193
The varieties most cultivated for winter use are the red and
yellow. Of these, the red is considered by some as more hardy
and prolific. It is undoubtedly the coarser and more pungent
of the two. The yellow stands first in point of quality, and
according to Burr, on account of its keeping qualities, is better
adapted to shipping purposes than some other kinds. The
Danvers, which is but a sub-variety of the yellow, and equals that
in point of quality, possesses, from its peculiar shape, an advan-
tage over it in cultivation. Owing to this shape, which is
globular, or approaching to that, a greater number of bushels
will stand on an acre than of the flat kind, a point of some
importance in the cultivation of so expensive a crop as this.
While on the subject of varieties, it may be as well to say,
that the top and potato onions being raised chiefly for summer
use, we pass by, confining ourselves to what is of more general
interest. We come then to the matter of cultivation, and here
three things are of great importance, viz. : careful preparation
of the ground, early sowing, and thorough cultivation through
the season.
If the land is naturally inclined to be cold and wet, its pre-
paration may be much facilitated by being thrown up into
ridges, in the autumn, subjecting it to the action of frost through
the winter. By this means it is not only the sooner made dry
in the spring, but the mechanical envision of the soil is much
assisted. The most smiple way of doing this, is merely to make
the furrows of double width, in reality turning over but about
half the ground, and throwing the ploughed portion upon the
top of the baulk or unploughed part. It is a good practice when
this operation is performing, to apply the manure at this time,
covering it in the way mentioned above.
As soon as the ground is ready to work in the spring, the
furrows may be harrowed down and the land cross-ploughed,
which brings it into fine tilth. When the fall ploughing is not
done, the cultivator can pursue any course which he deems
best, provided he secures the end to be sought, which is a firm,
light, smooth bed for the seed. Great pains should be taken in
this matter, as not only the thrift of the plants but their eco-
nomical cultivation depends very much upon it. As the finish-
ing stroke to this process nothing is better than the hand-rake,
25*
194 BOARD OF AGRICULTURE.
as it smooths inequalities, takes out all rubbisli, and prepares
the ground nicely for the drill.
In regard to the time of sowing, something depends on the
selection of a suitable piece of land, one that affords early work-
ing, being much the most desirable, as it seems almost impossible
to sow too early, and not only so, but it is one of the essentials
to success. So much importance, is attached to this as to lead,
in some cases to the sowing of ashes on the snow to hasten its
thawing, that the ground may be earlier fitted. Probably,
however, any time in April will not be too late.
Since the introduction of onion culture to the neighborhood
of the Connecticut River, a hand-cultivator has been invented
by* Levi P. Warner, of Sunderland, which is much prized as a
labor-saving instrument. This is convertible into a sower, in
which capacity it works with great precision, and is very nearly
a perfect machine. The amount of seed sown is about six
pounds of the red and five of the yellow or Dan vers, and with
this amount it is not considered necessary to thin out.
As soon as the plants are large enough to fairly show the
rows, the ground should be run over with the cultivator or hoe,
and within a week or ten days after, the first hand-weeding
should be performed. It is impossible, however, to lay down
'rules here, unless it is the single one, never to let the weeds get
the advantage. Small we^ds are more easily killed, and with
less injury to the growing crop than large ones, and besides a
clean field will almost pay for the pleasure it affords the eye.
The labor of weeding may be performed by children after a
little practice. "We found during the last season, which, owing
to the drought, was not favorable to the growth of weeds, the
ground needed cleaning about once a fortnight. There is one
weed (purslane,) which seems to thrive under any amount of
hoeing, and when the ground is badly infested with it, it is
better to devote it to some other purpose. After the crop
is matured, which is indicated by the falling over of the tops,
the onions may be raked or hoed out of the ground and left to
cure for a week or two, when they should be topped and
removed to some dry place under cover, where they can remain
as long as there is no danger from frost, or until they are sent
to market. The onion is strongly inclined to grow after being
SECRETARY'S REPORT. 195
gathered, and the condition of success in keeping it is said to
be a low, dry temperature, but without frost.
Tlie cost of raising varies in different localities. The price
of manures, of labor, and the character of the land, both as
regards foulness and natural fertility, are things that will affect
very much any estimate we may make. Our own experiments
in a small way the past season, show a footing up of some two
hundred dollars per acre, besides rent of land. This, owing to
enhanced prices, is about double what it was four years ago.
Of this sum about one hundred, or at that rate, was paid for
seed and fertilizers. This is probably more than usual. One
of the largest growers in this region, estifuates the average
expense this year, including manures and rent of land, at
two hundred dollars. The produce varies still more than the
expense, ranging from complete failure, up to eight or ten hun-
dred bushels to the acre, according to the skill of the cultivator
*and the freedom of the crop from its usual casualties.
It is well known that its most formidable enemy is the
maggot. So serious have become its depredations that in some
regions where the onion was once the staple crop, its cultiva-
tion has been nearly abandoned. No prevention has been
found, but the best chance for avoiding the evil seems to lie
in taking up new lands. The objection to this is that the first
crop is likely to be imperfect, having a large proportion of
scullions.
We would suggest as a remedy for this, and as enhancing the
chances of success, a thorough rolling of the ground both
before and after sowing, and if the last can be done by a hand
roller, so much the better, as the feet of teams are very apt to
press in a part of the seed too deeply, causing it to come up
unequally, and impeding cultivation.
We have thus endeavored, in as few words as possible, to
point out the best methods in the cultivation of this important
esculent. At present prices, it is certainly equal to the
tobacco crop in point of profit, and certainly exceeds it in that
of utility. We have almost a guarantee that it shall not
become a drug, in the fact, that as a winter vegetable it
cannot be raised in southern latitudes ; consequently it becomes
an article of export, and takes its place as one of our staple
productions.
196 BOARD OF AGRICULTURE.
CABBAGE.
Under the head of Brassicaceous plants, Burr, in his Field
and Garden Vegetables of America, enumerates Kale, Broccoli,
Brussels Sprouts, Cabbage, Cauliflower, Colewort, Portugal
Cabbage, Chinese Cabbage, Savoy, and Sea-Kale.
These are divided into numerous varieties, each possessing
the same general characteristics, and yet distinguished for their
habit of growth, their appearance, their flavor, or some other
quality peculiar to themselves. Of these we have selected the
cabbage as not only the most important of the brassica tribe,
but as next to the potato, perhaps, the most largely used of
any vegetable esculent in Massachusetts, or even in New Eng-
land. Especially has this been the case since the introduction
in so large proportion of the foreign element to our population.
Among the Irish, the Germans, and the French, at least the
Canadian French, in its season, and in one form or another, it
forms a staple article of consumption. And there is good
reason for this, since the cabbage is one of the most nutritious
vegetables grown, containing, according to Johnston, when
deprived of its water, about thirty-five per cent, of tissue-form-
ing compounds, such as albumen, &c., and forty-six per cent, of
starch and sugar, while the potato contains only nine per cent.
of the former, though it is richer in starch than the cabbage.
It is a curious fact, affording a good illustration of that instinct
by which man, in his natural and simple state, lays hold of
those productions the nearest allied to his wants which his
circumstances will allow, in that, being unable to procure in
their native country a free supply of meats, these hard-working
people should have substituted for it two vegetables the best
calculated to sujjply the waste of muscle tissue, occasioned by
their daily toil.
We have no means of ascertaining its comparative value
among the productions of the State, or the part that it plays in
the support of its population ; but if there were any statistics,
as there should be, by which these points could be proved,
probably its importance would be a matter for surprise to the
superficial observer. Its great use for culinary purposes, how-
ever, is not confined to New England, or to this country even.
Dr. Unger, whom I have already quoted, says : " No kitchen-
garden in Europe is without it, and it is distributed over the
SECRETARY'S REPORT. 197
greater part of Asia, and, in fact, of the entire world. The
original plant, undoubtedly, occurs wild at the present day on
the chalk rocks of the sea province of England, and on the coast
of Denmark, and North- Western France ; and it is a question
whether this marine plant did not at one time have a much
wider distribution when the climatic peculiarities of Europe
were different from what they are now." He says further on,
" It is very remarkable that the European and Asiatic names
used for different species of the cabbage, may all be referred to
four roots — to the Celto-Sclavonic root, Cap, which means head ;
Brassica of Pliny, is derived from the Celtic, Bresic, (cabl)agc.)
" The Celto-Germanico-Greek root Caul, whence Kale, <tc.
Finally, the Greco-Germanic root Cramb, which passes into
into Krumb of the Arabian, and probably into the German
Kraut, which originally indicated the cabbage plant, but subse-
quently became a generic name." These facts are interesting,
chiefly as showing the wider distribution and use of the plant,
and are rather curious than useful.
But its value is not limited to the various culinary purposes
to which it is so well adapted. As a forage crop it is hardly less
important. Wherever a system of soiling is pursued it should
come in for a supply of the stock, or, at least, a principal share
for at least two or three months in the year. Coming, as it
does, immediately after the autumn frosts, when green corn is no
longer to be had, it offers the very best supply of green feed
until the first of December, and, by a little care, even to the
middle of that month or the first of January. And, although
it may not be practised to its full extent, it is well worth while for
every farmer to have his half acre or acre of cabbages, to keep
up the flow of milk when the pastures begin to fail. We speak
from abundant experience in this matter. This very season, a
cow that had been running in a pasture and making but about
four pounds of butter per week, was taken into the stable and
fed with forty pounds of cabbage a day, with what hay she
wanted, which was but little. Her flow of milk immediately
increased so that it produced six or seven pounds a week. It
is thought by some that cabbages, like turnips, produce an
unpleasant taste in the milk and butter. It is believed that
this is a mistake. Certainly it has not been the case in our
experience. Only a few weeks since, we subjected to the taste
198
BOARD OF AGRICULTURE.
of a connoisseur an article of butter made in this way, compar-
ing it with another made from well kept cows, but without the
cabbage, and he was unable to detect any difference between the
two. If any one has acquired a prejudice of this kind, it has
probably arisen from the fact that the stumps and decayed
leaves have been carelessly fed out with the other parts. If
this had been the case, it is no wonder that the milk produced
should have an unpleasant taste. The cow, when at liberty,
selects her food with sufficient care, but, if confined, in her
eagerness for anything green, she is not so particular, and needs
to have her food prepared for her clean and sweet.
The relative value of cabbages, compared with other vege-
table food, is shown by Professor Johnston, in his Agricultural
Chemistry, page 359, where he says : " In the case of the ox,
the daily waste or loss of muscle and tissue requires that he
should consume 20 to 24 ounces of gluten or albumen, which
will be supplied by any of the following weights of vegetable
food : —
Meadow hay, .
Clover hay, .
Oat straw,
Pea straw.
Potatoes,
Carrots, .
20 lbs.
16 lbs.
110 lbs.
12 lbs.
60 lbs.
70 lbs.
Turnips,
120 lbs
Cabbage, . .
70 lbs
Wheat, . .
11 lbs
Beans, or pease.
6 lbs
Oil cake,
4 lbs
From this table it appears that cabbage is worth as much,
pound for pound, as carrots, and nearly twice as much as
turnips. This is probably much more than the popular
estimates, but is, no doubt, as correct. Among market gar-
deners the value of the cabbage, and its proper cultivation, are
much better understood than with the mass of farmers through
the State. The great object with the latter has been to get their
necessary supply for the table ; and with their method, or
rather want of method, they have hardly succeeded in this. In
our boyish days, the first sign of gardening operations to be
seen in the spring, was a row of cabbage stumps, whose heads
had been consumed the preceding winter, looking more hope-
lessly forlorn and crestfallen, as they literally were, than any
line of school-boys enduring the wrath of the master for idle-
SECRETARY'S REPORT. 199
ness or mischief. These stumps, or rather the shoots that
sprang from them, in the absence of asparagus and other pot
herbs, which later improvements have introduced, were the
main reliance for greens, and what were not wanted for this
purpose, were allowed to go to seed for the next year's sowing.
Under treatment so utterly grasping and short-siglited, it is not
to be wondered at that this product of a generous cultivation
fast dwindled away to its original type, and refused to head.
Scarcely less surprising was it, that its cultivators, in their
ignorance of the laws of reproduction, should have supposed
they could remedy its defects by inverting its position, putting
the tops where nature intended the roots to grow. Another
bad practice connected with the cultivation of this vegetable
■has been confining it to old gardens, where it is liable to become
club-footed, and so worthless. A better method, however, is
beginning to prevail, and the production of field cabbages, .both
for the market, and as a forage crop, promises to become a
permanent and important interest.
The foregoing considerations have induced us to select this as
one of the vegetables deserving more particular treatment in
this report.
From the great diversity of climate in which the cabbage is
found, we rightly infer its hardihood and easy adaptation to dif-
ferent localities. As its home is on the seaboard, however, it is
natural to suppose that in such places it will be found in its
greatest perfection. And such appears to be the fact. It is
presumed that Essex County, particularly in the neighborhood
of Marblehead, can boast of a success in this line equal at least
to any in the State. We have heard of entire fields averaging
the most extraordinary produce of thirty pounds per head. But
it yields to good treatment on almost any soil ; though what is
called a strong soil is as good as any if not too cold and stiff.
The- preparation of the ground, where the best results are sought
for, should not be inferior to that for the tobacco crop. It
should include two ploughings, with harrowing enough to make
the ground light and fine. If it is at all stiff and unyielding,
fall ploughing, like that recommended in the cultivation of
onions, will be found very beneficial. One point of considerable
moment is to have the last ploughing immediately before the
plants are set. Especially is this necessary if the ground is at
200 BOARD OF AGRICULTURE.
all dry, as it much facilitates their establishment and subsequent
growth.
Our own experience leads to the conclusion that composted
manures are better than fresh, tending to produce plants of a
finer flavor, and less liable to club-foot, and this seems to be the
opinion of those who are considered good authority on the subject.
Some good cultivators make use of a compost of peat and night
soil, well incorporated together. Manuring in the hill is recom-
mended by some, but it is believed that the better way is to
enrich the ground enough at the first ploughing to secure a
good crop without being obliged to resort to this method.
Guano and superphosphate may be used as special fertilizers,
and also salt, at the rate of ten bushels to the acre.
Before proceeding further it will be necessary to dwell some-
what upon the production pf the plants' in their early stages, for
upov these depends the value of the crop.
The first point of course is good seed, and this means that it
must not only be sound but properly grown, otherwise tliere is
no certainty that the crop will head well. There are some
seedsmen who can be depended upon to produce a genuine
article, but there are too many that are not sufiiciently careful
in the matter. There is no need, however, that the cultivator
should be dependent on the seedsman for his supply, as" by a
little painstaking, he can raise his own. Burr's directions for
obtaining seed are, to select perfect heads and set them three
feet apart each way. As they grow, remove the side shoots and
encourage the main sprout, which will push up through the
centre of the head. Seed thus cultivated for a few successive
years will produce plants, ninety per cent, of which will yield
well-formed and good-sized cabbages.
There arc many varieties to clioose from, among the most
popular of which, perhaps, are the early York, said to have
been introduced to England from Flanders, more than a hundred
and fifty years ago, by a returned soldier, who settled in York-
shire as a seedsman, whence its name ; the Winningstadt, a
little later than the York, and a little larger, with a very solid
head; the Bergen, raised largely for the New York market;
the premium flat Dutch ; and the Stonemason, originated by
Mr. Stone, of Marblehead.
SECRETARY'S REPORT. 201
Having selected a suitable seed bed, which should be fine and
rich, prepare it well by ploughing, or digging and raking.
Sow the seed in drills about a foot apart, and roll or pat the
ground smoothly, so there shall be no lumps for insects to
secrete themselves under. The great care at this period will
be to have a bed rich enough to give the plants a good start, to
have moisture enough to induce an even and quick germina-
tion of the seed, and to ward off, if possible, the depredations
of the turnip fly. Their attacks are sometimes made before the
seed-leaves are fairly visible, and so rapid is their work that the
careless observer concludes that his seed has never sprouted.
There are various expedients resorted to for the purpose of
preventing this mischief, which will be considered more at
length in another place. Here it will be enough to say that
the writer succeeded the past season in saving his early turnips
and cabbages by applications of black pepper and flour sprinkled
in the drills while the dew was on, and just as soon as the
plants could be seen. The sowing of the seed, should be
made about the middle, or last of May. Another, made in the
first part of June, may be of service in resetting when the
first setting fails, as it sometimes does.
Sowing in drills has these advantages over broadcast sowing —
that the beds are more easily kept clean, and applications to
ward off the fly are more conveniently made. Besides this,
there is a saving of seed in drill-sowing, and the operation of
thinning, which should never be omitted where the plants stand
thickly, is accomplished to much better advantage when they
stand in rows than when scattered irregularly over the bed.
This thinning should not be done until the plants are well out
of the way of the fly, and they should be left an inch or two
apart in order to insure a stocky growth, with a strong stem
and abundance of roots. The plants taken up may be set out
in another bed, and will be every way as good, but a little later
than the others. Fine plants may sometimes be obtained by
mixing a small portion of cabbage-seed with that of carrots or
beets, where these are sown. In this way, standing singly,
they have plenty of room, and being transplanted before the
carrots have attained much size, they do no injury to 'that crop.
Some cultivators prepare the whole field, and plant a few seeds
to each hill, tliinning to one plant when large enough to be
26*
202 BOARD OF AGRICULTURE.
secure against casualties. This course has been recommended
in regard to the Stone-mason, and, perhaps, the Marblehead
Mammoth Drumhead. In common field culture, it seems open
to the objection of more care and labor in guarding against the
fly, and also, of at least, one extra cleaning of the whole field.
This has been our experience, though the objection may not
apply to more favored localities.
Transplanting into the field is usually deferred until a rainy
time, and when one does not have to wait too long, it is with-
out doubt the best way, though it is not essential. There is a
time beyond which it is not desirable to have plants in the seed-
bed, and rather than have this much extended, it is best to
resort to artificial watering. This time, for a winter crop, is
from the first to the middle of July. If the land is backward,
they may be set in the latter parts of June. With good man-
agement, a crop may be produced after an early crop of peas.
The cabbage-plant is tenacious of life, and in the absence of
rain, it is only necessary to prepare the ground in the usual
way, and after making a hole with the dibble, fill it with water,
and set the plant. Another watering within twenty-four hours
will be sufficient in ordinary times. This method has been
tried in rather a dry timCy and in the middle of a bright day,
with perfect success. We pass over the operation of setting as
a matter with which all are familiar. One point, however,
should be observed, which a novice might overlook, and that
is to set deep. If the crown of the plant, or inside leaves, are
kept free, there is little danger of overdoing in this way.
Having secured a good set or stocking of the ground, the
after-cultivation consists in keeping it clean and light. Perhaps
no vegetable pays better for a frequent stirring of the earth.
Stories of wonderful results are reported where this seems to
have been the chief means employed, and testimonies in its
favor are so abundant that there is no doubt of its great
in^portance.
If the crop has succeeded well, it will be fit to harvest by the
first of November, or soon after, though it may stand with
safety as long as the weather continues open. If there is
danger of the heads bursting previous to gathering, start the
roots to stop further growtli. Owing to their great bulk and
liability to decay, it is a somewhat difficult matter to preserve
SECRETARY'S REPORT. 203
them in large quantities in our common cellars. One way is
to hang them up by the roots; another is to trim off the outside
leaves and stump, and pack in barrels; still another is to set
them out in the cellar as thick as they can be made to stand.
We know of a cultivator who preserves a thousand or fifteen
hundred heads in this way in excellent condition.
When the object is to keep them in very large quantities
over winter, pits are dug of the size necessary to contain the
required number, say a foot or eighteen inches deep. Into
these the cabbages are packed as tightly as possible in an
upright position, and over the whole enough litter is thrown to
protect them from severe frost. A slight degree of frost does
not injure them if they are kept at an even temperature. In
addition to these methods, they are sometimes pitted by digging
a trench in a dry place, wide enough to hold the heads, and
about a foot deep. Into these trenches the cabbages are put
head downwards, and covered w'ith boards and earth, or litter.
Perhaps, in an essay of this kind, a short space should be
devoted to the Savoys, which, though coming under the head of
Brassicaceous plants, are regarded by Burr as a distinct family.
The Savoy takes its name from the country where it originated,
having been introduced from Savoy, more than a hundred and
fifty years ago. It is distinguished from the common cabbage
in appearance by its more open head, and by the wrinkled
appearance of the leaves, which are also of a lighter green than
most other kinds, while " in texture and flavor it is thought to
approach some of the broccolis or cauliflowers." It is very
hardy, but somewhat slow in growth. As a table vegetable it
seems worthy of 'more attention than it has hitherto received.
The cabbage, like most other cultivated crops, is subject to the
attacks of insects, which are sometimes very troublesome. The
first is the fly, or black bug, of which mention has already been
made. ' As prevention is better than cure, we give, in addition
to what has already been said on this point, two methods of
warding off its ravages. " Steep the seed in a pint of warm
water two hours, in which is infused an ounce of saltpetre ;
dry it, and add curriers' oil enough to wet the whole, after
which mix with plaster enough to separate it and fit it for sow-
ing." The other is the following : " After preparing the ground
in the usual way for the seed bed, cover it up thickly with
204 BOARD OF AGRICULTURE.
almost any kind of combustible rubbish. Burn this to ashes,
and rake the ground and sow the seed, and no insects will
attack it while the effects of the fire remain."*
Another troublesome insect is the black or cut-worm, which
does its mischief soon after transplanting. The only remedy
yet known is to hunt for the depredators (the morning is the
best time,) and kill them, resetting as often as is necessary.
Then there is the Aphis, or plant-louse, .which sometimes inflicts
serious injury. The writer knows of no remedy for this, but a
single incident which came within his observation the past
season, may, perhaps, be worth relating. A small patch had
been set, and, owing to the extreme drought, was with
difficidty kept alive by frequent watering until the rains came.
About the middle of August they were almost covered with lice,
and many of them promised but little. They were thoroughly
hoed at this time, the ground being stirred deeply. In one
week's time there was scarcely an insect to be seen, nor did
they make their appearance again. Of course no general
deduction can be made from an isolated fact of this kind. Pos-
sibly others may be familiar with a similar experience, and it is
only with the hope of drawing it out, if such is the case, that
this has been introduced.
The club-foot is a disease causing, or showing it'self in an
enlargement of the roots. If it appears in the early stages of
growth it is very apt to prove a fatal injury. It is most common
in old gardens, or where the cabbage has been cultivated before.
The remedy is to plant on a fresh piece of ground every year.
Notwithstanding these drawbacks it is believed that this crop is
one of the surest and most profitable that can be grown. It
also has this advantage, that if it is difficult of sale at any time,
the home market is sure and fairly remunerating.
The depredations of the cut-worm may be in part obviated by
late setting, say from the tenth to the fifteenth of July. Preven-
tion of the striped bug : insert a stick, an inch square on the top,
in the centre of the hill, the top of the stick to be left four to six
inches from the surface. Open the hill, spread a newspaper
over, and cover the edges with earth. The stick keeps the paper
from the plants, and the paper shuts off the bugs.
* Gardener's Assistant.
SECRETARY'S REPORT. 205
THE SQUASH.
The introduction and use of the winter squash is of compar-
atively recent date. Its origin is involved in obscurity ; but
from the fact that ancient writings contain no allusions to it,
and that older European authors are equally silent in regard to
it, it is reasonable to suppose that like the potato it is a gift to
civilization from the New World. Its original home is supposed
to be somewhere within the American tropics, whence it has
spread over a large part of this country and Europe. As a table
vegetable it takes rank with the onion and the turnip, while for
pastry purposes it is perhaps second only to the apple. It must
be confessed, however, that it is not a great favorite with the
masses, owing, perhaps, to its expensiveness and the care neces-
sary in its preparation for the table. With those, however,
whose tastes and means require a variety of dishes, the squash,
from its delicate flavor and fine appearance, will always be
regarded as a necessity. These considerations will make its
cultivation by market gardeners in certain localities a matter of
considerable importance.
The change which has taken place within seventy-five years
in regard to the use of this and some other vegetables, is quite
remarkable. In the last century, tjie pumpkin was principally
used for all those purposes for which the squash is now
considered indispensable. Even later, and within the memory
of comparatively young people. New England was famous
for its pumpkin pies, while those made from squashes were
comparatively unknown.
At length the crooknecks were introduced, and became popu-
lar ; and these in turn, have been, in good part, superseded by
the improved varieties. There is frequently considerable differ-
ence in texture, flavor, &c., in specimens of the same variety,
and we have no knowledge of any method by which they can
be produced of a uniformly first rate quality. In this particular,
■approximation only has hitherto been attainable.
The varieties are numerous and too well known to need any
description here.
They are in name the Crooknecks — Canada and Large — the
Autumnal Marrow, the Hubbard, and the Turban. This last,
though perhaps not so well known as the others, has great
merit, and promises to become a favorite. One of its peculiar
206 BOARD OF AGRICULTURE.
qualities is its solidity, which, the squash being an article of
great bulk, is an item of considerable importance in winter
preservation. It is a curious fact that two of the kinds men-
tioned above, the crookneck and the autumnal marrow, are
supposed to have been introduced by the Indians.
Champlain found the bell-shaped species, from which came
the crookneck, among the Northern Indians in 1605. And
Mr. John M. Ives, of Salem, who introduced the autumnal
marrow to public notice, says, in a letter to Mr. Burr, giving an
account of its origin, that he received the first seeds from a
friend of his in Northampton in 1831, and that he was after-
wards informed by this gentleman, " that the seeds came
originally from Buffalo, N. Y., where they were supposed to
have been introduced by a tribe of Indians, who were accus-
tomed to visit that city in the spring of the year." The squash
thrives well on any rich warm soil, though newly cleared or
broken sward-land is said to be the best for it. Being a native
of a tropical climate, it is sensitive to cold, and should not be
planted until the ground is warm enough to insure germina-
tion. The hills should be made from six to eight feet, apart,
and a dozen or fifteen seeds planted to the hill. They should
be prepared by digging hoicks eighteen inches in diameter, and
one foot deep, which should be nearly filled with well-rotted
manure. Over this shovild be drawn a little earth, on which
the seeds may be dropped, and covered to the depth of an inch.
If the soil should be stiff and unyielding, it is an excellent
practice to cover with very light sandy loam, or even with sand
alone, if care is taken not to let the surface get too dry. The
object is to have a loose surface for the seeds to push through
when they germinate. When clayey soils become packed, as
they sometimes do after a hard rain, it requires considerable
force to break the crust, sometimes more than the germinating
power possesses, in which case the plant is crippled, or even
crushed from the beginning. We have sometimes seen in such
cases, the ground broken for the distance of several inches in
diameter, and raised to an angle of forty-five degrees, to make
room for the shoot. It may be remarked here in passing,
that it greatly facilitates the coming up of all flat-shaped seeds,
those which literally come up, to plant them in a vertical
position, and cover loosely. So necessary is this, that in some
SECRETARY'S REPORT. 207
cases, in planting the Lima Bean, for instance, the best way is
said to be to lay them on the top of the ground, which probably
means to give them the lightest covering possible to secure
sprouting. A strong compost made of night soil and common
earth, is a valuable dressing, causing a rapid and luxuriant
development of the seed-leaves, thereby lessening the chances
of injury from insects, while the manure itself is said to have
the effect of driving them away. The critical time for the
squash is just at this period. Its enemies are the striped and
the so called squash bug. A pretty effectual way of destroying
the latter, and to some extent the former, is to lay a broad
shingle by the side of each hill as soon as the plants are up.
The bugs seek the under side of the shingle for shelter in the
night, and are easily killed early in the morning. From the
fact that tlie striped bug commits its depredations on the under
side of the leaf, it is difficult to reach it. Soot, lime, elder
leaves, ashes, plaster, charcoal-dust, &c., are recommended.
We have seen, within the past year, a pyramid-shaped net,
with a stake at each corner for fastening* it into the ground,
which miust be a very good protection, and would not be
expensive for ordinary garden purposes.
If the crop escapes injury from insects, its growth is rapid.
The plants should be thinned down to three or four to the hill,
and the ground kept clean by frequent stirring, until the vines
cover the surface.
Before the frost comes, the squashes should be picked and
removed to some cool dry place. Tliey should be handled witli
care, and should not be laid in large piles, as every bruise
injures their keeping qualities.
They are best preserved in the winter in a dry atmosphere,
with a temperature uniform, and but little above the freezing-
point. Large cultivators are in the practice of fitting up
buildings for this particular purpose, where the squashes are
arranged on shelves, so they can be easily examined, and
where, of course, the temperature is regulated by artificial
heat.
In our enumeration of varieties, not only of the squash, but
of the onion and cabbage, we have purposely omitted, not only
the description but the names of a large number, choosing
rather to turn attention to a few well-known and standard
208 BOARD OF AGRICULTURE.
kinds than to occupy space and divide attention by allusions to
those which have but little intrinsic value to recommend them,
or which, if really as valuable, are not so much sought after as
those we have mentioned.
Some discussion followed the reading of the Essay, relating
chiefly to the modes of preparing bones for use as a fertilizer.
The Report was accepted.
The next subject, presented by the Committee on the
Management of Forest Trees, was the
CULTIVATION OF THE PITCH PINE ON THE SEA-COAST.
BY S. B. PHINNEY.
Thirty years ago the planting of the pitch pine commenced
upon the worn-out lands in Barnstable County, as a profitable
investment, and strips or bounds by the sea-side, especially on
the south and east shores of the Cape, to protect the lands
within, and to prevent the sand from blowing and forming
extensive dunes, like that in the centre of Wellfleet, and other
places upon the shores of Cape Cod.
Nineteen years ago, S. B. Phinney planted, near the village
of Barnstable, upon poor, worn-out land, ten acres with the
pitch pine seed, which has proved both successful and profitable.
A large portion of the trees upon this plantation will now mea-
sure in circumference from three to three and a half feet. The
method adopted in planting this lot was by ploughing shallow
furrows four feet apart, and dropping the seed about the same
distance between the furrows. Vacancies where seed did not
vegetate, were replanted the second year.
Amos Otis, Esq., of Yarmouth, is probably the largest culti-
vator of the pitch pine in this State, and has advanced as his
theory, the successful experiments which have been made in
Scotland, by planting wide borders of larches by the sea-shore,
showing that the land lost to cultivation, was more than com-
pensated by the increased fertility of the land within, and that
the wood and timber, was a net gain to the owner of the soil.
It is found that by the planting of the beaches on the coast
of France, with a variety of the pine, the sands had become
fixed, and lands formerly worthless had become valuable. Tiicse
views were then deemed visionary, but now, the planting
SECRETARY'S REPORT. 209
of the pitch pine is considered as safe and as profitable a crop
as can be raised on light, sandy soils. That which tiiirty years
ago was experimental and uncertain, is now considered safe and
profitable.
In the year 1832, Mr. Otis bought two acres of poor land,
and made thereon some experiments in planting forest trees.
He planted pitch pine, oak, chestnut, and balm of giload. Tliis
small experiment proved that a profit would be realized by
planting the pitch pine, and he accordingly bought from time to
time, about one hundred and fifty acres at an average cost of
one dollar and fifty cents per acre. He kept an account with
three several tracts, and knows the exact cost of each. But it
is not necessary to particularize, — those who are seeking
information on this subject want general results.
At first he ploughed th'e land into ridges, planting on the ridge
and in the bottom of the outside furrows. The seed planted on
the ridges did not germinate as well as that planted at the bot-
tom of the furrows. Afterwards he ploughed furrows, about
eight feet apart, and planted by hand, in the bottom of the fur-
rows. This was an expensive method, and is now discontinued ;
yet if a man has only a few acres to plant, it is a method to be
recommended, substituting a common planting machine or seed
dropper, to planting the seed by hand.
In 1839, he had a machine constructed to plough a shallow
furrow, and to drop and cover the seed at one operation. With
this machine, which cost less than five dollars, a man and a
horse could plant five acres in a day — thus reducing the cost of
planting to fifty cents the acre. Some improvements have since
been made in the construction of pine seed planters, and they
are now generally used.
The pine seed costs about one dollar per quart, cleaned and
ready for use. Half a pint, if evenly planted, is sufficient for
an acre ; but as there will necessarily be some loss, it is better
to use a pint. If the trees are too thick at first, they will die
out, and no material damage will ensue.
Insurance against fire is an element of cost which should not
be overlooked. A few years ago, woodland was considered the
safest of safe investments ; now, fires in the woods are of
frequent occurrence, rendering that species of property as
27*
210 BOARD OF AGRICULTURE.
hazardous as any on which policies are issued by insurance
companies.
It is estimated that if all the lands in Barnstable County,
planted to pitch pine between the years 1836 and 1849, were to
be offered and sold at auction, they would bring an average
price of more than fifteen dollars per acre. Several tracts
could not be bought for twice that sum. Small lots could be
selected, planted twenty-five years ago, in favorable locations,
where the present growth of wood is worth at the rate of thirty-
five or forty dollars per acre, the original cost of the land and
planting not exceeding five dollars per acre. Many thousand
acres have been planted in Barnstable County, and the pitch
pine is now considered as certain a crop as can be planted.
The days of experiment have passed.
Several years since, a large importation of Norway pine seed
was made at JSTantucket. Much of it was planted there, and
considerable quantities in other portions of Eastern Massachu-
setts, but it was not found to be adapted to the soil and climate.
It germinated well, but very many of the young plants were
killed by the drouth the first season, and from one cause and
another, nearly all that, was planted are now dead. In Nan-
tucket very fine groves of young Norway pines, planted from
the seed, are to be seen ; — but there the pitch pine is preferred.
The white pine succeeds better some eight or ten miles from the
sea-coast.
A variety of pine, the seed whereof was imported from France,
and thence called the French, has been tried. It is a beautiful
evergreen, and is said to be the kind which has been so success-
fully cultivated on the coast of France. A few that have been
planted on loose sand have grown tolerably well. If this variety
will grow on the beaches of our sea-coast, it would be well to
plant them as a screen to protect the lands within.
The conclusion at which all in Barnstable County have
arrived, is that the pitch pine is the most profitable forest tree
that can be cultivated. In other portions of the State, there are
probably other trees that could be more profitably cultivated.
The soil best adapted to the pitch pine is a yellow, sandy
loam, a soil containing so little clay that it will not bake or
crack. When the pitch pine grows naturally, loam or gravel
suitable for the repair of sandy roads is very seldom found. On
SECRETARY'S REPORT. 211
a loose, barren sand it will not grow without the surface of the
ground is covered with some material that will prevent the sand
from being moved by the winds. In places where the limbs of
pine trees have been thickly spread over loose sand, a fine
growth of pines often comes up from the seeds which drop from
the cones. The wood grown on such lands, however, will never
repay the labor of planting ; but there are other conditions
which make it advisable. Heavy loam and clay soils are better
adapted to other varieties of trees. The soil which is recom-
mended for planting the pitch pine, would be a sandy soil, worn
out l)y repeated crops of corn and rye.
The farmer can judge whether or not he has soil adapted to
the profitable cultivation of the pitch pine. If he has, his next
object is to procure good seed. Some botanists; called learned,
state that it requires two years for the pitch pine to mature its
seeds. This is a mistake. The proper season for gathering the
cones, is the last of October and the beginning of November,
before the burs of the cones arc opened by severe frosts. Some
years seed is very abundant; in others very little can be procured.
Select the cones of the growth of the current year, not those of
two years, as the learned botanists sat/, and spread them thinly
on a tight chamber or garret floor, and let them remain till
spring, when wanted for planting. It is well, however, to turn
them over occasionally in the winter. If the room is well
lighted, and has a southern aspect, much of the seed will drop
out. The cones that do not open can be put in pans and placed
in a slightly warm oven, or can be spread singly in the sun. In
either case the cones will soon open, and the seed can be knocked
out. In putting them in an oven, or by the side of a stove,
care must be taken not to expose them to a strong heat, wliich
destroys the vitality of the seeds. After it is separated from
the cones, the wings must be rubbed off, and the seed cleaned
by sifting and winnowing. A bushel of cones will ordinarily
yield a quart of clean seed, though double of that quantity is
sometimes obtained.
Last year cones were very abundant,* and were sold at the low
price of fifty cents a barrel. Usually the cost of procuring
tlicm is about seventy-five cents a bushel. It is better and
more economical for a man to buy the cones than the cleaned
212 BOARD OF AGRICULTURE.
seed, because it is difficult to distinguish that which has been
injured by over-heating, from that which has not.
If a farmer has a large tract to plant, it would be advisable
for him to procure a seed-planter, which will cost about five
dollars. If he has only a few acres, a cheap method is to furrow
the ground one way, in rows from six to eight feet apart, and
drop the seed in the bottom of the furrows with a common seed-
planter, covering it about half an inch deep.
There is another way to which the pitch pine can be applied,
to which it is well to call attention. As a border for the
protection of cultivated fields, especially gardens, it is well
adapted. The dry south-west winds which prevail in some sec-
tions of the State, in the spring and summer, are more injurious
to vegetation than other winds. Many kinds of fruit trees, that
are unprotected on the south-west, soon become unfruitful and
perish. A border two rods in width, thickly planted on the
south and west of a garden, will add much to its fertility.
Trees and shrubs that would not grow at all, will, thus
protected, flourish and bear abundantly.
Those who have gardens near the sea-shore will find it greatly
to their advantage to plant, as a screen, a belt of forest trees
between the sea-shore and their gardens. Such screens, besides
the advantage they are to the growing crop, will add to the fer-
tility of the soil by preventing the finest and richest portions from
being blown away, and by arresting the particles blown from
the neighboring fields. For the same reason, the soil near old
ranges of stone wall is better than at a distance.
In the discussion that followed the reading of the Essay, Dr.
Hartwell, of Southbridge, stated that the white pine would grow
twice as fast as the yellow pine, and, in fact, nearly four cords
of white pine could be grown in the same time, and on the same
land as one cord of yellow pine, but the pitch pine might be
more profitable on the poor soils of Barnstable County.
Dr. Loring called attention to the fact that on the stronger
soils of Essex County, the plan described by Mr. Phinney, of
planting in furrows, had not succeeded in the planting of oaks,
and other forest trees. The water would often stand in the
furrow, and the freezing and thawing of winter would destroy
the young plants, while seeds which had fallen by accident on
SECRETARY'S REPORT. 213
the top of the furrows, had grown well. This might not he the
case on a very light and porous soil, where the water would not
stand. The Norway pine would not endure the exposure to
the winds near the sea-shore.
Prof. Agassiz, of Cambridge, said that we should never forget
one fundamental law of the natural distribution of forest trees,
and in our attempts to convey information upon such subjects,
the different elements which affect the growth of species, as
elevation above the sea-level, distance from the sea-coast, etc.,
should be considered. We want most careful investigations in
regard to the geographical distribution and range of plants in
this country, and the Board could do much to encourage such
investigations.
Mr. Phinney said that where corn will grow well, tlie pitch
pine will not always succeed. The seed will be more likely to
fail. It is in a light, sandy, and exhausted soil that it seemed
to do best.
Mr. Taft, of Upton, mentioned, as an interesting case of the
profitable natural growth of wood, that on a piece of woodland
within his knowledge, where the wood was cut off nearly thirty
years ago, and the land sold for seven dollars and a half an
acre, and allowed again to grow, the wood alone had been
recently sold for sixty-five dollars an acre, cutting about forty
cords, thus paying the original price of the land with compound
interest at six per cent, for the period of its growth, and seven
hundred dollars in addition, the land being left besides.
The Report was accepted and ordered to be printed.
The Committee to whom the subject had been referred, then
presented a Report
ON FARM BUILDINGS.
BY C. O. PERKINS.
The degree of civilization, the wealth, and the general taste
and refinement of a community, or of individuals, may be
judged, with great accuracy, by a glance at the surroundings
of their home. From the Indian, living in his wigwam ; the
Grecnlander, living in his hut of ice ; the wandering Arab,
taking his tent with him, or the cottage of the domestic peasant
of the nobility-owned soil of- Europe, (so domestic, that his
brutes are tenants of the same roof,) we may pass through all
214 BOARD OF AGRICULTURE.
the various stages of civilization to the clean, comfortable,
beautiful, convenient and best arranged premises of the New
England farmer, with a variation according to means, location,
and taste, which is only equalled by the natural scenery which
surrounds him, but evincing, in the aggregate, the greatest
amount of thrift and refinement, and, withal, so« beautifully
dotted with school-houses and church-spires, indicating universal
education and the Christian religion.
THE NEW ENGLAND FARMHOUSE.
Tastefully kept, carefully designed with reference to conve-
nient location, convenience of internal arrangement, beauty of
form and proportion, draped, perhaps, in tasteful simplicity, with
festoons of living vines, and with surrounding ornaments, of
flowers, and of shade and fruit-trees ; occupied by the intelli-
gent and warm-hearted farmer, with his neat, tasty, frugal,
industrious and affectionate housewife, their cares and labors
being lessened by the aid of sons bearing the image of the
mother, and by daughters in the likeness of the father, and
who, through the diligent training of the experienced parents,
are the aspiring candidates to like positions, — all these, and
even more may be seen in the rural portions of every New
England town, and in no " place on earth do we find nearer
approaches to the Garden of Eden, or a nobler or purer type
of that being who was made in the image of God.
THE FOUNDATION
of all buildings should be effectively permanent. We have seen
cellar walls and underpinnings that have stood one hundred
years without change or variation ; and again we have seen
buildings ruined from want of proper foundation before they
had stood one- tenth of that time. We sometimes see the
upright part of a house with cellar underneath and permanent
foundation, with a wing attached without cellar or sufficiently
permanent foundation, and every winter the frost breaks the
joinings of the two, making periodical work for the mechanic
and inconvenience for the occupants.
Let all foundations for buildings extend below the frost and
be substantially made of enduring material. Neither clay,
muck, nor loam should be allowed in contact with foundation
SECRETAEY'S REPORT. 215
walls, but small stones, gravel, and coarse sand, not being reten-
tive of moisture, are suitable banking material. The surface of
the ground around all buildings should be so graded as to turn
all water from foundation walls.
ARCHITECTURE.
The architectural construction of farm buildings should vary
with the location, with the purposes to be attained, with the
amount of capital to be employed, whether to be built with ref-
erence to economy or ornament, appearance or usefulness ; and
the style of finish may be varied with the taste of the proprietor,
whether the plain Tuscan or the more masculine and grand
Doric, the lofty-pinnacled Gothic, the light and elegant Ionic, the
delicately-beautiful Corinthian, or the Composite, being the
combination of the last two orders. But convenience and per-
manent durability should never be lost sight of, and all increase
of corners, projections, or indentations will be attended with a
corresponding increase of expense and complication of repairs.
No one plan or order is desirable for all ; besides, were all build-
ings from one pattern, the sameness would become monotonous
and the eye would not find that pleasant relief which it now
enjoys.
GENERAL PRINCIPLES
•with view to economy. The nearer square any building the
greater the solid contents in proportion to the external surface.
The roof being the most exposed and the most subject to decay,
should cover the greatest amount of space which may be effected
by increased height of the building, and as before expressed,
by bringing the building nearest to a square form. Roofs with
view to economy should not be less than the Roman, or two-
thirds pitch, and perhaps the Gothic, or a pitch equal to the
width may be still more economical. Flat roqfs should be
avoided. The penetration of driving storms is greater upon
them. Any slight defect is more easily penetrated by water.
The snow in winter forms a lodgment upon flat roofs, the weight
endangering the building. Roofs should project from two to
three feet over and beyond the walls of buildings, protecting
the walls from storms and the hot sun. Slate, tin, and shingles,
each have their advocates. Slate may be the most desirable in
216 BOARD OF AGRICULTURE.
many locations. Good rived shaved pine shingles make a good
roof, that without paint will last forty years, and with paint,
may last twice tliat time. Good rived hemlock shaved sliingles
will last thirty years. Sawed or machine-cut shingles are to be
avoided, as some of them being cut across the grain, soon water-
soak and decay, spoiling the roof. Good sound hemlock, free
from knots and shakes, straight-grained, sawed one-half inch
thick, and seven to ten inches wide, cut twenty-six inches long,
and laid one foot to the weather, the first course being cut four-
teen inches long, makes a very good roof — will .last some thirty
years, and is much better than sawed or machine-cut shingles,
and many times may be profitably used on barn buildings. If
paint is used on the roof, it should be of a light color, as dark
colors draw the heat and crack and warp the shingles. A tin
roof gives the coolest attic.
The farm-house should be designed with direct reference to
health, comfort and convenience. A two-story house is more
desirable than less. It has a generous look of comfort, which a
lower building, however tastily set off can never represent. It
gives cool and comfortable chambers in summer, and attic room
besides, which always comes in play. The attic floor should
never be less than two feet below the eaves, giving access to the
whole room. The second story should be at least eight feet in
the clear, and the lower floor nine, and each may be as much
more as the occupant desires. The cellar should clear at least
eight feet, and be so arranged as to have a permanently dry
bottom ; by filling around the walls of the building, at the ends
of the joining at each floor, the rats may be cut off from any
incursions. If possible, give the room to be daily occupied by
the family the front and sunny side of the house, as the parlors
are, most of the time, to be kept dark. The dark side of the
house is best adapted to their use. The sun is nearly as necessary
to the life and health of mankind as to vegetation. The kitchen
should be of easy access to water, to the wood, to the cellar and to
the pantry ; should be of liberal size with large sink. (Cast iron
is best. If it endangers dishes, put a wide board on the bottom.)
Stairs should be wide, with easy pitch and broad tread. The
wood-house and the privy should be connected with the house,
and it is unnecessary they should be projections. It is desirable
that chimneys have their foundations from the bottom of the
SECRETARY'S REPORT. 217
cellar, and with proper arrangements in the chimneys the neces-
sity of ash and smoke-houses may be avoided. The house that
embraces the most conveniences, and covers the most wants
under one roof, with the least ells, wings, nooks, corners, and
projections, with a reasonable reference to taste and due propor-
tions, may be said to be the most economical, and will prove
most satisfactory in process of time.
WATER.
There is scarcely a set of farm-buildings in New England that
cannot be economically furnished with constant running water.
The make of the land is admirably adapted to that purpose, and
any necessary outlay in that direction will well pay. Water can
now be brought -nearly as well up-hill as down. We have in
our mind one of Douglas's hydraulic rams that has been in
constant operation for eighteen years, affording an abundant
supply of water for a large family and large stock of cattle ;
supplying house, horse-barn, cattle and sheep. The water is
brought sixty rods, with a rise of forty feet, and the yearly
expense has not exceeded twelve dollars, including interest on
the first investment ; whereas, formerly, the water for especial
family use was drawn from a well thirty feet deep ; the washing
water from a cistern, the horses watered at a pump, the cattle
driven sixty rods in the highway, (manured by tlieir droppings,)
and the sheep ate snow.
INCONVENIENT EXPENSE.
We sometimes see no legs than some ten or a dozen buildings
and appurtenances scattered about to make up a complete farm
set. First, a house, with a well located off across the road some-
where, and an inconvenient wood-shed, with little or no good
wood ; then an asli-house or a smoke-house ; next a hog-pen
and poultry-house, then a granary, then wagon-house, and per-
haps horse-barn, then one or two cattle-barns, and then a sheep-
barn. And the farmer has most of these buildings to visit to
accomplish his routine of stock tending. And perhaps you
will see in connection a small front yard, a side yard or
drive-way, another back yard ; and, off at one side, a garden,
perhaps picketed to keep the fowls out. The repairs of fencing,
roofing, silling, &c., are constant, and never done.
28*
218 BOARD OF AGRICULTURE.
BARNS.
Economy and convenience suggest one large, commodious
barn, that may answer for cattle, horses, sheep, swine, granary,
wagon-house, &c. Let the farmer shape the size of his barn to
his farm, and embrace all under one roof. Barns should have
a basement, and two stories above the basement will afford the
most room with the least expense. The basement should clear
nine feet, and the story above the basement ten feet, and the
story above not less than twelve feet, making twenty-two feet
above the basement. This, with a not less than two-thirds
pitch roof, will afford room, which the thrifty farmer will never
regret. The basement may be appropriated to manure, swine,
sheep, young cattle, poultry, and storage for various large
farming tools. The first floor above, the -basement may be
appropriated to horses and cattle on one side the main floor,
and to hay, granary, and carriage-house on the other side;
the second floor to hay, granary, store-room, &c.
A barn 46X46, with basement nine feet in the clear, posts
above the basement twenty-two feet, making the first floor ten
feet, and the second twelve feet clear, will stow about thirty-
four tons of hay below the eaves, and as much more above.
The plan may be shortened or lengthened according to the
wants of the farm. If shortened, the roof may run the other
way, but the floors should be unchanged. The advantages of
this barn are, that it gives the convenient width, embraces all
barn wants in a compact and convenient form, and, it is
believed, with the least expense.
It brings the swine where they can intermix their own and
the horse and cattle manure ; also the sheep manure may be
thrown therewith. This plan contemplates taking the advan-
tage of land naturally adapted. The surface of the ground
may come to the top of the basement on three sides — the first
floor having doors at both ends, and the second floor having an
abutment, and bridge and doors at one end only. One of the
12X20 spaces on -second floor, devoted to hay, may be used for
a corn-house to good advantage, if desirable. The manure can
be removed through the open space of basement, and manure-
making material may be added through apertures on the back
side. The large floors will serve, at certain seasons, for addi-
tional storage. There may be a portion cut from back side of
SECRETARY'S REPORT. 219
granary and stairway, on first floor, for tool-shop. The cattle
should stand on plank laid upon the main floor and running
back from the manger four to six feet, according to the length
of the animals. The plank should extend up to the manger,
but not under, that when worn or decayed they may be easily
removed. Stanchions are the most convenient way of fastening
cattle, and sufficiently comfortable. Behind the cattle there
should be a gutter and movable plank for removing the
. manure. Horses should also stand upon plank laid upon the
main floor ; six feet from the manger back is a suitable length.
' The floors should pitch back about one inch in six feet, and
the same with cattle. Feeding mangers for horses should be
raised at the bottom only about six inches. A manger two feet
wide and deep, and three feet long, is just the thing. Horses
never get strained in the withers or contract the heaves by
feeding from low mangers. High mangers give the dust a
chance to enter the horse's nostrils, endangering the heaves*;
besides it is not the way nature designed horses to feed, and
high feeding mangers are always attended with danger to the
wind, forward limbs and back of the horse. A perpendicular
plank, running up at each side from the front of the manger,
will prevent horses from throwing out their feed.
Large barn doors should be hung with pulleys from the top,
running on the outside of the barn. It is not so much matter
with smaller doors, as they are not so easily affected by the
wind. The arrangements of cross-beams about the hay-bays
should be constructed with reference to the use of the horse-
, pitchfork, as it is a great labor-saving implement, and can be
used by boys at a time when men's help can scarcely be
obtained. The twenty foot bay, twenty-two feet deep, may be
filled by laying three ropes across the hay rigging before it is
loaded, and by attaching one end of the ropes, when the load is
to be unloaded, to the floor-girth ; and with a set of pulleys
suspended from the rafter and attached to the other end of the
ropes and the use of a horse, the whole load may be removed at
once.
So many authors have written upon country residences, and
cottage and farm-houses, and have furnished plans, that it would
seem that very little could be added by those who have not
made the subject their professional study. But upon barn
220 BOARD OF AGRICULTURE.
buildings there has been less written, leaving a greater want
with the public, which is an excuse for having gone into the
matter in more detail.
CONCLUSION.
Neither for looks nor convenience is it desn-able that the
farmer should surround his premises with a multiplicity of
small buildings. With a farm-house and barn built with refer-
ence to covering all wants, the necessity for a multiplicity of ^
small buildings, small yards and small lots, is obviated. The
amount of mechanical appliances to increase man's laboring pow-
ers has greatly increased within a few years, and is still increas-
ing ; and to facilitate their use on the farm, it is desirable to do
away with small lots and short corners. The one indicates
contraction of thought and action, and the other a generous
expansion of both.
A discussion followed upon some of the points suggested in
the Essay, and many interesting facts and statements were
elicited.
Mr. Homer said that it was better that horse-stalls should be
so arranged that the pitch should be towards the manger. The
horse should stand so as to bring the most of his weight upon
his fore legs.
Mr. TiDD said that pains should be taken in the cow-stalls
not to get the platform too long. The trouble of taking care of
a stock of cattle would be increased by having a platform longer
than was needed.
Mr. Thompson had constructed many barns in which many of
these points had been carefully considered. As to the length
of the platform for cows, it should be from four feet to four feet
six inches, for cows of ordinary size.
Mr. Lathrop said that the platform for oxen should be six
feet long. He would never use stanchions, as he did not
consider them well adapted to secure the ease and comfort of
stock,
Mr. Moore stated that the dairy farmers of Middlesex County
were changing their mode of tying from chains to stanchions,
•on account of the greater cleanliness of the animals in them.
Customers were apt to find the milk of cows tied so as to be
SECRETARY'S REPORT. 221
able to move back with the freedom which the tying with chains
gives, rather objectionable.
The Report was accepted. The next Report presented was
ON FRUIT CULTURE.
BY JOHK B. MOORE.
The Commiftee on Fruit intended to continue the subject of
nomenclature, which was so ably commenced under the direc-
tion of the former chairman of this Committee, but from the
very small crop and unusually poor specimens of fruit the past
season, have thought it judicious to omit the continuation of the
subject the present year ; and instead thereof will offer a few
thoughts upon the present conditions of the apple-orchard and
its future crops of fruit ; and also upon the pear, peach, and
cherry.
It is well known to the farmers and fruit-growers in the
vicinity of Boston, that it is much more dif3ficult to produce good
applet now than formerly, and that the relative proportion of
good or number one apples is much smaller at the present time
than ten or fifteen years ago.
This result is mainly owing to the very great increase of
insects destructive both to the fruit and foliage of the trees ; the
two most destructive to the fruit are the curculio and the cod-
ling-worm. These worms, we think, could be checked to some
extent by picking up all the fruit falling from the trees every
few days, and submiting them to some process that would
destroy the larvae of all insects therein.
The former practice, before thg excitement upon the temper-
ance question, was to pick all the little apples, even not much
larger than wahiuts, and grind them up for cider. Of course,
insects subject to that operation would be destroyed, and the
quantity of cider increased, if not improved ; the flavor of it,
however, if made from such apples as we have had the last sea-
son, would be decidedly meaty ; and some of the drinkers of it,
in these days of petroleum, might be excused if they should
conclude that they had " struck i7e."
Now, this gathering of the immature fruit quite often, and
grinding it up for the purpose of making cider, or submitting it
to any operation that will cause the destruction of the insects
contained therein, will of course make the next crop of fruit
222 BOARD OF AGRICULTURE,
average better, as there will be a less number of insects to prey
upon it than if this had not been done.
These small apples, which drop from the trees first, have
nearly all been punctured by the curculio, many of them per-
haps a dozen times ; and there are really more worms in one
quart of those small apples than in a barrel of fruit which has
attained its full size : hence the importance of picking up the
fruit when quite small, and destroying the larvae before they
have left it for the ground.
The principal insects which attack the foliage of the trees are
the canker-worm and the common caterpillar. The former has
destroyed most of the fruit in the immediate vicinity of Boston
for many years ; and there has been quite a number of plans tt>
check or stop the ravages of this very destructive insect, none
of whicli appear to be entirely successful.
The common caterpillar can be kept under by constant vigi-
lance. The best and easiest way of destroying a large portion
of them is by picking off the eggs, which can now easily be
found on the small twigs, and burning them. Whatever is
missed should be exterminated immediately after hatching, as
then it is much less trouble than it would be if they had attained
their full size.
These, although they are not the only insects which attack
the foliage, yet they are the ones that cause the most trouble
and destruction to the crop ; and these insects, together with
the borer, which can be more easily managed, are now the prin-
cipal drawbacks which the orchardist has to contend with, which,
with the increased price of l^yid near large cities, renders it
doubtful if it would be profitable to plant out apple-orchards in
their immediate vicinities, or where land suitable for orcharding
is worth one hundred and fifty dollars per acre, — land of that
value and in such locations paying better with some other crop.
And the fact that owners of apple-orchards near Boston, the
trees of which are now just in their prime, are having them dug
up, and the ground cleared entirely of trees, for the purpose of
growing some other crop on the land rather than apples, goes to
prove that it is either unprofitable to raise apples, or more
profitable to grow some other crop on land so valuable.
And therefore we cannot arrive at any other conclusion than
this: that the apple cannot be cultivated in the immediate vicinity
SECRETARY'S REPORT. 223
of our large cities, where the land upon which the orchard is
grown is worth one hundred and fifty dollars or more an acre,
profitably, but that it may be extended, with a reason a) )le pros-
pect of paying, at some little distance from such places, if the
owner is willing to give good cultivation, and to look sharp after
the insects.
And although the location may be more than fifty miles from
market, it should not prevent the owner from planting trees,
but should rather encourage him to do it, for these reasons :
first, there are less insects ; second, if near a railroad, the expense
of transportation will not be much, if any, more than it would
by horse-power, ten or fifteen miles, which is the usual method
of delivery near cities ; and then, perhaps, it is a crop that will
pay as well as any that distance from market, and can be
transported as easily and safely as any other.
We often hear the remark that our orchards are fast going to
decay. That is true in one sense, for after trees have borne
their crops for many years, and have passed their maturity, and
in their old age have lost their vigor and fruitfulness, they, like
all other products with which this earth is stocked, either animal
or vegetable, must travel that same down-hill road to decay ;
and we can hurry them along in that path by neglect, both in
cultivation and in the destruction of insects, or we can extend
their usefulness by an opposite course. Which method we shall
pursue is a question every orchardist must answer for himself.
The habit of deep ploughing in orchards, we think, is detri-
mental both to the longevity and health of the trees. Suppose
there are not more than eight or ten inches in depth of soil in an
orchard, (and that is as deep as the soil of most of our orchards,)
and after planting the trees the ground is annually ploughed
eight or ten inches deep. Of course all roots of the trees will
be destroyed as deep as the plough goes, and whatever roots are
left to the trees are in the hard and cold subsoil, driven there
against these repeated attempts to get into a more congenial
and nutritive soil, and contrary to the nature of the tree,
which, if left to its own instincts, will always spread its roots
near or within a few inches of the surface of the ground.
■ Will not deep ploughing, then, by forcing the roots of the
tree into a hard, wet, cold, and unnatural subsoil, produce dis-
ease and decay ? We think it will. And as cultivation and
224 BOARD OP AGRICULTURE.
stirring of the soil are necessary, let the orchard be ploughed
shallow, or mulched with leaves or cheap hay.
On almost every farm there are more or less acres of rough,
rocky land, unfavorable to the production of the various hoed
crops, or for mowing fields. This land is often the most suitable
for the apple-orchard, and should be appropriated for that pur-
pose, rather than the smooth and more level lands of the farm,
which are better adapted to the other crops.
Should not there be some moral or legal means applied to
prevent the extension, and to cause the destruction, of the com-
mon caterpillar ? The legislature of this State, by the sugges-
tion of the Board of Agriculture, very properly made a law
causing all dogs to be licensed, and all damage to sheep killed
by dogs to be paid for out of the fund accumulated from the
fees for the licenses. That is right. If a person has twenty-five
dollars' worth of sheep suddenly converted into mutton and
dog-meat by his neighbors' dogs, he gets his pay for it ; but if
he has a valuable orchard, in which he has spent time and
money to have all the caterpillars destroyed, and his lazy or
shiftless neighbor has an orchard near, the trees of which are
covered with caterpillars' nests, and by not being destroyed are
allowed to attain their perfect organization, and to fly over and
deposit their eggs on his trees, and thus do him a damage, by
causing him a large amount of extra work the next year to
exterminate them, he has no dog fund to go to, and gets
nothing for it. Should it be so ? We think not. Every per-
son's duty to his neighbors and to the public requires him at
least to extirpate, as far as he can, the insects on his own
trees ; and the future condition of the apple-crop, if the ravages
of the insects are not diminished in some way, must be seriously
Injured, both in quantity and quality.
The cultivation of the pear increases quite rapidly, particu-
larly in the gardens near our large towns ; and this fruit?
although much more plenty than a few years ago, still com-
mands a fair and remunerating price in our principal markets,
and they are not glutted with this fruit, as many have heretofore
thought they would be ; and there are now almost as many
bushels sent to market as there were single pears twenty years
ago. And it indicates that the consumption of this delicious
SECRETARY'S REPORT. 225
fruit is not now confined to the few, but that it is becoming
general and extensive throughout the community.
The peach and cherry seem to be fast leaving us, the former
from that insidious disease, the yellows ; the latter, either from
some injury to the trees from the winter, or from the ravages of
the black aphis, or from both, is fast going to destruction.
There does not appear to be any certain or efficient, remedies
for the complaints of either the peach or the cherry. The
extinction of either one would be quite a loss ; and we hope
that some remedy may be found that will save them, as wo now
have so few varieties that we cannot even afford to lose one of
them.
The Report was accepted.
Mr. Perkins moved to abolish the requirement of the Board
that grain and root crops should be weighed by competitors for
premiums offered by the county fairs.
■ The motion was specially assigned for Saturday, the 28th.
Saturday, Jan. 28th.
The Board met on Saturday according to adjournment. The
subject first under discussion was the motion of Mr. Perkins, of
the Berkshire Society, to discontinue the requirements on the
part of the Board, whereby the societies are compelled to cause
crops entered for premiums to be accurately weighed or
measured.
Tlie chief reason urged for the repeal of the requirement was
that it was a source of inconvenience and expense, and that the
result was, after all, unsatisfactory.
Mr. Moore, of the Middlesex Society produced a copy of the
reports of the Berkshire Society, as returned to the Board,
printed only in a newspaper form, and showed that they could
be of little use to the State. No detailed statements appeared
as to how crops were raised, no estimate, even, of the expenses,
no reliable data, which could serve for the instruction of
farmers in other parts of the Commonwealth, or even in the
immediate vicinity where they were grown. Such returns were
not what the State had a right to expect. They could add
nothing exact and valuable to our stock of knowledge on the
subject. They could serve uo good purpose.
29*
226 BOARD OF AGRICULTURE.
Dr. LoRiNG, of the Essex Society, said, as a member of the
committee which prepared the blanks to be used by the societies,
that the Board had tried to make the requirements as practi-
cable and as little burdensome as was consistent with the idea of
getting some value in return for the money which the State was
paying for the advancement of its agriculture. He proposed
some modifications in the blank which would meet any reason-
able objections which could be made to the present requirements.
Mr. Taft, of the Worcester South-East Society, advocated the
amendments, and said, in reply to the assertion' of Mr. Perkins,
that farmers would often deceive the committee, and swear to
statements which were not true ; that, as a general rule, farmers
were an honest class of men, and that if cases of deception and
perjury had occurred in Berkshire, or any other county, the
individuals by whom it is practised should be forever after
debarred from competing for premiums.
Messrs. Garfield, of the Housatonic Society, Grout, of the
Middlesex South, Lathrop, of Hadley, and Tidd, of the
"Worcester West Society participated in the debate, till it was
Voted, to refer the subject to a committee consisting of Messrs.
Perkins and Garfield, to prepare such a schedule of require-
ments as should, in their judgment, facilitate the action of
societies, and at the same time secure the object of the State in
offering its bounties, by eliciting accurate, trustworthy and
exact information in regard to the crops entered for premium,
and to report the sariie for the consideration of the Board.
This committee reported subsequently, but as the course
suggested was not thought to be calculated to secure the desired
end, it was not adopted.
The question- then recurred on Dr. Boring's amendments to
the blank to be furnished by the societies to competitors for
premiums.
Prof. Agassiz said there ought to be a more general under-,
standing as to the object of awarding premiums, that is, as to
whether they are designed simply to reward farmers for improve-
ments that may have been made, mere rewards of merit, in
other words, or to gather some facts and data of value to
agriculture. The latter ought to be the aim of the State, and
if it is, we cannot be too exacting and minute.
SECRETARY'S REPORT. 227
After some further discussion the amendments were adopted,
and the form completed as follows :
Agricultural Society.
Statement concerning a crop of
Raised by Mr.
In the town of 1865.
"What was the crop of 18G3 ?
What manure was used, and how much ?
"What was the crop of 1864 ?
"What manure was used, and how much ?
What is the nature of the soil ?
When, and how many times ploughed, and how deep ?
What other preparation for the seed ?
Cost of ploughing and other preparation ?
Amount of manure, in loads of thirty bushels, and how applied ?
Value of manure upon the- ground ?
When, and how planted, and the amount and kind of seed ? _
Cost of seed and planting ?
How cultivated, and how many times ?
Cost of cultivation, including weeding and thinning ?
Time and manner of harvestinjr ?
o
Cost of harvesting, including the storing and husking or threshing ?
Amount of straw, stover, or other product ?
REMARKS.
Signed by Competitor.
From actual measurement, I hereby certify that the land which the above
crop of covered, contained rods, and no more.
Acting Surveyor.
* hereby certify that appointed for that purpose by
the Committee on crop, appeared before me, and took oath
that be has ascertained the weight of the above crop, according to the regula-
tions of the State Board of Agriculture, on the day of
and that it was pounds.
Justice of the Peace.
In ascertaining the amount of crop, any vessel may be -used, and the weight
of its contents once, multiplied by the number of times it is filled by tlie crop.
The certificate shall state the weight of all crops only in a merchantable
state.
In measuring the land, any competent person may be employed, whether a
sworn surveyor or not.
228 BOARD OF AGRICULTURE.
In ascertaining the amount of a hay crop, entered for premium, the meas-
urement of the hay in the barn may be employed.
The Committee with whom' crops are entered for premium, may, at their
option, select such entries as are in their judgment entitled to the application
of the above regulations.
Rules of Measv/re, practised and adopted hy the State Board of Agriculture.
Wheat, Potatoes, Sugar Beets, Mangel Wurzel, Ruta-
Bagas, "White Beans, and Pease, . . . .60 lbs. to the bushel.
Corn, Rye, 66 " "
Oats, 32 " "
Barley, Buckwheat, 48 " "
Cracked Corn, Corn and Rye and other meal, except
Oat, and English Turnips, 50 " "
Parsnips, 45 " "
Carrots, 55 •' "
Onions, 52
(( (<
Dr. Hartwell, of Southbridge, then presented a paper upon
ADiPOCERE, as follows :
ADIPOCERE.
A soft, unctuous substance, of a light brown color, into which
the muscular fibres of dead bodies are converted, by long
immersion in water or spirits, or, by being buried in moist
places under peculiar circumstances.
This substance was first discovered by Fourcroy, in the bury-
ing-ground in the Church des Inouns, in Paris, in 1787, when
it was removed, among the masses of the bodies of the poor
there interred together.
In this place, about fifteen hundred bodies were thrown
together into the same pit, and being decomposed, were con-
verted into this substance. When this substance is subjected
to chemical analysis, a true ammoniacal soap is first yielded,
composed of ammonia, or concrete oil and water.
My attention was first called to this substance in the summer
of 1861.
One of my farm laborers was scraping the ground in my
livery barn cellar, when he uncovered a white substance,
which, upon examination, I found to be adipocere. It was
the remains of a hog which had been buried there many years.
The present tenant had occupied the barn for over ten years, but
had no knowledge of the burial of the animal. It might have
been there thirty years. It must have been there over ten years.
SECRETARY'S REPORT. 229
The bones of this hog were in a perfect state of preservation,
the hair also was not changed.
The quantity of adipocere was quite large, showing that the
whole soft parts of the body had been converted into this
substance.
The color of this substance was a perfect white.
The yellow tinge is produced by exposure to the air and
light.
The specimen which I show you is from one of two cows
which belonged to my neighbor, and were killed by eating green
clover in August, 1863. I permitted him to bury them in my
horse-manure heap, upon my farm, where they have laid to this
6th of December, 1864. The part of the animal which was
changed to adipocere was in contact with the ground in a kind
of pit, deeply covered with compact manure, which excluded
the air, and was constantly charged with water.
The carcase of a horse was buried in the same heap of
manure in April, 1864, in a higher and drier part of the heap.
Nothing remained to be seen of this animal except the bones,
hoofs, and hair, all the other parts had been incorporated with
the manure.
The time required for the decomposition of animal matter in
a warm horse-manure heap, cannot be many days.
No offensive gaseous exhalations, where the covering is two
feet, can be discovered.
My principal object in this communication is to call the
attention of farmers to the best and most profitable way of dis-
posing of domestic animal bodies, which die of disease or
accident.
Almost every country town has its veterinary cemetery,
usually selected in some loose, sandy, or gravelly soil, in con-
sequence of its easy excavation. This porous sand will not
absorb and retain the gases; hence there are frequent com-
plaints to the selectmen of the town, who are believed to
possess legal and sanitary powers sufficient to correct all mis-
demeanors which may offend the body politic. The difficulty
then is to find the man whose olfactories can endure the stench.
The nuisance is usually suffered to exhaust itself while the
case is under adjudication.
230 BOARD OF AGRICULTURE.
I once permitted my neighbor to bury his dead horse in my
farm gravel-pit. The consequence was that my laborers left the
field by reason of the offensive odor from the equine remains.
I complained to my friend that he did not cover the dead horse
deep enough.
He promised me faithfully that the evil should be corrected.
But the difficulty was that he could not find a man to do the
sepulchral service. In a few days, the evil, like many diseases
by nature's recuperative powers cured itself, and my farming
was progressing again in its usual monotonous way.
Now, to save all this trouble and expense, and use these
carcases of dead animals to profit, you have only to put them
in your dung heap. If you have not a manure heap, just
lay the dead animal upon your pasture, and over it dump one
or two cords of manure, and your obsequies are scientifically
performed.
This manure will absorb all the elementary substances ema-
nating from decomposition of the animal remains. How much
this animal matter will add in nitrogen to the value of the
manure, I am not, from chemical experiments, able at this time
to inform you.
Some of the manure which I am putting upon my farm is
impregnated with this animal matter.
I am making arrangements to analyze this manure according
to the best farming method.
In making the chemical analysis, I lay the works of Sir
Humphrey Davy, Dr. Dana, Liebig and Boussingault, upon the
shelf, and proceed with my experiments in the most practical
way. I shall not be able to give the equivalents of oxygen,
nitrogen, hydrogen, and carbon contained in this manure.
My scientific analysis will consist in staking off a given
number of rods of land upon which this manure has been
applied, and then staking off an equal number of rods upon
which an equal quantity of the same kind of manure not thus
impregnated with animal matter will be applied. Both lots of
land are to be planted with Indian corn.
This Indian corn, in the language of chemistry, is to be my
re-agent.
. My test is to be the sealed half bushel measure ; the difference
in productiveness of the lots is to be noted as the Jinale.
SECRETARY'S REPORT. 231
Voted, that the thanks of' the Board be presented to Dr.
Hartwcll, and that the paper be published in the Report.
Monday, Jan. 30th.
The subject under consideration on Monday, January 30th,
was the Agricultural College. This subject was introduced by
the report of the committee to which certain resolutions oifcred
at the public meeting at Greenfield had been referred.
After a very full and free expression of opinion on the part
of the members from all parts of the State, the following
preamble and resolutions were adopted as the sense of the
Board :
Whereas, it appears by the message of his excellency, the
governor, and by the report of the trustees of the Agricultural
College, that that institution has been located in the town of
Amherst, strictly in accordance with the provisions of the law,
in that case made and provided, and that a farm has been pur-
chased, which, with its surroundings, is, in the judgment of the
trustees, eminently fitted for the purposes of the institution,
and deeds of warranty taken in the name of the corporation,
Therefore
Resolved, That no action by the Board of Agriculture, on the
subject of location, is necessary or desirable.
Resolved, That the Agricultural College should maintain an
intimate relation to the agricultural societies and the farmers of
the Commonwealth,- as a means of disseminating practical infor-
mation and affording the best means of educating young men
for the business of farming.
Resolved, That for this purpose every effort should be made
to connect the State Board of Agriculture, in some way, with
the government of the college, for the express object of bringing
the agricultural societies into close connection with that institu-
tion ; and as the most useful method of combining all the efforts
of the Commonwealth in one system of practical agricultural
education.
Tuesday, Jan. 31st.
On Tuesday, the Board, by special invitation of Professor
Agassiz, held its meeting at the Museum of Comparative Zoology,
at Cambridge. The origin and objects of the institution were
232 BOARD OF AGRICULTURE.
explained by the Professor and his assistants. After some hours
devoted to viewing the magnificent collections of natural history
and the working facilities which the Museum affords, the Board,
by invitation of the Massachusetts Society for Promoting Agri-
culture, visited the Bussey Farm, at West Roxbury, to examine
the Norman horses, imported by that society, during the last
year, from France. Respecting the history and characteristics
of the horses, Mr. Saltonstall, on behalf the Massachusetts
Society for Promoting Agriculture, presented the following
statement.
THE PERCHERON HORSE.
The trustees of the Massachusetts Society for Promoting
Agriculture, feeling that a great want of the farmers exists in
the matter of a proper horse for agricultural purposes, — a horse
uniting the qualities of great strength with reasonable speed, —
after husbanding their means for several years, have imported
two noble stallions and three fine mares, of the famous Per-
cheron breed. This horse, undoubtedly, is the best representa-
tive of a true agricultural horse in the world. And the horses
of the society are splendid types of their breed.
Herbert says,* " Le Perche is a district of that portion of
France which was formerly known as Normandy, in which the
breed of the Norman horses has been most highly cultivated,
and exists in its most perfect form and improved condition.
The remarkable purity of the race is attested by the certainty
with which the stallions transmit to their progeny, begotten on
mares of a different race, their own characteristics, and the high
degree in which the offspring of tbe mares, bred to horses of
superior class, retain the better qualities of their dams."
The Percheron horse is a cross of the old Norman war-horse,
of the iron-clad chivalry of the Middle Ages, — of William the
Conqueror and Richard Cceur de Lion, — with the light Andalu-
sian horse, which in its highest form was a pure barb of Morocco
imported into Spain by the Saracen Moors.
" The bone and muscle, and much of the form of the Per-
cheron come from the old Norman war-horse ; and he gets his
spirit and action from the Andalusian. Docility comes from
• Hints to Horse Keepers. Chapter 6.
SECRETARY'S REPORT. 233
both sides. On the expulsion of the Spaniards from the
Northern Provinces, the supply of Arabian stallions was cut off,
and, since that time, in the Perche district of Normandy, their
progeny has, doubtless, been bred in-and-in ; hence the remark-
able uniformity of the breed, and their disposition to impart
their form to their progeny, beyond any breed, of domestic
animals within my knowledge. Another circumstance, which, I
think, has tended to perpetuate the good qualities of these
liorses, is the fact of their males being kept entire ; a gelding is,
I believe, unknown among the rural horses of France. The
farmer will thus breed from the best horse, and he will have an
opportunity of judging, because he has been broken to harness
and his qualities known before he could command business as a
stallion."
The points of the peculiar breed known as the Percheron-
Normans are these : Their standard is probably from fifteen to
sixteen and a half hands. " They are very short in the saddle
place, and comparatively long below ; they are well ribbed
up and round-barreled ; they have not the heavy head and
extremely short, thick neck of the old Norman horse ; l3ut, on
the contrary, have the head short, with the genuine Arabian
breadth of brow and hollow of the profile between the eyes and
nostrils ; nor are the heads thicker, especially at the setting-on
place, nor the necks, which are well arched and sufficiently long,
heavier or more massive than corresponds well with the general
stoutness of their frame. Their legs are particularly short from
the knees and hocks downward ; nor, though heavily haired,
have they such shaggy fetlocks and feet as the larger Normans,
while they have the unyielding, iron-like muscles and feet,
apparently unconscious of disease, for which the latter race are
famous."
Herbert concludes his chapter on the Norman horse by
quoting from a writer in the " British Quarterly Journal of
Agriculture : " " The horses of Normandy are a capital race for
hard work and scanty fare. I have never seen such horses at
the collar, under the diligence, the post-carriage, the cumbrous
and heavy boiture or cabriolet for one or two horses, or the farm-
cart. They are enduring and energetic beyond description ;
with their necks cut to the bone, they flinch not ; they keep
their condition where other horses would die of neglect and
30*
234 BOARD OF AGRICULTURE.
hard treatment. A better cross' for some of our horses cannot
be imagined than those of Normandy, provided they have not
the ordinary faihng of too much length from the hock down-
ward, and a heavy head." "These two points last named,"
(Herbert goes on to say,) " are precisely those which are
entirely got rid of in the best style of Percheron-Normans,
which are, as has been stated, those of the Normans most
thoroughly imbued with the Arabian, or, to speak more correctly,
Barb blood of Andalusia."
Such, then, are the horses imported by the trustees of the
Massachusetts Society, with the hope that the farmers of Massa-
chusetts will avail themselves of the opportunity offered them
of crossing their best mares with this renowned stock, and thus
obtain an animal uniting more of the qualities essential to them
in their agricultural pursuits than can be now found in any
State in the Union — a horse which will probably more nearly
resemble the Morgan in his best days than now exists.
"Wednesday, Feb. 1.
The Board met at 10 o'clock according to adjournment.
Present, Messrs. Adams, Agassiz, Bull, Clement, Garfield,
Grout, Homer, Hubbard, Huntington, Johnson, Keith, Ken-
rick, Loring, Moore, Perkins, Saltonstall, Matthew Smith, J.
M. Smith, Stedman, Stockbridge, Thompson and Tidd.
Mr. Grout in the Chair.
Messrs. Tidd, Stockbridge and Adams, having been appointed
a committee on credentials of new members, reported that the
following members were duly elected, viz. :
* Leverett Saltonstall, of Newton, by the Massachusetts Society
for Promoting Agriculture.
Asa Clement, of Dracut, by the Middlesex North.
Newton S. Hubbard, of Brimfield, by the Worcester South.
Velorous Taft, of Upton, by the Worcester South-East.
Levi Stockbridge, of Hadley, by the Hampshire.
John M. Smith, of Sunderland, by the Franklin.
John Kenrick, of Orleans, by the Barnstable.
Daniel A. Cleaveland, by the Martha's Vineyard Society.
On motion of Mr. Huntington it was
SECRETARY'S REPORT.
235
Resolved. That the Board of Agriculture petition the legis-
lature for such alteration of the 4th section chapter 66 of the
General Statutes. relating to Fairs, as shall enable the several
original county societies to award premiums without reference
to other societies that have been formed witliin their limits.
The Board then proceeded to assign the delegates to visit
and report upon the Exhibitions of the county agricultural
societies for the year, as follows : To the
Essex,
Middlesex, at Concord, .
Middlesex North, at Lowell, . .
Middlesex South, at Framingham,
Worcester, at "Worcester,
"Worcester "West, at Barre, . .
"Worcester North, at Fitchburg, .
"Worcester South, at Sturbridge, .
"Worcester South-East, at Milford,
Hamp., Franklin and Hampden, at Northampton.
Highland, at Middlefield,
Hampsliire, at Amherst,
Hampden, at Springfield,
Hampden East, at Palmer,
Franklin, at Greenfield,
Berkshire, at Pittsfield,
Hoosac "Valley, at North Adams,
Housatonic, at Great Barrington,
Norfolk, at Dedham,
Bristol, at Taunton,
Plymouth, at Bridgewater,
Barnstable, at Barnstable,
Nantucket, at Nantucket,
Martha's Vineyard, at West Tisbury,
Asa Clement.
T. G. Huntington.
Charles O. Perkins.
Abel F. Adams.
Matthew Smith.
Louis Agassiz.
N. S. Hubbard.
J. M. Smith.
John Kenrick.
James Thompson.
HOLLIS TiDD.
Leverett Saltonstall.
E. W. Bull.
George B. Loring.
Elias Grout.
Levi Stockbridge.
Henry R. Keith.
Phineas Stedman.
Sylvander Johnson.
Velorous Taft.
Daniel A. Cleaveland.
Harrison Garfield.
John B. Moore,
Alured Houer.
Thursday, Feb. 2.
■ The Board met according to adjournment, when Mr. Tidd
was requested to preside.
The first business in order was the consideration of the report
of the committee on a list of subjects submitted by Mr. Bull,
chairman, when the following committees were appointed :
On Cranberries. — Messrs. Kenrick, Davis, and Thompson.
The Grass Crop. — Messrs. Stockbridge, J. M. Smith, and
Homer.
Grape Culture. — Messrs. Bull, Clement and Moore.
236 BOARD OF AGRICULTURE.
TIlb Dairy. — Messrs. Keith, Tidd, Huntington, and Hubbard.
Fruit Culture. — Messrs. Thompson, Clement, and Bull.
Farm Fences. — Messrs. Grout, Adams, and Johnson.
Making and Application of Manures. — Messrs. Perkins, Sted-
man, and Homer.
Farm Accounts. — Messrs. Garfield, Stedman, and Perkins.
Fecundation, Gestation, and Parturition of Domestic Animals.
— Messrs. Agassiz, Loring, and Matthew Smith.
Farming as an Occupation. — Messrs. Moore, Huntington, and
Adams.
Management of Woodlands and Forest Trees. — Messrs. Clem-
ent, Taft, and Kenrick.
Sheep Husbandry. — Messrs. Loring, Keith, and Matthew Smith.
Adaptation of Crops to Soils, ^c. — Messrs. Stedman, J. M.
Smith, and Grout.
Raising and Preservation of Seeds. — Messrs. Huntington,
Stedman, and Hubbard.
Drainage. — Messrs. Saltonstall, Perkins, and Clement.
Committee on Meetings. — Messrs. Loring, Agassiz, and Keith.
Voted, To appoint a committee of three to take action upon
the resolutions relating to the agricultural college — Messrs.
Loring, Bull, and Perkins.
It was voted, that the public meeting for lectures and
discussions be held at Worcester, on Tuesday, the 12th of
December.
Adjourned.
In accordance with a vote of the Board, the following was
presented as the Report of the Committee on
GRAPE CULTURE.
BY E. W. BULL.
The past season has been peculiarly favorable to the grape,
and many of the tender and uncertain varieties have been
ripened much better than usual. These circumstances are
likely to add to the interest now so largely felt by the public in
grape culture, and to quicken the purpose which many enter-
tain of planting vineyards ; your committee propose, therefore,
to notice the, in their judgment, best methods of planting, and
the necessity of certain precautions to secure success. Perhaps
SECRETARY'S REPORT. 237
notliing has so much prevented tlic planting of vineyards as tlie
belief in trenching, and other costly modes of culture, derived
from the practice of vine-growers in other countries, and the
teaching of the books on which we have too much relied in the
absence of experience of our own.
We believe that trenching is not only unnecessary — except,
perhaps, for the purpose of draining wet lands — but really
injurious to the vine, the roots of which are thus invited into
the cold subsoil, which, in our short seasons does not get warm
enough to promote the healthy development of the vine, which
grows late, and is thus surprised by the winter with unripened
wood, which yields imperfect and unripened buds, to give
imperfect and late fruit the ensuing season, if, indeed, it does
not die outright.
Trenching, in hot countries, saves the vine from the effects
of the severe droughts which prevail during their long and hot
summers, and is, in such localities, indispensable to success ;
but the fact that trenching varies according to the climate^
being, in France, about twenty inches, in Spain, about thirty
inches, and in Italy four and sometimes five feet, shows that we
must adapt our culture to the conditions of climate, and our
experience leads us to the conclusion that twelve inches is quite
enough.
One other difficulty lies in the way of tlie cultivation of the
grape — in the the large way, — and that is the almost universal
belief that protection is necessary to carry the vines, — even
those called hardy, safely through the winter.
Your Committee have, in former reports, invited attention to
the misuse of this term, which should only be applied to such
grapes as are absolutely hardy — loitliout protection — under all
ordinary circumstances. It is quite common among grape-
growers to call any grape hardy which can be made to survive
the winter with aid of protection, but we believe that the term
applies properly only to those, which, like the apple, pear, &£.,
survive all winters without protection, except unusually severe
and exceptional ones, against which no experience can shield
you.
"We have such grapes, and it is the part of wisdom, at least on
the part of the novice, to begin with such as have been proved
to be adapted to field culture without protection.
238 BOARD OF AGRICULTURE.
THE SOIL
which is host adapted for a vineyard, is light and warm, such as
would carry a firstrate crop of corn. It should not be so level '
that water would stand about the roots in winter, and it should
be in good heart, but not excessively rich. Indian corn is a
good preparatory crop, insuring clean tillage and destruction
of all weeds and grass. If, however, the soil be stiff and
inclined to clay, and if it be dry, with a slope toward the sun,
it may be made to carry grapes by adding to it liberal dressings
of vegetable mould, with ashes, plaster, and bone-dust. Such
soil should be ploughed very deep to insure good drainage and
permeability to warm rains and to the tender roots of the plants.
It will, however, never be so good for the grape as the warm
loam which we recommend above.
Wet, spongy, and cold soils are wholly unfit for the grape,
and can only be improved by deep trenching and thorough
draining with tiles or stone ; but be careful, in such cases,
to leave the manure near the surface that the roots may thus
be kept within the influence of the summer heat, so that the
wood will be well ripened, and the buds made into fruit-buds
for the next year's crop. With all these precautions, however,
such soil will not give you grapes of the finest quality, unless,
indeed, the situation is especially favorable.
PLANTING THE GRAPE.
Having ploughed the field as deep as possible, say from nine
to twelve inches, carry on about forty loads of compost, made
of peat mud, or vegetable mould and barnyard manure, made
the season before, and well fermented. Spread on the surface,
and cross-plough six inches deep. Mark out your rows ten feet
apart, let them run north and south, if possible, and plant the
vines six feet apart in the rows. This gives you sixty square
feet to each vine, and seven hundfed and twenty-six vines to
the acre. These distances will enable you to plough and culti-
vate between the rows, and to go with the cart to carry off the
crop. The sun will also reach the earth, and warm it to a
greater depth than would happen in closer planting, and your
vines will keep in better health, and will give you abundant
crops.
SECRETARY'S REPORT. 239
Take care to spread out the roots of the vine in every direc-
tion, covering them six inches with tlie soil, and leaving the
ends of the roots a little deeper than the crown of the plant.
Press the earth rather firmly to the roots, keep down all weeds,
and stir the earth frequently. A light root crop may be taken
from the middle of the rows the first season to lighten the
expenses of cultivation.
To avoid unnecessary repetition in the matter of pruning,
<fec., &c., we would refer to the article on grape culture, p. 64
of this volume.
COST OF VINEYARDS.
There is not the least need of the extravagant expense so
often incurred in planting vineyards. We have shown that it
is unnecessary to trench and heavily manure the soil — both
costly processes — and now proceed to show the cost of estab-
lishing an acre of vineyard. If planted at the distances we
recommend, there will be, to the acre —
726 vines, which, at $25 per 100,
40 loads compost, at $1 per load.
Ploughing, .....
Carting and cross-ploughing,
726 poles, at Ic, ....
Planting — two men, ten days, . *
Total cost of planting an acre, . . |267 76
There will be some difference in the cost in various localities^
but it is believed the above statement is a fair average.
The cost of planting an acre on the Ohio, is said to be about
three hundred dollars after trenching-, which we avoid ; on the
other hand, the cost of labor and manure is in their favor.
The third year after planting, the first crop may be gathered.
Five pounds to the vine will be a light crop if the vines have
had proper culture, say thirty-five hundred pounds to the acre,
which, at ten cents per pound, will amount to three hundred
and fifty dollars. The next year twice this crop may be safely
taken, the next year three times, and the next year four times
the weight of the first crop, or more than seven tons to the
. $181
50
40
00
6
00
3
00
7
26
30
00
240 BOAED OF AGRICULTURE. .
acre, worth, at ten cents the pound, fourteen hundred dollars.
If we deduct one-half, even — although we know these figures
have been exceeded for three successive seasons, — we still have
an annual income of seven hundred dollars from an acre of
vines, an income which would cover the expense of even
extravagant culture, and still give larger profits than any other
crop we raise.
To this we only add that the grape-harvest does not take
from the labors of the farm the strong hands wanted for other
harvests, but may be gathered by old and young, invalids even,
who, jocund and glad, make of it sport rather than labor.
ERRORS IN PROPAGATION.
In this direction, perhaps, lies the most danger to our coming
vineyards ; for vines propagated from feeble or unripe wood, or
even from ripe wood, if from single buds, in heat, under glass,
will not be so strong nor so hardy of constitution as those
raised in the open air from strong cuttings. This is simple
common sense. We do not breed from weak animals, still
less from those too young. Does the grafter take his scions
from trees which are weak, or the farmer his seeds from weak
plants ? .
Does not the first, rather, go long distances to obtain, from
.the best and most vigorous trees, the best scions which they
fbear ? and the farmer, also, from his neighbor's well-ripened
;seeds from strong plants, if all his own are weak ? Certainly,
this is the practice of ages ; the ancients were not content with
less than the best and most fertile cuttings from the best and
most productive vines.
They selected even those cuttings which ripened their fruit
.the earliest ; and they maintained that the early maturity of the
fruit was advanced by this means, and its culture thus made
possible in less favorable localities ; and they were unquestion-
ably right, for the practice prevails down to this day.
Now, if from vines which abound in field culture, they select
only the best and earliest wood, and find it necessary to do so,
even in their fine climate so suited to the grape, how much
more important must it be for us, in our rough climate and
changeful seasons, to propagate only from thq most vigorous
wood, as well as the most early. A single week will often make
SECRETARY'S REPORT. 241
the whole difference between getthig your crop ripe or losing
it, and the extreme difference, in time of ripening tlie crop,
between the feeble vine from the hot-house and the strong
one from the nursery-bed, will be two weeks. The difference
between the average of vines from the nursery, even, will be in
the same vineyard row, sometimes ill time one week, and, in
amount of crop one-third. The best vines, then, will give crops
which will vary both in quantity and season ; how unwise it
must be, then, to accept those which are not only not the best,
but are positively the worst and feeblest.
Propagators say, indeed, that any natural feebleness in these
weak cuttings is overcome by the skill of the cultivator and the
stimulus of long-continued heat, and the longer season, — winter
in the hot-house and the open ground in summer, — which they
have to grow in ; but we believe that vines weakened by this
excessive propagation, do never attain their proper vigor, and
we know of some, which, after five years' cultivation, have not
yet shown fruit, although carefully nursed. In no other way
can we account for the discrepancy in the statements in regard to
some of our new grapes ; some growing strong, while others of
the same kind do hardly grow at all, as has happened in our
experience. It is not uncommon for propagators, who want to
get up a stock of some new grape at the earliest possible
moment, to layer the growing wood of the young vine, — itself
from a single bud, — and to get, from every eye of this green and
growing wood, with aid of heat and moisture, a new vine.
Now nature lays up, in the internodes or spaces between the
buds of the grape, organizable matter to feed the bud in the
spring when it first .begins to grow. Tbis organizable matter
feeds in the same way the bud which grows from the cutting,
and the stronger the cutting, the more vigorous will be the
growing shoot and the roots which are formed from its base,
and those which grow from the lower buds, so we get two or
three systems of roots from the two or three buds which the
cutting contains ; the top grows with vigor, the wood gets its
^^ development early in the season, ripens perfectly, and, when
planted out, the vine grows with vigor and comes up to its
proper type and the normal condition of the kind to which it
belongs.
31*
242 BOARD OF AGRICULTURE.
Our seasons are so short and so variable that, though we have
demonstrated the practicability of grape culture in the open
field, without protection, it will be wise, and probably necessary,
in the long run, to plant only the strongest and best, and, where
it is not possible to get strong and good vines, to confine our
culture to the garden and the few, until we are able to obtain
such better plants as can be grown in the field. But not only
should the young vines be grown from the most early and pro-
lific vines, they should be grown in soil as nearly as possible
like that of the vineyard into which you are going to transplant
them ; for if the soil of the nursery-bed is moist and rich, and
the soil of the vineyard dry and not rich, then will the young
vine be pinched in its growth, and, a's all cultivators know, may
take on a starved habit which it will not get rid of for years.
It would be safer to get your vines out of a soil not quite so
good as your vineyard, or at least, not better, and if the soil of
your vineyard is strong and inclined to clay, get your vines, if
possible, out of similar soil, for if they have thriven in such soil,
they will continue to thrive in soil of the same nature. One
must remember that such soils require continual stirring to keep
them friable, and that such soils, more than all others, are
amended by composts to which lime is added rather freely.
We believe that if strong and healthy vines, which are per-
fectly hardy and of free growth, are planted in the vineyard,
success will follow the method we have recommended.
Slender growing vines and those of tender constitution
require higher feeding and protection in winter, but the culti-
vation of even these, some of them, will become possible with
increased skill and experience. We recommend, however, to
the novice, only those hardy and free-growing kinds which are
sure of success without much of either.
THE STATE CABINET.
The State Cabinet of Natural History has received many
additions since my last Report. A rapidly increasing interest
in its objects and aim is manifest, not only in the frequent
contributions to its instructive collection of specimens, but
also in the greater influx of visitors, and the preponderance
of that class who are eager to inform their minds, and not
merely to spend a leisure hour in the vacant contemplation
SECRETARY'S REPORT. 243
of a number of " curiosities." Grateful acknowledgments
for various donations in the department of Entomology, during
the past year, are due to the following individuals : —
Messrs. WiUiam H. Floyd, of Weston; John C. Moore, of
Boston ; Wm. E. Rice, M. D., of South Boston ; Henry A.
Purdie, of Boston ; E. H. & F. Goss, of Melrose ; Caleb Eames,
of Wilmington ; J. W. Manning, of Reading ; John Osgood,
of Lynn ; Thos. F. Dickinson, of Walpole ; Louis H. Samuels,
of Boston ; Horace J. Foster, of Quincy ; Mrs. H. W. Wellington,
of W. Roxbury ; Miss C. E. Guild, of Walpole ; Amory L.
Babcock, of Sherborn.
Li other departments donations have been received as follows :
MAMMALOGY.
Forster'3 Shrew. Sorex forsteri. (Richardson.) Donor, E. S.
Wheeler.
Short-tailed Shrew. Blarina talpoides. (Gray.) Donor, H. M.
Nelson.
Albino Rat. 3Tus decumanus. (Linn.) Donor, M. Sands.
Albino Rat. Mus decumanus. (Linn.) Donor, W. .W« Dove.
Meadow Mouse. Arvicola riparia. (Ord.) Donor, J. L. Pratt.
Tooth of Whale. T. S. Brigham.
ORNITHOLOGY.
Quail. Ortyx virginianus. (Bon.) Female. Donor, E. A.
Samuels.
Red-breasted Snipe. Macrorhamphus griseus. (Leach.) Donor,
John Osgood.
Purple Sandpiper. Tringa maritima. (Brun.) Male. Donor
T. C. Haskell.
Ten skins of Massachusetts birds, duplicates of specimens already in
the cabinet. Donor, A. L. Babcock.
oology.
One egg of Belted Kingfisher. Ceryle alcyon. (Boie.) Donor, E. A.
Samuels.
Two eggs of Great-crested Flycatcher. Myiarchus crinitus. (Cab.)
Donor, E. A. Samuels.
Four eggs of White-bellied Swallow. Hirundo Ucolor. (Vieillot.)
Donor, E. A. Samuels.
Three eggs of House Wren. Troglodytes cedon. (Vieill.) Donor,
E. A. Samuels.
244 BOARD OF AGRICULTURE.
One egg of Long-billed Marsh Wren. Cistothorus palustris. (Cab.)
Donor, E. A. Samuels.
Two eggs of Black-capped Titmouse. Parus atricapillus. (Linn.)
Donor, E. A. Samuels.
One egg of Indigo Bird. Cyanospiza cyanea. (Baird.) Donor, E.
A. Samuels.
Two eggs of Common Crow. Corvus americanus. (Aud.) Donor,
George A. Hall.
Two eggs of American Bittern. Botaurus lentiginosus. (Stepli.)
Donor, E. A. Samuels.
One egg of Green Heron. Butorides virescens. (Bon.) Donor, E.
A. Samuels.
One egg of Clapper Rail. Rallus crepitans. (Gm.) Donor, JE. A.
Samuels.
One e^g of Virginia Rail. Rallus virginianus. (Linn.) Donor,
E. A. Samuels.
One egg of Summer Duck. Aix Sponsa. (Boie.) Donor, E. A.
Samuels.
One egg of Arctic Tern. Sterna macroura. (Naum.) Donor, E. A.
Samuels.
One egg of Least Tern. Sterna frenata. ^ (Gambel.) Donor, E. A.
Samuels.
Of the eggs of domestic poultry, the following donations have
been made :
One egg of Game Fowl ; Cochin China Fowl ; Dorking Fowl ;
Creeper Fowl ; and Domestic Duck. Donated by E. A. Samuels.
Two eggs of Leghorn Fowl. Donated by M. M. Tidd.
Seven small eggs of Common Fowh Donated by F. B. Chadwick ;
also, one egg of Guinea Fowl, and one of China Goose, by same.
Two eggs of African Bantam. Donated by E. Burgess.
One distorted egg of Common Fowl. Donated by J. H. Jenks.
One egg of Bronze Turkey. Donated by J. L. Pratt.
ICHTHYOLOGY.
The Museum of Comparative Zoology donated the following
species in this department :
One specimen of Perch. Perca Jlavescens. Cuvier.
Two specimens of Cunner or Sea Perch. Ctenolabrus hurgall. Cuv.
Three specimens of White Perch. Merone americana. Gill. ■
SECRETARY'S REPORT. 245
Two specimens of Bream or Pond Fish. Pomotis auritus. Raf.
One specimen of Sculpin. Cottus grcenlandicus. Cuv.
^ One specimen of Slender Sculpin. Cottus octodecimspinostLs. Mitch.
Three specimens of ten-spined Stickleback. Pygasteus dehayi.
Brevoort.
Three specimens of two-spined Stickleback. Gasterosteus biaculeatus.
Mitchell.
Two specimens of Dollar Fish. Peprilus triacantha. Cuvier.
One specimen of Eel Pout. Zoarces anguillaris. Storer.
One specimen of Horned Pout. Pimelodus atrarius. De Kay.
Two specimens of Chub. Semotilus argenteus. Putnam.
One specimen of Sucker. Catostomus hostoniensis. Les.
Two specimens of Shiner. Plargyrus americanus. « Girard.
Four specimens of Red Fin. Hypsalepis cornutus.' Agassiz.
Four specimens of Striped Minnow. Hydrargyra majalis. C. &> V.
Three specimens of Minnow. Pimdidus pisculentiis. C. & V.
Three specimens of Minnow. Fuiididus multifasciatus. C. & V.
One specimen of Hardhead. Alosa menhaden. Storer.
One specimen of American Turbot. Platessa ohlonga. De Kay.
One specimen of Spotted Flounder. Pleuronectes maculatits.
Mitchell.
One specimen of American Sole. Achirus mollis. Cuvier.
One specimen of Flounder. Platessa plana. Storer.
One specimen of Common Eel. Anguilla bostoniensis. Leseur.
One specimen of Dog Fish, (factus.) Acanthias americanus. Storer.
One specimen of Sand Launce. Ammodytes americanus. De Kay.
One specimen of Lamprey. Petromyzon americanus. Leseur.
HERPETOLOGY.
One specimen of Spotted Tortoise. Emys guttata. Storer. Donor,
G. T. Brown. •
THE AGRICULTURAL LIBRARY.
The State agricultural library connected with the office of
the Secretary of the Board, has received but few accessions
during the past year, there having been no appropriation from
which new additions could be procured. It is desirable that
this valuable collection of books, the most extensive, at the
present time, of any of a similar character in New England,
should be kept up with the times, and every effort will be made
to procure such additions, from time to time, as the means at
command make practicable.
246 BOARD OF AGRICULTURE.
It is more generally used for reference than ever before,
especially during the sessions of the legislature, and it is
important that some permanent fund should be provided bji^
which the new publications should be procured as they appear.
THE AGRICULTURAL COLLEGE.
Some progress has been made, since my last Annual Report,
in the establishment of an agricultural college under the Act
of Congress of July 2d, 1862. The Act of the legislature
creating a board of trustees, practically limited them in the
choice of a location, to those places which should raise by
subscription, of otherwise, the sum of seventy-five thousand
dollars for building purposes. Under this condition, but four
towns came forward, and, with great public spirit and liberality,
offered that amount, either in the form of a bona fide sub-
scription, or of a guarantee that they would comply with
the condition imposed by law. These places were Lexington,
Springfield, Northampton, and Amherst. h
The trustees, after examining several locations with great
care and solicitude, came to a nearly unanimous decision to
locate the college in the town of Amherst, chiefly on the ground
that the farm lands, presented for their consideration, were
better adapted for the objects in view than those offered else-
where. The lands, consisting of about four hundred acres, were
accordingly purchased, and the preliminary steps taken for the
establishment of the college. This location was approved, after
examination, by the governor and council.
Whatever may be said of the action of the trustees in regard
to the matter of location, it is probable that any impartial body
of men, appointed as agents of the State to act under similar
circumstances, with all the information necessary to a decision
placed in their possession, would have come to the same
conclusion. If there is any reasonable ground of complaint,
therefore, in regard to the question of location, it can hardly
be made against the action of the trustees. They did what
they thought to be for the best interests of the State and the
institution, so far as it was in their power under the law.
It is to be hoped, therefore, that there will be a general
acquiescence in the decision, and that the agricultural com-
munity will cooperate with the trustees in establishing an
SECRETARY'S REPORT. 247
inclustrial college, which shall be an honor alike to the
Commonwealth and the country at large.
It is designed to establish an independent institution, without
any direct connection with Amherst, or any other college, in
accordance with what appeared to be the direction of public
sentiment. Arrangements will soon be made to proceed with
the erection of suitable buildings, but it must, in the nature of
things, be some time before the college can be put into a condi-
tion to receive students. Of the aggregate fund, consisting of
scrip for three hundred and sixty thousand acres of the public
lands, one-tenth of which, or thirty-six thousand acres only
could be appropriated to the purchase of lands, three-tenths
were placed under the control of the Massachusetts Institute
of Technology, leaving but two hundred and sixteen thousand
acres to be sold to constitute a permanent working fund.
Only a part of this has been sold as yet, and that at an
average price of only about eighty cents an acre. Some time
will be required to realize the whole amount.
In the meantime the lands at Amherst, purchased by the
trustees, have been leased to the former owners at an average
of about five per cent, a year on the purchase money, or about
five dollars an acre rent, including woodlands, waste and tillage,
and under reasonable restrictions as to crops, manure, stock,
<fec. This temporary arrangement appeared to be for the
interest of all concerned, and it would seem to indicate, at
least, that, the purchase was a judicious one on the part of the
college, so far as the rent may be taken as a criterion of the
value of the land.
The trustees have elected the Hon. Henry F. French, a gen-
tleman well known to the farming community, as the president
of the College, and under his energetic supervision, aided by a
competent executive committee of the board of trustees, the
work will be forwarded as fast as practicable.
During the year, also, the New England Agricultural Society,
which originated in the action of the State Board of Agriculture,
at its annual meeting in 1864, has been formed, and has held its
first great exhibition in the city of Springfield. This exhibition
was a grand success so far as it illustrated the agricultural
enterprise of this and sister States, and formed a marked
248 BOARD OF AGRICULTURE.
feature in the public displays of the year. The immense crowds
that attended it, as well as the attendance on most of the
county fairs, gave evidence of increasing activity and interest
in the community.
We have now throughout the country a pretty complete
system of agencies for the promotion of progress in agriculture,
from tlue Department of Agriculture at Washington, to the
State societies and organizations, and the county societies, to
say nothing of farmers' clubs and other town and local associa-
tions. It remains for the great body of intelligent farmers to
avail themselves of such efforts and such instrumentalities, as
the means of advancement in their calling, and the attainment
of the higliest degree of perfection, in the development of the
agricultural resources of the country.
CHARLES L. FLINT,
Secretary of the State Board of Agriculture.
Boston, January 25, 1865.
APPENDIX
ii APPENDIX.
REPORTS OF DELEGATES
APPOINTED TO VISIT THE
AGRIOULTUEAL EXHIBITIOIsTS.
•
ESSEa..
The forty-seventli annual exhibition of the Essex County Agricultural
Society, was held at Lawrence the 27th and 28th of September. Being
a native of Essex County, and my father having been one of the
presidents of the society, I hoped to have derived much pleasure from
the duty assigned me ; nor do I believe that my expectations would
have been disappointed had I not been prevented from repeating my
visit the second day by a painful accident on my way thither. This
deprived me of witnessing ploughing matches and other matters of
essential interest.
The business meeting held in the city hall was marked by a full
attendance and by the interest shown in the questions discussed.
The display in the cattle pens was decidedly small and inferior in
quality. A few Ayrshires, and one Durham cow, thirteen years old,
which had produced 10,449 pounds of milk from February to September,
were noticeable exceptions.
Only three our four lots of sheep were on the ground, all of which,
except one pen, were Merinos.
Very few entries were made of horses, and none Avere noteworthy.
Of poultry there was but a small show, mostly of the Brahma Pootra
breed, claimed to be the best of the large varieties, but not comparing
with our best native and game breeds either in beauty or quality.
In the large tent of the society were a few agricultural implements,
carriages, &c., but nothing to cliallenge admiration or even curiosity.
The display of fruits, vegetables and flowers was very beautiful, and
I cannot attempt to describe the effect of the hall as it appeared, its
tables loaded with the finest varieties of apples, peai'S, grapes, -and
melons, as well as of squashes, cabbages, beets, mangolds, ruta-bagas,
carrots, parsnips, and potatoes ; with clusters of golden corn and the
APPENDIX. iii
products of the dairy, adorned, too, witli a profusion of beautiful fabrics
from the various mills in Lawrence, — a picture of abundance, typical of
the industry and thrift of our people. Here seemed chiefly to centre
the zeal and interest of the society ; while the pens in the market-place
or public square were, on that tirst day, left to crowds of boys, organ-
grinders, auctioneers with very loud voices, and jugglers with extremely
large drums.
Ought this to be in Essex County ? With some of the best farmers
and finest farms, in one of the wealthiest counties, with no rival society,
the Essex Society should make the effort to excel ; and I cannot but
think the first step toward this end should be the establishing for itself
of an abiding place in some accessible part of the county. This seems
to be the great desidei'atum of the society.
Leverett Saltonstall.
MIDDLESEX.
The annual exhibition of the Middlesex Agricultural Society was
held at Concord, on the twenty-second day of September.
This was the seventy -second anniversary of the society. It was
natural, therefore, to suppose that the force of long existing ties and
familiar associations would bring together a large concourse of people
heartily interested in the purposes and transactions of the day. The
society embraces within its limits many of the most pi'oductive farms
and beautiful rural residences — homes of wealth and of taste — in this
section of the Commonwealth. One might reasonably anticipate,
therefoi-e, a display of animals of every class, — the best of their species,
— and of field, orchard, vineyard, and garden products, of surpassing
excellence. There would be, also, in such a locality, the finest speci-
mens of various manufactures ; and the handiwork of thrifty house-
wives would add much to the attractiveness of the show.
But our expectations were, in several respects, disappointed. Neither
at the field where the ploughing match was held, nor upon the society's
grounds for the display of stock, including the hall for the exhibition of
fruits, vegetables and domestic manufactures, — places unfortunately wide
apart, — was there any large concourse of really interested spectators.
There were, indeed, lookers-on, but it did not appear that many of those
present, at either point, felt any personal interest in the character or
result of the transactions of the day. And, more than once, did the
thought occur to our mind, that a lack of warm interest was apparent,
iv APPENDIX.
which might be supposed to indicate, if it did not proceed from, the
chill and decay of age.
Of the officers of the society, we take pleasure in saying that nothing
appeared to be wanting on their part, to render the occasion alike pleas-
ant and instructive to all present. All preliminary arrangements had
been judiciously made, and every part of the day's programme was
punctually attended to at the appointed hour ; and perfect order and
decorum were preserved throughout. All the features of an agricultu-
ral exhibition, common at the present day, were seen in this' — excepting
a display of farming tools — which we consider an omission anywhere ;
and excepting, also, those inticements to gambling and intemperance,
and those displays of buffoonery, which, if any where allowed, are a
disgrace.
The ploughing match was a fair exhibition of the farmer's skill and
judgment in handling both the implement and the team. The compe-
tition in the work was limited, we apprehend, to the neighborhood, — as
is too often the case elsewhere, — and to those farmers who usually
enter into it. In ploughing, which is one of the most important parts
of farm work, we think it judicious to enlist, in some way — by sufficient
premiums, or otherwise — a large number of competitors from various
parts of the society's limits, and with the use of ploughs of different
construction. The advantage of any particular implement, or of any
improved method of operation, might then be perceived and availed of
by the farmers present. Ploughing, once the most exciting and closely
observed part of an agricultural exhibition, seems to have become one
of minor consideration. This, if a fact, is to be regretted, for it is on
the plough — the form of the implement itself, and the ease and thorough-
ness of the operation of it — that much of the facility and success of
farm work depends.
In the various departments of animals, the exhibition was not superior,
if equal, to many shows of former years. The cattle, however,
embraced not merely what are termed " fancy stock," but animals of
substantial value and use in the localities and for the purposes of their
individual owners. And we consider this a fact of importance to the
society, and of credit to the exhibitors of the stock. An imported bull
or cow, of pure blood, that has always been fed and handled in accord-
ance with its estimated cost and value, may attract and deserve attention
for its singular beauty, or as a pi'omising foundation of an improved
race. But farmers who cannot ordinarily incur the expense attending
the purchase and keeping of such animals, take pride in exhibiting good
stock raised upon their own farms, or otherwise obtained in the exercise
of their own judgment, and kept for uses which prove it to be a source
of profit. It may be that such animals have no famous pedigree, or
APPENDIX. V
beauty of form or color to recommeiKl tljem ; but, as " the tree is known
by its fruit," so are they known by, and kept for, their fruit alone. We
were pleased, therefore, to see many animals of various grades, and
some called only " native stock," as well as to observe the beautiful
herds of, Dutch, Devon, Jersey, and Ayrshire, both of pure blood and
high grades, which were particularly deserving of notice; and, as a
whole, rarely, if ever to be surpassed. The cattle of Dutch breed
were exhibited by W. W. Chenery, Esq., — president of the society, — a
gentleman whose name has been familiarly associated with the cattle
disease, or " Pleuro-pneumonia," the prevalence of which has wrought
so much injury to individuals and expense to the State, and caused
gi'eat disappointment and loss to himself. The animals now on exhibi-
tion by him were entirely free from disease, and attracted much
attention. The same gentleman also contributed largely to the exliibi-
tion by the display of several very beautiful Angora goats and Texel
sheep. And in various ways, his means and his efforts seem to be
generously employed to promote improvement in every branch of the art
which now shares so much of his regard.
Of horses, the number was small. Few were distinguished for
excellence of form or m(wement, or gave evidence of extraordinary
powei*. Probably, the great demand for good horses for use in the
army, diminished the number that would otherwise have been on hand.
Or, it may be, that the penalty attached to any violation of the statute of
the Commonwealth prevents the training and preparation of horses for
exhibition on the track, or in any way best fitted to discover their good
qualities. If popular sentiment upholds and sanctions horse-racing at
these exhibitions, it ought also to approve gf a demand for the repeal
or modification of this law.
Of swine, there were a few of superior size and condition, which
commanded attention and commendation. A similar remark may be
made, also, concerning poultry.
But, in the society's hall, there was a display of fruits and vegetables,
which constituted the chief excellence of the show. The quantity
might not have equalled expectation in such a locality, but the quality
could hardly be excelled. Particularly was this to be said of the fruit.
In the home of the Concord grape and its originator, and in the exhibi-
tion of a society whose members furnish so large a part of the supply
of fruits and vegetables in the city markets, such excellence might be
looked for. Of both native and foreign grapes, and of peaches and
pears there were many beautiful specimens. But of apples, we doubt
whether a superior display has, or could have been made, in the State
this year.
vi APPENDIX.
We missed the pleasure and the benefit of a public meeting at the
dinner table. Instead of this, however, a full assembly was gathered
in the town hall to be instructed and delighted by speeches from
Professor Agassiz, Hon. H. F. French, R. W, Emerson, Esq., and Hon.
Simon Brown. Only the lateness of the hour interrupted and closed
this intellectual treat.
We have only further to say, that to us, this society appears to stand
in the position of an institution laboring under disadvantages, which
the officers and members will strenuously exert themselves to overcome.
In its past history are many pages which bear ample testimony to its
usefulness and its honor. And in its present character, it bears on its
records the names and works of men highly distinguished among agri-
culturists and horticulturists ; men who are benefiting the State and
the country, and who rightfully claim for the Middlesex Society an
honored place among the agricultural institutions of the Commonwealth.
Charles C. Setvall.
MIDDLESEX NORTH.
Mr. Garfield, who was appointed to visit the annual exhibition of the
Middlesex North Agricultural Society, held on the 29th of September,
1864, failed to appear, and the officers requested me to report in his
stead.
Let me in the outset remind the Board that the rain poured down in
torrents from early in the, morning imtil late in the afternoon, which
will account for deficiencies in several branches of the show. Members
not knowing the rules of the society may be surprised to learn that in
some classes the entries reached so large a number. The truth is, the
society had determined to have a fair which should transcend all pre-
vious ones in point of excellence, and the rules requiring many classes
of stock to be entered previous to the day of exhibition, were so made
without reference to elements over which they had no control. Only
four teams, however, contested in the ploughing match — one single
yoke of oxen and one pair of horses ; double teams, two yoke of oxen,
and one pair of oxen with one horse.
There were four draught horses entered for premium ; fifteen differ-
ent lots of bulls and bull-calves, consisting of Durhams, Devons, Alder-
neys and Ayrshircs, with some grade animals ; six entries of working
oxen ; five of steers. The towns of Tyngsborough and Dunstable each
entered a string team. Of milch cows there were twenty-one separate
entries. It being requisite that the weight of milk and pounds of but-
APPENDIX vii
ter should be given at various periods, and the principal part of the
labor having been performed, the storm did not diminish the number of
entries in that class materially.
There were on the grounds SoutlMown, Cotswold, Leicester and
Merino sheep, in the seven entries made, and the opinions are at least
as various as the number of breeds as to which is the more profitable.
Ten entries of swine, many individual specimens excellent in appear-
ance. A boar of mixed breed drew the first prize.
Several coops of domestic fowls, of various breeds, all good in their
way. Those Shanghais, we are glad to learn, are becoming more and
more scarce. Farmers ought not to keep cocks whose crow alone will
frighten the children.
One union mowing machine, one horse • rake and a spring bedstead,
were among the machines, inventions and implements. We have seen
a rocking-chair, with a fan adjusted in such a way that the motion of
the cha^r would whirl the fan in the face of the occupant, making respi-
ration easy ; and we imagine a spring bedstead a capital invention for
those who are too lazy to sleep without some mechanical power being
attached to their soporifics.
Of bread, white and brown, some made by matrons and some by
maidens, there were fifty-four parcels, loaves, much of it excellent,
vdth butter enough for it all, there being twenty-one boxes in the hall,
beautiful, yellow oil of the cow.
Twenty-six contributors of vegetables ; and finer, we never saw any-
where. There were two gentlemen, market gardeners, Mr. French and
Mr. Manning, of East Chelmsford, who excel in that branch of indus-
try. That is no disparagement of other contributors.
Seventeen entries of assorted fruit and melons. It is but fair to
remark, however, that a plate of quinces, and several of cranberries, were
entered in this class. In the first-class of apples, five competitors for
the prizes. Number of varieties by each, from twelve to forty-two.
In the second class, consisting of single dishes, and up to ten plates,
there were twenty exhibitors. The show of apples was the best seen
by the Avriter within the last year, with, possibly, one exception. The
single dishes of russet, sweet and Gravenstein shown by the president,
Epiiraim P. Spalding, Esq.^ were very fine. E. H. Warren had a
splendid dish of ladies' sweets, with the bloom carefully retained. Mr.
Sargent, of the Lowell and Boston express, presented a large platter of
the largest and fairest Baldwins of the season. We think said Sargent
made a mistake in varnishing his apples, for a question was raised as to
their identity, and such queries liave before arisen, where the appearance
of fruit lias been materially changed by polishing. Clean fruit, picked
carefully from the trees and shown with the bloom, if it has any,
viii APPENDIX.
appears better thus, than any amount of rubbing can make it. There
was a grand show of pears, yet no Bartletts, owing to the lateness of
the season. Duchess, at a pound each, were plenty. Our Lowell
friends succeed in the productidfi of pears in their gardens, protected by
high fences and walls of buildings, trees planted in soil made fat and
mellow two to four feet deep.
The exhibition of grapes was the finest and most extensive ever
known there.
There were peaches, too, of remarkable size and beauty, which
make us feel a weakness for them.
That portion of the exhibition hall devoted to household manufac-
tures, fancy articles, &c., was literally crammed, mainly brought in on
the afternoon of the 28th.
There were a goodly number of ladies present, some with bedraggled
skirts, but their ardor in no respect dampened. We discussed the din-
ner at one o'clock, when every inch of room was occupied b|- ladies
and gentlemen.
John A. Goodwin, postmaster of Lowell, delivered a spicy address in
the dining hall, followed by others, and some of the others were decid-
edly long, for after-dinner speeches. We advise orators, in preparing
dinner-table speeches, to use much shortening, and more spice.
In concluding, let me assure you the Middlese;? North Society is in
a thriving condition. A very rainy day will occasionally occur, and for
the time put a damper on the proceedings, but no society can claim
exemption from such occurrences. The officers of the society ai'C all
practical men, and intelligent, not in the habit of being frightened by
rain or snow. Men who have successfully pursued their business pri-
vately, will, when associated for a mutual purpose, recognize no such
word as fail.
Asa Clemekt.
MIDDLESEX SOUTH.
As delegate from the State Board of Agriculture, I attended the
eleventh annual exhibition of the Middlesex South Agricultural Society,
held at Framingham, on the 20th and 21st days of September. All
objects and articles for exliibition were arranged on the forenoon of the
first day. Committees to view on the afternoon of same day. All arti-
cles to remain during the second day. Ploughing match on the morn-
ing of the second day ; after which, trial of speed, and draft of horses
and draft of oxen. Dinner served in upper hall at one o'clock. After
APPENDIX." ix
which, the address was delivered by Hon. George S. Boutwell — sub-
ject, " Slieep HusbanAy." After the address, remarks were made by
lion. C. L. Flint and others. The premiums were declared by posting
notice at the different post offices of different successful competitors.
The hall of the society is sixty by ninety feet, two stories, with base-
ment. The grounds of the society enclose six acres. Admission fee,
fifteen cents, other than members. Only three-fourths of the awards of
premiums were paid to those not members.
The show of vegetables in the hall was very good. Liberty Chad-
wick exhibited 152 varieties of vegetables and fruit, among which we
noticed six turnips the Aggregate weight of which was 67 ^ pounds.
Charles Morse, of Ashland, exhibited seven mammoth squashes. H.
G. White exhibited Hubbard squashes, some of which were a part of
41,000 pounds taken from one acre. The show of peaches was limited.
The show of pears and grapes was very fine. J. W. Clark exhibited
thirty varieties of grapes. Wm. H. Howe, of Marlborough, exhibited
forty varieties of apples ; and Crail Howe, of same place, exhibited
thirty-eight varieties of apples. A. S. Lewis exhibited thirty varieties
of pears. Oliver Bennett, Esq., exhibited fifteen varieties of pears,
seven varieties of peaches and one variety of figs ; and on his own
grounds he shows 1,800 pear trees, fifty different varieties — some eight
hundred stands of grapes, twenty-five varieties of out-door grapes,
and twenty-five varieties of hot-house grapes, and a superior peach
orchard of I know not how many varieties ; but of the quality of Mr.
Bennett's fruit we can speak personally, as we were not only feasted at
the time, but were generously furnished beyond that for future test.
There were 256 entries of vegetables by twenty-seven different indi-
viduals. There were exhibited 79 varieties of grapes by twenty differ-
ent individuals; 131 varieties of pears by twenty-six exhibitors; 179
varieties of apples by twenty-two exhibitors. The show of canned
fruits, wines, mead and honey very good. Saw no rye bread.
The show of butter and cheese Avas limited, as also was the show of
agricultural implements and miscellaneous articles.
The show of domestic manufactures and fancy work was not what
we should have expected from the number of intelligent and good-look-
ing ladies we saw present, but suppose their energies may have been
better applied to labors for our patriotic soldiers.
Turning from the hall to the pens of cattle, we found the show of
milch cows, young cattle, fat cattle and working oxen, perhaps, about
what might be expected from the proximity of the show to a large city,
but what would have been called small in some of the more pastoral
districts of the State.
b
X APPENDIX.
There were five entries of blooded bulls, ten entries of working oxen
four entries of fat cattle, nineteen entries of sheep^even entries of swine,
and forty-nine entries of fowls. The show of fowls, more particularly of
Brahmas, was very good. The show of sheep was mostly Southdown,
and exhibited by Mr. H. G. White, and were very fine specimens.
We saw no fine woolled sheep, but think they would be a valuable
accession to any county or county show. There were a few Cotswolds
exhibited. Thomas Hunt, of Sherborn, exhibited a pair of grade
Dutch Durhams, six-years-old fat oxen — weight 4,200 pounds ; they
were very rangy cattle. H. G. White, of Framingham, exhibited his
bull Monitor, (Shorthorn Herdbook No. 5019) — weight 2,200 pounds ; a
very fine animal — in all, twenty head of cattle, fifty-six head of sheep,
four Chester County swine, six coops of Brahma fowls, one yoke of oxen,
weight 3,700 pounds, raised in Middlefield, Hampshire County. Mr.
White's show of stock, fowls and vegetables was very noticeable and
creditable for one man.
We did not notice the horses _in detail, but saw them trying to exhibit
speed inside of a rope-ring, upon a 7 X 9 piece of gromid, which was
grassed over, and our impression was that the society needed a good
half-mile track, or show their horses standing. I notice those who rear
and show blooded neat stock look with utter disgust upon the crowd
who rush to the show of speed horses, forgetful of the purse, brains and
toil required to breed and develop those beautiful points so much
admired by breeders of that class of neat stock. But I believe the
officers of most societies conclude it takes some horse to bring the crowd
which brings funds.
Charles Moulton, of Framingham, called our particular attention to
his exhibition of horses. He has a gray mare indicating speed and
endurance — has been offered $800 for her, has raised from her six colts,
the youngest now a sucking colt of fine promise. Has sold one colt
from her for $1,000. He exhibited a two year old gray from said mare,
which he values at $1,000, weight 850 pounds. Also, a 'colt fifteen
months old, bay — " Dictator," sired by Draco — weight 800 pounds — a
colt not easily beat.
We noticed a pair of twin sucking colts, a sight not often seen, as
mares seldom run their time with twin colts.
The dinner was served in the upper hall. Price of dinner tickets,
$1.50. After which, the address was delivered, and only those who
had dinner tickets could hear the address.
We iK)ticed that of eleven towns represented in the society, Fram-
ingham took, last year, almost two-thirds of the premiums, and will
probably this year take about the same. This is not as it should be.
There wei'C no entries of forest trees, hedges, grain or root-crops.
• APPENDIX. xi
The collection of people the second (Jay was judged to be about
5,000, and we were very favorably impressed with the general quiet,
good behavior and interest, as well as general intelligence manifested by
all persons present ; and as they mingled together, all seemed conscious
of their own and each other's happiness, and that they were having, not
mei'ely in name, but in reality, a farmer's holiday ; and with that con-
stant toil exercised by most formers and their families of INIassachusetts,
it is desirable that they should at times turn for observation and recrea-
tion, and as we saw the interest manifested and pleasure taken, we were
impressed with the fact that our annual fairs are doing very much to
raise the standard of the farmers of Massachusetts.
We cannot close without expressing our profound thanks to the wor-
thy president of this society, William G. Lewis, and secretary, James
W. Brown, for their united and untiring efforts to afford us every facility
for observation, and to make our visit interesting to us ; and also to H.
H. Peters, of Southborough, who came for us at the close of the first day,
and returned with us in the morning, in the intervening time making us
the recipient of his generous board, and showing us one of the best kept,
permanently improved and finest farms in Massachusetts, and also fifty
thoroughbred Ayrshire cows, as much alike as so many pease, and in
just the right condition of flesh to give the greatest flow of milk, and,
we venture to say, the best lot of Ayrshire cows in the United States ;
and we renew our thanks to J. W. Clark, Esq., for his attentions to us,
and for the facilities afforded us of seeing the surrounding towns, and
the thrift and pleasant country homes occupied by the men and families
of persons doing business in Boston, who are afforded every facility of
convenient conveyance by the Boston and Worcester Railroad. Said
road having an eye to its own interest and the interest of its patrons,
by offering such inducements of railroad as are building a continuous
line of country homes from Boston to Worcester, whereby men do busi-
ness in Boston and live with their families in the country. The Boston
and Worcester Railroad and its patrons are on the best of terms. Mr.
Clark has but two acres of land, yet he has it so diversified and laid
out that in observing all that is beautiful and useful, one would think
they were looking over a score of acres; and among the many of his
fruits we were shown a seedling grape," called the St. Catharine, of very
fine quality, which ripens much earlier than the Concord, and is perfectly
hardy. Oliver Bennett, Esq., has also a seedling grape, called the
" Framingham Seedling," of good size and quality, and which ripens
four weeks earlier than the Isabella. To secure a large crop of peaches
every year, and protect his trees, Mr. Bennett collects a few branches
together and binds them in straw, and then binds several of these
together ; and to render the operation more convenient, he cultivates
xii APPENDIX. *
the growth of limbs close to^the ground ; the straw is removed in the
spring, as the blossom buds begin to develop.
With our best wishes for the permanent success of the Middlesex
South Agricultural Society, and all those therewith connected, we turned
our face towards the Worcester Society, at Worcester.
C. 0. Perkins.
WORCESTER.
By invitation of Charles E. Miles, Esq., President of Worcester
Agricultural Society, I had the pleasure of attending the forty-sixth
annual show of that society, held at Worcester on Thursday and
Friday, September 23d and 24th. Upon my arrival at the hall I was
very cordially received by the officers of the society, and the appointed
delegate not being present, I was requested to report in his stead.
By the kind attentions of the Secretary, John D. Washburn, Esq.,
and by access to his books, and through the constant attention of the
worthy president, I was afforded every facility, that I might bear
full testimony to the success and prosperity of this, .one of the oldest
and wealthiest societies in the State, and also representing one of the
best farming districts. The society's grounds inclose sixteen acres, with
a hall fifty by one hundred and twelve feet, and three and one-half
stories high.
The afrangements of this society are that the show of cattle, sheep,
swine, poultry, &c., should be on the first day, as also the dinner and
address, leaving the second day almost entirely to the exhibition of
horses.
There were eleven entries of bulls, sixteen entries of cows, thirty-four
entries of working oxen, seven entries of three-year-old steers, sixteen
entries of one and two-year-old steers, four entries of fat cattle, nine
entries of ewes, seven entries of bucks, and twelve entries of swine.
There was a very fine show of poultry, among which we noticed eight
pure-white swan geese, exhibited by C. B. Pratt, extra fine. M.
L. Wood, of Grafton, exhibited very good Spanish Merino
sheep. We saw some fine specimens of 'swine, of which we think
the Chester County breed takes the preference. William Eames, of
Worcester, exhibited some fine specimens of grade Devon cows, among
which were some that took premiums at tlie New England Show,
Springfield ; and one engaged our particular attention, a bright-red
cow, nineteen years old, being half pure Shorthorn, and half pure
APPENDIX. . xiii
Devon, showing marked evidence of constitution and millcing qualities ;
and we think there are no finer cattle or better workers or milkers than
the intermixture of Durham and Devon stock. John Brooks, of
Princeton, exhibited a large stock of good Jerseys. There was a large
show of fine milch cows from the town of Barre. Col. W. S. Lincoln
exhibited fine Jerseys. AVe think the shoAV of Jerseys the largest and
best we have ever seen. Harvey Dodge, of Sutton, exhibited fine
Devons, and also a large show of vegetables in the hall. We noticed
the very fine thorough-bred Ayrshire bull " Mclvcr," owned by Bela
J. Stone, also the Durham bull " Montauk," owned by Chaffin &
Bigelow, Worcester. We noticed a good many fine steers, particularly
a pair of Devon and native yearling steers, pretty as could be, by
Frank Batchelder, of Sutton. The show of steers Avould have almost
induced us to think we were oh our own native highlands, only more
so, except for one feature. The steers all had their tails nicely shorn
from the roots down, leaving a nice little bush at the end, which struck
us as somewhat of a novelty, but upon second thought, we remembered
that we had seen army blankets for the soldiers that partook more of
hair than wool, inducing us to believe that hair in these war times is an
article of commerce, and that the Worcester County boys might have
an eye to profit as well as trade. We noticed a fine show of cows from
the State Hospital, "VVorcester, some of which were thorough-bred
Durhams ; also a fine pair of oxen. As a whole, the exhibition of
cattle was uncommonly good, and we are well aware that in our brief
notes we have not done justice to all.
The show of implements, both outside, where we saw the farm
implements, and inside, where we saw the indoor, family, labor-saving
machines, was very numerous and good. Every year brings its
improvements and additionSj and farming is fast emerging from drudging
toil to mechanical systemization and brain labor, whereby less pains
show greater gains. The extensive show of implements reminded us
that we were in Worcester, where they do more at the manufacture of
such than in almost any other place in New England.
In the hall we noticed on exhibition over one hundred cheeses, new
and old, sage and old sage, and if looks do not deceive, those who eat
will hardly know when to stop. There was a large display of butter,
and most of it must have been Devonshire butter, at least it was that
color, and one noticeable feature was that it was in boxes holding from
ten to twenty pounds, made in balls of one pound each, and placed in
the box so that they did not touch each other ; the balls were oblong,
some square and some hexagonal ; we suppose they were made for
market, and being made to weight would obviate all necessity of
weighing scales, and we were satisfied would delectate the palates of
xiv • APPENDIX.
the purchasers. The show of vegetables was very good, particularly of
onions, potatoes, squashes, and some of the largest turnips we ever saw.
Of the ladies' department we cannot speak in detail, further than
that there was a fine display, and men and women are, to sum the
whole thing up, the most interesting features of every show; besides,
we were informed, the Worcester Horticultural Society had an
exliibition at the same time, which left the Agricultm'al Society's Hall
a matter of fact and not of fancy.
Tliere were six entries of stallions, nineteen entries of family horses,
seven entries of matched horses, twenty-three entries of colts, and
twelve brood mares. "We cannot speak of their merits from observation,
but judging from the crowd, there must have been merit, as the
attendance on the second day was greater than on the first, with all its
various attractions. This reminds us that our attention has been called
to this subject, and the breeders of thoroughbred stock are very mvich
annoyed that so mucla importance is given to tire horse at our local
shows, and also at the New England Show, and cite the New York
Show as a counter example. The Show of New York is made up,
almost entirely, by rural men, men who are willing to spend a day in
looking at the* good points of a good animal. But Massachusetts is
made up more of mechanics and a manufacturing population, a body of
people who move and like to see things move. These people need
their holiday, and would like to come out and see what the farmers can
show ; and if our shows should embrace only farmers, they would
embrace only a small part of our' community. Our shows find it politic
to cater to the tastes of the mass. Every class has its speciality.
Cattle men enjoy looking at the good points of good cattle; sheep men
at the good points of sheep. More who are judges of neither cattle
nor sheep must find enjoyment somewhere, and judging from the way
things take, the horse furnishes more of it than any other one object.
It may be said that fast horses make fast men, and that such may be
true cannot be denied, when we find that a show here in Massachusetts,
with receipts of over $14,000, cannot be made to pay its Avay ; and the
genuine live Yankee has fast motions and notions which are not to be
despised at home, and he always finds a place abroad, and there is
nothing too fast for him. Think he would ride on the telegraph if he
could only get aboard.
The Worcester Society have a fine dining hall, and it was well filled
at the dinner, after which the society were furnished with an iiateresting
address from William S. Lincoln. Subject : " Virginia as the war found
it, and as it is now leaving it." Ex-Governor Lincoln, of more tlian
eighty years, with whom time has dealt very tenderly, came forward
reluctantly but very pleasantly, to the call of the president, and said that
APPENDIX. XV
forty-six years ago he came forward at the call of the society, and ought to
be excused now. He said some were frightened at prices in connection
with the war, but he thought there was not cause for alarm. He had seen
very much higher prices ; flour $30 per barrel, wool $2 per pound,
sugar oO cents; the time when the girls played on different auisV
from now ; when they could spin yarn that was not street yarn. The
ex-governor was followed by remarks from the worthy Secretary of the
State Board, Hon. Charles L. Flint ; and thus ended a pleasant feature
of the "Worcester Agricultural Society.
C. 0. Perkins.
WORCESTER WEST.
As a delegate from the State Board of Agriculture, I visited the
Worcester West Agricultural Society's exhibition, at Bari-e, Sept. 29th,
1864.
The day was exceedingly rainy and unfavorable for the exhibition,
and, as a matter to be expected, kept away many persons, and also
reduced the number of animals and articles exhibited. •
The first thing my attention was called to was the ploughing match,
which was contested by six single teams, of one pair of oxen each.
One of the teams, owned by Mr. Carpenter, of Charlton, showed
remarkable fine training, and did the work very well. After the
ploughing match was over, I had the pleasure of viewing the cavalcade
and the single and double teams of horses pass around the common.
They made a fine appearance, and embraced many good specimens of
the Morgan breed of horses.
Then came the trial of working oxen and draught horses, which was
well contested by some very fine lanimals. The same can truly be said,
also, of the exhibition of horses and colts, and we noticed many animals
among them that were creditable to their owners. «'
In the pens we found many excellent animals, particularly the milch
cows, nearly all of them grade Durhams ; some of them are evidently
large milkers, and apparently well adapted to the wants of the farmers of
Worcester West, who give their principal attention to the dairy for mak-
ing cheese ; but I would suggest to them that an infusion of the best Jer-
sey blood would make their fine cheese better yet. Still, I came away
tlioroughly impressed, from examination of the stock on exhibition and
stock belonging to farmers in and about Barre, that they have got a
class of animals in these grade Durhams quite well adapted to their
luxuriant pastures and good keeping, and for cheese-making cannot be
excelled, at least in the quantity that they will make.
xvi APPENDIX.
The heifers and heifer calves in the pens, like the cows, were large,
well-developed and well-bred, and were creditable to the society.
There was a small exhibition of sheep, said to be good specimens, and
a meagre show of swine, which at other shows would be called inferior.
™ j^ the town hall there was a fine display of manufactured articles.
Also vegetables, fruits, flowers, butter and cheese. Here the Hard-
wick Cheese Company had a cheese on exhibition weighing 300
pounds, and the Barre Company a number of very fine cheeses of the
usual weight made by them, eighty-five pounds each. Tliis part of the
exhibition attracted a good deal of attention, and was largely attended
during the day.
At one o'clock the services commenced in the church, where the
audience listened to an able and instructive address from ex-Governor
Washburn, after which the society and invited guests partook of a din-
ner at the Massasoit House. After dinner was over, the audience had
the pleasure of hearing speeches full of wit and eloquence, made by
Governor Andrew, ex-Governor Washburn, Hon. Oliver Warner, the
president of the society, and others, which, with reading the awards of
premiums, closed the ceremonies of the occasion.
This society .labors under disadvantages in not owning a lot and
buildings of their own, in which to hold their exhibitions ; and I would
suggest to men of means within the limits, or interested in the society,
to furnish sufficient money for this purpose, and have no doubt that
money spent in this way would be beneficial to the public and to the
farmers of Worcester West.
I left with the impression that this society is doing its share in the
work of improvement by awakening the attention''of the farmers in its
vicinity to the importance of agricultural progress.
By invitation of Mr. Ellsworth, I visited the Barre Cheese Factory,
where they commenced making cheese last spring, and witnessed a por-
tion of the process of converting milk into cheese, which is here done
. in a neat and scientific manner, and so uniform is the method of manu-
facture, that every cheese is nearly alike in size, taste, and quality, and
the company, which is composed of the farmers who furnish the milk,
appear to be well satisfied that it is a better way than to make it in
private dairies, and more 2:)rofitable, and it certainly saves much hard
work to that already over-worked class, of ladies, farmers' wives.
The superintendent of the factory finds that it takes 11^ pounds of
milk in June, and 8^ in September, to make one pound of cheese. The
September cheese is also richer and better than the June. This com-
pany charges outsiders one cent and the whey for each pound of cheese
made, but expect that the whey alone will pay expenses.
APPENDIX. xvii
According to their figures, a milkman^ s can of seven quarts, (which
really holds eight quarts and one pint, wine measure,) full of milk, was
worth for cheese-making at their factory in Barre, in June, a fraction
over thirty-six cents, and in September about forty-four and one-third
cents per can.
In conclusion, I desire to say that I am indebted to the president of
the society, and to Mr. Ellsworth, for their constant and kind attentions
during my stay.
John B. Moore.
WORCESTER NORTH.
'The annual exhibition of the "Worcester North Agricultural Society
opened at the town hall in Fitchburg, on the evening of October 27th.
There was a fine collection of the various products of the garden,
the orchard, the vineyard, and the dairy. The ladies had not failed to
contribute liberally to the attractions and enjoyment of this annual
festival, by offering numerous specimens of fancy and ornamental work.
Among the largest exhibitors of choice fruit were Dr. J. A. Marshal,
Hon. Alvah Crocker, and Dr. Jabez Fisher.
Gardner P. Hawkins, of Fitchburg, showed seventeen vari'eties of
choice apples grown upon his house lot, containing not more than one
acre of ground.
Dr. Fisher exhibited sixty varieties of pears, and six of grapes. Of
the latter, he has six acres — mostly of the Concord variety — in bearing.
The cattle show proper opened on Wednesday morning.
First in the programme, was the ploughing match, at nine o'clock.
The field selected was well calculated to test thoroughly the capacity of
both plough and team, as well as the skill and patience of the plough-
man. Tlie surface was uneven, the soil vai'ying from a some^^ hat
gravelly loam to a hard, clay loam, with a generous sprinkling of small,
loose boulders. The skill with which the work was accomplished under
these difficult circumstances, gave evidence that this was to them only a
specimen of every-day life, and presented no obstacles which these
ploughmen could not readily overcome; except in the case of one
individual, who having exhausted his stock of three plough points, was
obliged to retreat and leave his land unfinished.
One feature in the operations of this society deserves notice, and is
worthy of imitation by other societies. This is the encouragement of
boys, by offering special premiums for ploughing done by minors, and
with steers. Two entries were made in this class, and the skill and
c
xviii APPENDIX.
energy with which these mere lads performed their tasks, as also the
training to which the steers had been subjected, showed that the efforts
of the society in this direction had not been in vain.
At eleven o'clock, came the trial of working oxen, upon a cart loaded
with stones. The load was graduated in exact proportion to the weight
of the oxen, each being required to take (including cart) thirty-three
per cent, more than its own live weight. This is readily arranged by
the addition or removal of stones, each of which has its weight dis-
tinctly marked upon it. In the class of working cattle were thirteen
pairs, mostly well matched, thrifty cattle, of medium size.
The miscellaneous stock was exhibited in pens put up for the occa-
sion upon the common, and consisted in part, of fourteen bulls, twenty-
five cows, five pairs of fat cattle, three fat cows, forty-one heifers and
heifer calves, sixty-six steers, sixteen swine, thii-ty-six sheep, and ten
coops of poultiy.
A good degree of interest is manifested in the welfare of the society,
as indicated by the number of entries. Yet in regard to neat stock, it
appears too evident, that the mass of farmers within the limits of this
society have hitherto been too negligent in the selection of breeding
animals. As, however, the spirit of improvement is already manifest in
the introduction of pure hred bulls, "and as the society have now
excluded all others from their premium list, we may look with confi-
dence for rapid and continued improvement in this important branch of
husbandry.
The exhibition of horses was all, and more than could have been
expected, considering that the society has no suitable place for this
purpose, and also the fact that another organization was holding a horse
show within the limits of the town at the same time.
This last, is a matter over which this society has no possible control,
and to their credit be it said, they are able to maintain the interest in
their strictly agricultural exhibition, while during the whole time a so
called horse fair, is being carried on with a distance of less than two
miles.
The whole number of horses exhibited was ninety-six, viz. : stallions,
ten ; breeding mares, seventeen ; draught and family horses, thirty -four ;
horses in pairs, twelve ; colts, twenty -three.
I have thus glanced hastily and imperfectly at the doings of this
society which is evidently in a healthy and flourishing condition. Its
most apparent present need is that of suitable ground upon which to
hold their exhibitions. This want will doubtless be supplied in due
time, as its officers and members appear to be fully aware of its
importance.
APPENDIX. xix
In closing, I wish to express my thanks to the officers of the society,
and to otliers who cordially welcomed me as your delegate, and who
contributed in various ways to make my visit both jdeasant and
profitable.
P. Stedman.
WORCESTER SOUTH.
On the morning of October 16th, 1864, we found ourself at a board-
ing-house in the centre of Sturbridge.
Recollected riding upon the outside of a stage the preceding evening,
some eight miles, in company with eleven others, a majority of whom
were bound for the cattle show of the Worcester South Agricultural
Society. Inside passengers were crammed in so closely, and darkness
drawing around us long before we reached the village where they began
to alight, we never learned the number who were favored with inside
seats.
The morning referred to dawned inauspiciously, — clouds, dark and
lowering, indicated rain, which, after a time, fell in sufficient quantity
to mystify the minds of many and prevent a large assemblage at an
early hour in the day. As the time approached for the ploughing match,
and desiring to witness the same, I was fortilnate in meeting Dr. Hart-
w^ell, chairman of the committee, when we wended our way to the
ground allotted to that branch of the exhibition. We found that ten
teams had been entered, each single pairs of oxen, and all upon the
ground, ready to contest for the prizes. The land was tough sward,
rendered still more difficult by the drought, from the effects of which it
had not fully recovered. At the appointed time, however, the teams
all started and performed the task assigned in workmanlike manner.
The larger and more efficiently trained cattle got through quicker and
with greater facility than others, yet the work, considering the circum-
stances, was nobly done. Formerly, the land had not been deeply
ploughed, and Ave think the committee acted wisely in demanding
greater depth of furrow slice. Shallow ploughing, except for special
purposes, and where it cannot be avoided, should never be practised.
On returning to the village, the cattle pens were all found to be occu-
pied, and many cattle tied to stakes and posts prepared for that purpose
outside the pens. First, we noticed a Durham bull, seven years old,
and owned by P^dmund Capen, of Charlton. His weight 2,300 pounds,
of good proportions ; but we think he had been kept long enough for
all useful purposes of this world.
XX APPENDIX.
The herd of ten, with nineteen others, half Ayrshire, all the property
of Bela J. Stone, of Sturbridge, were fine appearing animals. Two
pairs steers, two years old, grade Durhams, by S. F. Marsh, of Stur-
bridge, so handsome that the term lubberly could not in justice be
applied to them.
The herd of ten, one and two years old, belonging to Dexter Nichols,
of Sturbridge, grade Devons, were remarkably fine-looking animals.
Simon Carpenter, of Charlton, was on hand with a herd consisting of
a bull, a cow, Avith heifers and steers to make the required number,
which appeared well.
We searched in vain for fat oxen, and were scarcely more successful
in finding any neat stock which was of that class. Two cows alone were
to be found, and, upon inquiry, I was informed that the butchers had
scoured that locality through and through, picking everything to which
the term beef could be applied.
Among the sheep were ten good natives, the property of Bainbridge
Doty, of Charlton. Also, a beautiful buck, " Gen. Grant," seven-eighths
Leicester and one-eighth Cotswold, owned by the Hamilton Woollen
Company.
In a capacious cage upon four wheels, we noticed a large swine.
Made an effort to learn the weight, but did not succeed. A brood of
clean, white, fat, short-snouted pigs pleased us. They looked contented
and sleek — seemed to be taking on fat without making effort to do so.
While looking at those pigs, my mind reverted back to the days when
droves of swine used to pass our place, coming all the way down from
the queen's dominions on the north, which were not unfrequently
denominated " Canada land shad." Sometimes it has occurred to our
mind that they were of that breed which, on one occasion, wei*e beset
by foul spirits, when the whole herd ran violently down a steep place,
and Avere drowned. Be that as it may, they certainly resembled, to
some extent, a female shad on returning to the ocean after the spawning
season, so far as flanks and sides were concerned. With legs nearly
the size of pillars formerly used in supporting an old fashioned piazza —
ears resembling more a blacksmith's apron than anything else — snouts
like a pick-handle, with a flange on the outer end, which enabled them
to dig post-holes or any other holes where it would cause the perspira-
tion to flow freely from a biped to perform the same amount of labor
with the improved implements of the present day. Vast improvements
have been made even in the race of pigs. Well, let them go on.
There were several coops of domestic fowls, which compared favora-
bly with other shows of the kind witnessed on other occasions.
In the town hall, the mechanical department was, in part, represented
by Litchfield & Co., of Southbridge, shuttle-makers. Side by side were
APPENDIX. xxi
. shown the shuttles used in olden time in connection with the hand-loom,
with the various patterns used with the different improved power-looms
of the present day. While viewing them, my thoughts ran back forty
years, to the time when I was required to sit by the "quill-wheel" and
wind quills for my aged grandmother, which she used in just such a
shuttle as one of the samples before me. "What memories revived at
the sight of that old shuttle ! But we cannot stop to relate them here.
Benjamin H. Franklin, of Southbridge, had on exhibition a machine
for boring in corners where a common auger or bit could not be used.
Said machine could be adjusted at will, so as to bore at any desirable
angle, and must be very useful. By the same, a steel ten-foot pole, in
four parts, which could, with facility, be converted into a^ walking stick.
A rather curious and, we should judge, convenient contrivance. Mr.
Franklin had several other machines and tools of his own manufacture,
which evinced skill and ingenuity on the part of the designer.
The handiwork of the ladies was not shown on so extensive a scale
as we have witnessed elsewhere, yet what fancy articles and household
manufactures there were, bespoke taste and judgment on the part of the
contributors to that department.
Mr. Haines, secretary of the society, and the harness-maker of the
village, presented some fine specimens of his handicraft.
There was a superior display of vegetables, in almost endless variety,
George S. Allen, of Brimfield, showing three squashes upon one vine,
the aggregate weight of which Avas 268 pounds. We hope no one
will feel encouraged by this notice to attempt the production of mam-
moth squashes, for they are worthless, except as food for stock, and for
that purpose other vegetable products ai-e more easily raised, besides
being better. For culinary purposes, the turban, marrow and Hubbard
squashes exhibited Avere of the right stamp. In our experience, we
have found the Hubbard squash more hardy and less liable to be
destroyed by bugs than the marrow ; but in dry, hot weather, like that
with which we were visited last summer, it requires much attention to
save squash vines from the ravages of the striped bug, and last, though
not least, the larger pumpkin bug, commoi^y so called. This latter
has the poAver, Avlien disturbed, of emitting a strong odor of national-
ity, or rather of individuality ; for the moment you pinch one, the flavor
is unmistakable. A little air-slacked lime sprinkled over the plants and
on the under side of the leaves, just enough to give them a white coating,
is the best ai'ticle to drive off the striped bug, and Avholesale slaughter
the only effectual remedy for the black marauder.
There was a very respectable display of fruit. Peaches, grapes and
pears, however, were rather scarce. Apples abundant, and fine specimens.
D. R. Taylor, of Warren, showed a plate of what he termed the Golden
xxii APPENDIX.
Eagle, which were large and fine in appearance. L. Draper, Jr., of
Brookfield, a dish of red Winter Sweets. Luther Hammat, of Sturbridge,
contributed thirty-four varieties, some of which were new to us, as were
those previously named. Tlie largest and finest specimens of the Gar-
den Royal we ever saw were there. Mr. Hammat, of whom we have
spoken, we should judge to have seen sixty winters ; he is an enthusiastic
cultivator of fruit. We spent an hour or two in looking over his
grounds, where we saw an apple orchard in excellent bearing condition,
and upon a side-hill among the rocks, where never a plough entered the
soil, and probably never will, owing to the impracticability of driving a
team where the natural impediments cannot be overcome. The trees
were all grafted with choice varieties. A part of the season, sheep are
permitted to graze among the rocks in the orchard.
The fair continued two days. George S. Hillard, Esq., of Boston,
delivered the address, which was listened to with marked attention by a
large audience.
After the oration, a procession was formed — mai'ched to the dining-
hall, where ample justice was done to the viands prepared for the occa-
sion. The inner man having been well cared for. Dr. Hartwell was
called upon for a speech. The doctor related a thrilling incident that
occurred in his early manhood, and in which he was an interested party,
the relation of which brought down the house. There were many
ladies at the dinner table, and all about the hall and grounds. The
fairer portion of creation seemed to enjoy what was going on quite as
well as the sterner sex.
On the second day, many fine horses were on the ground for exhibi-
tion, and there was some trotting round' the common ; though, owing to
the great crowd of spectators, much caution had to be exercised.
Our visit was an agreeable one, and our thanks are due to Mr. Hub-
bard, president of the society. Dr. Hartwell, Mr. Haines, Luther Ham-
mat, Esq., and others, for courteous attentions during our sojourn of forty
hours in Sturbridge.
Asa Clement.
WORCESTER SOUTH-EAST.
The Worcester Soutli-East Society held its annual show at Milford,
on the 27th and 28th of September.
The first day was spent in preparing matters and things out of doors
and at the hall, with the exception of showing horses. The trial of
carriage horses came off according to programme, at 1 o'clock, P. M. ;
APPENDIX. xxiii
the trial of farm horses at 5^ o'clock, P. M. Tliese trials took place
precisely at the time, and this punctuality was kept up through the
exliibition ; which is the first principle in all transactions. The driving
of carriage horses was rather promiscuous than otherwise, they having
no special track. Some fine horses were there. The trial of draft
horses was very respectable. Having arrived the previous evening, I
stopped at the well-kept house o^ Wm. H. Staples. The first day went
with Mr. Carpenter and saw some three hundred pear trees, in success-
ful bearing. Called at Mr. Putnam's, who had a large amount of
squashes and a great variety, some of which he exhibited, together
witli many other vegetables, most of which were hard to be 1)eaten.
The show in the hall, in its sevei-al departments, was good ; that of
apples, very extensive ; but the lustre made on them by rubbing, is not
in good taste with me. The ladies exhibited some fine specimens of
their skill, among which was an artificial flower tree, that discovered
great ingenuity in its formation.
Second Day. — The ploughing took place at 8i^ o'clock, A. M. I
think there were twelve entries, two of liorses, The famous cattle
that took the first premium at the New England Fair were there.
Without particularizing, the work was as well done, if not the best,
that I have ever seen, and was viewed by more than two thousand peo-
ple. • The show at the park of draft oxen and teams was respectable ;
sheep and swine pretty fair, but not large in number. The various
kinds of fowls were well represented.
An extra dinner came off at half-past twelve o'clock, got up by Mr.
Staples; at 1^ o'clock marched to the church, to the music of the Mil-
ford brass band ; here were feared by the flow of soul and science, by
F. D. Huntington, D. D., of Boston, whose subject was, " The Odds
and Ends of Farming."
I would here say that Milford, in 1830, contained sixteen hundred
inhabitants ; it now claims ten thousand.
The first day of the fair, Mr. Mayhew — who, by the way, I think
very much of a gentleman — invited the Secretary of the Board of
Agriculture, with myself, to his fine residence, and feasted us on pears
and otherwise refreshed us.
I was under the necessity of leaving for the cars before the reading
of premiums, and not having any report of them, I stop here, by giv-
ing n^ good wishes for their success, and thanks for the gentlemanly
treatment by the officers and others whose acquaintance was made.
Alured Homer.
xxiv APPENDIX.
HAMPSHIRE, FRANKLIN, AND HAMPDEN.
The annual exhibition of the Hampshire, Franklin, and Hampden
Agricultural Society was held at«Northampton, on Thursday and Fri-
day, October 6th and 7th. The collection of cattle, though not so
large as has been exhibited on former occasions, was highly creditable
in quality. The Shorthorns, which have so long been bred in this
region, predominated, and presented all the attractions for which that
breed is so remarkable. It is doubtful whether, in any other part of
New lilngland, the introduction of this blood has been pursued with so
much care, and attended with so much success, as in this. The selection
and breeding of pure-bred herds have been pursued here with great
judgment and diligence, by men who would have made their mark as
farmers, in any section of the country. And it is well known that some
of the most successful attempts at tile improvement of cattle by long-
continued admixture of Shorthorned blood, have been made within the
limits of this society. Nature has done much to encourage this branch
of industry in this valley and the territory adjoining. It is here that
the most successful experiments in reclaiming pasture lands have been
made ; and the soil has seldom refused to furnish an abundance of
herbage, when it has been subjected to judicious treatment.
The herds of Paoli Lathrop, Esq. and Milo J. Smith, Esq., in which
the best Shorthorned blood has been introduced and kept in all its
purity, were exhibited as specimens of the quality of that breed of
cattle, which has done so much for the agriculture of the valley of the
Connecticut ; and they certainly bore strong testimony in favor of the
family to Avhich they belong.
Passing from these to the grade animals, whose parentage on the
male side has been kept pure for many generations, and which represent
the value of this mode of breeding, we come to the herd of the Messrs.
Anderson, of Shelburne. The excellence of these animals is a striking
illustration of what can be done by diligent attention to the selection of
breeding animals, and by a careful and patient effort to render a farm
well adapted to a rapid development of the animal structure. Not
many years ago, the farm of the Messrs. Anderson corresponded pretty
well, both as regards stock and condition of the pastures and tillage
lands, with most of the farms about it. It was then capable of produc-
ing ordinary crops and ordinary cattle. Now its pastures in summer,
and its mowing lands for winter, are capable of feeding such animals
that nineteen of them weigh 26,500 pounds, and bear all the proportions
of the most thrifty cattle. An increase of weight to the amount of 500
pounds in one year, has frequently been made by some of these animals.
And it would be a most interesting and valuable addition to the agricul-
APPENDIX. XXV
tural records of the Commonwealth, if the Messrs. Anderson would
furnish a statement of the profits which have attended their mode of
rearinj^ heavy cattle on a New England firm.
The exhibition of sheep was confined to the English varieties, South-
downs, Cotswolds, &c., and was consequently small.
The exhibition of fruit in the hall was excellent. From the town of
Hatfield there were collected 170 plates of apples and other fruit. The
show of pears was good ; and that of grapes was quite remarkable. Of
the out-door varieties, Isabellas and Concords far outnumbered all others.
The specimens of vegetables exhibited indicated great care and skill in
the cultivation.
Of the remaining attractions, the address, the dinner, and the trials
of speed, it is sufficient to say that they furnished the instruction and
entertainment usually expected on such occasions.
The society is in a flourishing condition, and on its anniversary brings
together some of the most enterprising and successful farmers of the
Commonwealth. For cattle and field crops it stands in the front rank.
There is no doubt that it will one day exhibit wool-growing sheep, as
another and a highly profitable pi'oduct of its fine hill-pastures, and
luxuriant meadows. Geo. B. Loring.
FRANKLIN.
The fifteenth annual cattle show and fair of the Franklin County
Society was commenced Thursday, September 29th. A severe rain-
storm set in about eight o'clock in the morning, which kept away some
stock and large numbers of people. The show, notwithstanding the
unfavorable weather, was an excellent one.
There were on the ground five herds of from 15 to 30 each, and
better herds cannot probably be gathered together from any county in
the Commonwealth. The cattle were mostly grade Shorthorns, although
there Avere numerous thoroughbred animals. These were mostly Short-
horns, though there were several Jerseys.
Among the most noticeable animals thoroughbred, w^ere the Short-
horns of George E. Taylor, of Shelburne, and Josiah Fogg, of Deerfield,
each having a herd of 15 superior animals.
Among the best grade Shorthorns was the herd of the Andersons of
Slielburne, of 22 head, which are much admired wherever exhibited, and
which are not beaten in any part of the country ; and Avhose excellence
is due in a great measure to the care bestowed upon them and the man-
ner of making the hay on which they are fed in winter, and to the
d
xxvi APPENDIX.
improvement of their pastures, so that there is a steady and rapid
increase from the time they are calved till they are turned over to the
butcher, — a course which gives them larger profits, and well .deserves
the imitation of farmers generally.
Also the herd of O. O. Bardwell, of 27 head ; of P. D. Martindale,
of 20 head, and of George P. & W. W. Carpenter, of 30 head, — not a
poor animal among them.
The working oxen and steers were numerous, and all of them a credit
to their owners. There were no town teams exhibited. There were
several specimens of Jerseys which were good, and various other
animals, too numerous to mention, all of which were good ; and, as a
whole, I have never seen the neat stock exhibited at this fair equalled
by any county.
The show of sheep was, perhaps, never equalled in the State, there
being about 500 head on the grounds, and many of superior quality.
Among them five flocks of from 40 to 120, each contesting for the
Grennell premium.
This large display of sheep indicates that the farmers of this county
find the growing of sheep a profitable branch of farming, and one which
farmers in other parts of the State, where sheep are almost unknown,
would also find profitable. Among the benefits of sheep husbandry are
the quick returns which the farmer gets from his investment, and also
the ease and comparatively small sacrifice with which he can reduce his
stock to his fodder, in case of a short crop of hay like the present, and
also the readiness with which he can stock up again without purchase,
by taking a little extra pains in raising lambs, so that many a farmer
has benefited his flock by the process more than he has sacrificed.
The show of swine was good, and, although not large, they would all
do honor to any farmer's pen.
The show of poultry was small, but of good quality.
There were but few agricultural implements on the ground.
The show in the hall was excellent, and one of the noticeable
features was that almost every article was of superior quality.
There was a good display in the mechanical arts, and the articles
were somewhat numerous.
There were of fruits 34 entries, 16 of apples, some entries comprising
over 30 varieties ; 8 of pears in one instance, consisting of 18 varieties;
10 of miscellaneous, embracing quinces, peaches, grapes, &c., together
with basket of last year's apples.
There were 46 entries of bread, 19 of butter, 5 of cheese, and 62 of
domestic manufactures, 41 of fancy articles and needle-work, 13 of fine
arts, 28 of flowers, said to be the best display of flowers ever made in
the hall, and it was indeed a splendid sight.
APPENDIX xxvii
Of maple sugar and honey there were 11 entries; miscella-
neous articles, 11; pickles, preserves, jellies and canned fruits, 13;
vegetables, 44.
By far the richest display was in fruits and flowers. The fruits were
as tempting to the palate, as the flowers were pleasing to the eye,
especially the grapes, one entry of which consisted of 2.5 varieties.
The numerous specimens of bread and butter did great credit to the
ladies of this society, especially the butter, which I never saw equalled
in any society, in quality ; and it was evident that if the husbands know
how to raise the best stock in the. State, the wives know as well how to
manage the dairy. As a whole, the show in the hall was one of the
best the society ever held.
At four o'clock a procession was formed and marched to the society's
grounds, where an address was delivered from the juclges' stand by the
Hon. Henry L. Dawes. The subject was, " The Massachusetts Farmer,
as he was and as he is to be." It contained much to interest and
instruct. The rain continued during the entire delivery, and but a few
hundred people were there to hear it.
Friday, the day for the horse show, opened with a heavy rain. The
members of the society soon began to make their appearance in the
street, but owing to the continued I'ain and mud, at an informal meeting
of the society it was voted to postpone the horse show till Tuesday,
October 4th, so that I left without seeing the thing finished, and can
make no groat report of its doings, but can say from newspaper reports,
and from report of members, that the entries were large, and the show
one of the best of tlie society.
This exhibition of tlie society has demonstrated that there is no lack
of interest among the members, and that stock raising, and agriculture
generally, is steadily progressing in the county.
The business of the society appears to be conducted with fidelity,
energy and ability, and is doing great good to the community.
Matthew Smith.
HAMPDEN EAST.
As delegate of the Board of Agriculture, I attended the annual exhi-
bition of the Hampden East Agricultural Society, at Palmer, on the
10th and 11th of October. The members of this society had on exhibi-
tion specimens in all the usual departments of our agricultural shows.
The ploughing match, trial of working oxen, exhibition of horses, had
each their allotted hour. There were fine specimens of young stock,
xxviii APPENDIX.
two and three years olds. Butter, cheese, vegetables, fancy work, and
domestic manufactures, were creditably represented ; but the stock
department, as a whole, both of horses and cattle, was decidedly inferior.
Tlie show of men and women, of active, inquiring, interested s^iectators, .
was deplorably small. And, though it was my pleasure to meet many
wide-awake, intelhgent farmers of Eastern Hampden, yet I could not
avoid the conviction that there was, in the section over which that society
operates, a great lack of interest in the aims and objects for which the
society was organized ; and that if the Hampden East Society would
make the best, nay, the legitimate nse of the bounty of the State, great
.exertion should be made to arouse that agricultui'al community to the
importance and necessity of making a better use of their opportunities.
A good audience of the citizens of Palmer assembled in one of the
village churches, and listened to an address of Mr. Blair, one of the
estimable citizens of that town. Levi Stockbridge.
BERKSHIRE.
The annual exhibition of the Berkshire Society was held at Pitts-
field, on the 4th, 5th, and 6th of October, and was highly successful.
The interest which belongs to this long-established society, one of the
oldest in the country, is such as to render it a special object of atten-
tion. And it is gratifying to know that its prosperity and vigor
are not in any way diminishing. The record which it possesses is of
unusual value. Its founders and early patron^ were men Avho had
large comprehension of the importance of agriculture, and applied intel-
ligence and industry to their labor on the land. The attitude assumed
by them toward all matters of public importance, and their understand-
ing of the wants of our country which the farmer could supply, render
their written opinions, as found in the first manuscripts of the associa-
tion, suggestive and valuable. It is somewhat remarkable that this zeal
and industry, so worthy of all imitation, in furnishing contributions to
the agricultural literature of the country should not be imitated by
those who now conduct the affairs of the society. Berkshire is one of
the most interesting agricultural sections of our State. Its farming is
varied and successful ; and it is to be hoped that for the future some
more tliorough record of the transactions of the society, and of the
modes of agriculture which it is called upon to encourage, will be
secured and published.
The entries at the exhibition, in all its branches, were sufficiently
large. Some of the crops it may be well to enumerate, as significant of
APPENDIX. xxix
the industry which occupies the attention of the farmers there. Of
spring wlieat there were 5 entries ; of winter rye, 13 ; of oats, 18 ; of
meslin, 5 ; of barley, 13 ; of grass, 4 ; of sowed corn, 2 ; of corn, 25 ;
of beans, 3 ; of flax, 1 ; of tobacco, 7 ; of carrots, 1 ; of turnips, 2 ; of
ruta-bagtis, 1. The quahty of these products was good ; and it was
encouraging to find so many entries in this Large grain-growing section
of the State, in accordance with the rules laid down by the Board of
Agriculture, for securing an accurate account of the mode of cultiva-
tion and the crop. We truly wish that these statements were published
in full by the society. Those methods of cultivation which will produce
36 bushels of wheat to the acre, 70 bushels of winter rye to the acre,
88f bushels of oats to the acre, 45^ bushels of barley to the acre, 72^
pounds of corii to the rod, " the green weight on an average rod of
ears," as stated by the committee, or 11,500 pounds to the acre, — ought
to be carefully recorded for the benefit of those in other parts of the
Commonwealth, who are striving to raise good crops. These returns
are worthy of special notice.
Of vegetables, and articles of food, the entries were numerous. And
the butter and cheese, those important farm-products, weve well made,
and indicated a highly commendable care and skill. To enumerate the
household manufactures would -be impossible in the short space allowed
us ; and to praise their appearance, would be only to repeat compli-
ments which the farming community of Berkshire have so deservedly
received for many years.
The quality of the cattle on exhibition was excellent, and in their
shape and variety they indicated judgment and care in breeding. The
oxen especially attracted our attention, as peculiarly fitted for farm-
work, by their compact and well-formed structures, and for the shambles
by their well-organized systems. There were also many well-made and
conveniently-sized colts and horses.
The show of sheep was highly encouraging. It is evident that very
considerable attention has been given here to the improvement of wool-
bearing sheep within the last few years ; and there were flocks on
exhibition which might vie with some of the best in Vermont, or any
other State, where the Merino is brought to high perfection. It appears
that the hills of Berkshire are well-adapted to the feeding of the
" improved American Merinos." The production of the heaviest fleece
with the least amount of food in winter, and on pastures where heavy
cattle and coarse-wooUed mutton sheep would starve, is found to be a
very profitable branch of agriculture, and it cannot be too strongly urged
upon that section of the State, where this industry is already advancing.
Farmers who have passed through the trials and disappointments which
attend the breeding of French Merinos and Saxonies, and have learned
XXX . APPENDIX.
that the Spanish Merino as developed in New England, is a hardy and
profitable animal, have learned how to turn their pastures and their
coarse fodder to the best account. They have obtained an animal
which can bear our winters well, roams over our hills with natural apti-
tude, furnishes an ample return in wool during his life, and supplies the
table with the choicest and cheai^est-made mutton, when he is brought
to the stall and the shambles. There are sheep whose sluggish and
delicate organization requires constant pampering, and that luxuriance
of feed which may be obtained on highly-cultivated fields, or in a stall
well supplied with gi'ain ; and which are unfit for the toil of feeding on
our steep and rugged hill-sides. There are undoubtedly localities in
which they may be profitably fed. But let those who suppose that the
Merino is a delicate animal which must be sheltered from every shower,
remember the long journeys whi'ch he performs in his native mountains,
and the exposure which he endures with impunity in every part of
Europe, and in every section of the United States. Choice bucks and
ewes, kept for the value of their blood, are carefully housed in order to
exhibit their full capacity for growing strong and heavy fleeces — wool
especially adapted to the most profitable branches of American manu-
factures— and not because the delicacy of their constitution requires it.
So the breeder of Shorthorns, or Ayrshii'es, or Devons, or Herefords,
endeavors, by shelter and careful feeding, to show the capacity of his
animals, and to improve and develop those qualities which he desires
to transmit with their blood ; knowing as he does that the acquired
faculties become at last a part of the nature which the breeding animal
can hand down to his descendants.
We have seen the heavier breeds of sheep fond of the idleness and
confinement of the fixrm-yard and slow to leave it. But not so of the
Merino and some of the excellent mountain breeds of Wales and Scot-
land, to which we can appropriately apply the words of Bloomfield in
his refreshing rustic poem, " The Farmer's Boy," where he says : —
" For the luxuriant their grassy food,
Sheep, long-contined, but loathe the present good,
Bleating around the homeward gate they meet,
And starve and pine with plenty at their feet.
Loosed from the winding lane, a joyful throng,
See o'er yon pasture, how they pour along."
It is this ability to roam which peculiarly adapts the Merino to our
hilly lands, and which added to his heavy yield of wool and his easily
fed carcase, makes him a profitable animal — the chosen sheep of Ver-
mont, and Ohio, and New Hampshire, and Maine, and Illinois, and
Texas, — the favorite of the best fai'mers in Virginia before that State
• APPENDIX. xxxi
was ravaged by war. The most important and growing industry of
this last State which was broken up by the war, was the feeding of
Merino slieep recently introduced by those farmers who appreciated the
importance of this wool-growing animal.
We trust the farmers of Berkshire will not falter in the path upon
which they have entered ; and that their next exhibition will show as
much perfection in this, as in the other branches of agriculture.
Geo. B. Loring.
HOUSATONIC.
The fair of the Housatonic Society was held on their grounds in
Great Barrington, on the 28th, 29th and 30th days of September.
Necessary engagements elsewhere' prevented my attendance the first
day, an event that I regretted, as I learned on my arrival that the
exhibition of all stock, excepting horses, is confined to that day, and the
more, as the show in this department was said by those who witnessed
it to have been very fine.
After making the acquaintance of some of the officers of the society,
I learned from them that its condition continues to be flourishing, as,
indeed, everything connected with the operations indicated.
There being, when I arrived, but little doing abroad, I made my
examination of the hall. The first object that arrested my attention, so
different from anything in those parts of the State, with which I am more
familiar, was the magnificent display of butter ; not in diminutive boxes
of five pounds each, and those few in number at that, but in solid jars
of twenty-five to fifty pounds, and not an inferior article, to judge from
the appearance, in the whole. When I compared this artistic produc-
tion, so indicative of the higher New England thought, and so connected
with the refining influence of cultivated domestic life, with the coarse
weed that covers so large a portion of the fertile lands bordering on the
Connecticut, I could scarcely refrain from the feeling that the farmere
of Berkshire tower aloft in the true spirit . of their profession as far
above those of my native valley, as her grand mountain peaks above
our own smoke-producing plains.
Compare the two products together. They are the very opposites of
each other. One suggests filth, the other cleanliness. The cultivation
of the one brings the outer man into continued contact with worms and
dirt, oftentimes defiling the conscience as well by laying it under con-
tinued protest, while its use is atteuded frequently with habits that set
xxxii APPENDIX. ' •
at defiance all attempts at sanitary reform. The production of the other,
on the contrary, leads one to the fresh clover pastures where the bees
sing. It takes you to the side of the motherly animal who offers you for
the mere pressure of the hand, and the softer and cleaner the better, a
pi'oduction freighted with the aroma of nature's choicest compounds ; then
to the dairy-room, cool and sweet, and to the various processes which
convert the flowing nectar into golden globules fit for the banquet of a
king. Follow it now to its use, and you will see that it ministers to
nothing but the legitimate wants of man ; that it goes only where civil-
ization and refinement go. It finds its place- by the side of " the cup
that cheers but not inebriates," making itself at once the crown and
solace of the board. There were some fifty entries in this department,
and I have no better wish for the exhibition than that for fifty years to
come they may never exchange this wholesome product for the cultiva-
tion of a plant that is ah'eady " nigh unto cursing, and whose end is to
be burned."
In my further examination of the hall, I found the usual variety of
contributions, though of course they were not all of equal excellence,
The Indian corn was fine ; some specimens of twelve-rowed being equal
to any I ever saw. This is no more, perhaps, than might be expected
in a county which boasts the present season, a field of sixty acres in
one body.
The exhibitions of vegetables was fair, but not remarkable.
In the department of fruit I noticed, particularly, fine specimens of
peaches and grapes.. Of the latter an exliibition of ten varieties labelled
" Thompson's Seedlings," particularly attracted my attention. Not
having seen the exhibition, I can say nothing of their peculiar qualities,
but, in appearance, they compared favorably with most of the seedlings
that are now coming into popular favor.
Tlie show of domestic manufactures was no way remarkable. I shall
by no means attribute this to any want of industry or skill on the part
of the fair women of Berkshire County, but rather to some of those
untoward chances which sometimes attend the best efforts.
It is pleasant to see that among the fine tastes whose cultivation is on
the increase among us, flowers are fast taking the place they so well
deserve. The managers of the Housatonic Society are doing a Avise
thing in introducing them into the hall of exhibition. Their exact use-
fulness, indeed, it may be hard to define, because the impressions they
make arc evanescent and etherial like themselves; but there is no doubt
that in the wise economy of Him who creates beauty for its own sake,
and has given to man the answering faculty of admiration, certainly
there seems to be no doubt that the grateful interchange of the two,
tends only to the cultivation of those higher forms of social life which
APPENDIX. xxxiii
make the home radiant with beauty, and fragrant with the purest
affections.
My observations out of doors were confined mainly to the ploughlng-
match which took place on the morning of the last day, and to sundry
trials of the speed of horses on the track. The ploughing-match
elicited the usual amount of interest, and showed commendable dexterity
in this important art.
The trotting came off according to the programme, although the rain
had put the track into bad condition. Your delegate is not a connois-
seur in the sport, and therefore will not go into particulars. The most
noticeable thing to him was the great good humor that prevailed in
spite of the unfavorable circumstances. Having his own ideas of beauty
in the horse, and the purposes for which he should be bred, he ventures
the opinion, though with some fear of being thought heretical, that the
attention given to the track of late, has not improved the style of our
horses, or their quality for usefulness. "We are losing the most valuable
characteristics of the Morgans, compactness of frame, fine action, courage
and endurance, and getting instead, the ungainly form and tender
constitution of the racer.
I can only say, in conclusion, that, while the weather was most unfav-
orable for the festivities of the occasion, it saemed in no wise to damp
the ardor and enthusiasm of the people who turned out in crowds, and
whose tastes seemed so well-balanced that they were equally ready to
pass judgment on a pen of cattle, to listen to a learned address, or to
enjoy a two-forty trot.
To the officers, and others connected with the society, I tender my
thanks for their many attentions.
T. G. Huntington.
HOOSAC VALLEY.
Agreeably to my appointment, I attended the fifth annual cattle show
and fair of the Hoosac Valley Society, at North Adams, September
20 and 21, 1864.
The society have about twenty aci'es of land enclosed, upon which is a
good track for the trial of horses, and a hall for the exhibition of the
various articles contributed, costing about $1,500. The weather was
fine, and the people were out in good numbers. The following is a list
of the entries :
Articles in the hall, 249; agricultural crops, 108; fixt oxen, 6;
working oxen, 1 3 pairs ; young stock, 1 1 ; two and thi-ee year old
xxxiv APPENDIX.
steers, 1 6 pairs ; dairy and breeding cows, 8 ; milch cows and heifers,
8; bulls, 9 ; strings of cattle, 2; fine-wool sheep, 15 lots; coarse-wool
do., 6 lots; flocks qf 10 sheep, 3 entries; swine, 5 entries ; poultry, 14
entries; matched horses, 14 pairs; single horses, 14; stallions, 6;
breeding mares, 1 1 ; trotting hoi'ses, 3 ; three and four year old colts,
19 ; younger colts, 29. The cattle were exhibited the first day, with
the exception of seven yokes of fine cattle from Lenox. The show of
cattle was not as good as it should be.
No premiums are given for thoroughbred males, consequently some
animals of that class, owned in the vicinity, were not at the show. I
hope the society will take measures to bring out that important class of
animals at their next annual show. I would also recommend to the
society to increase their premiums on young stock, to encourage the
raising of good animals. As a great many of our dairy farmers are in
the practice of selling their milk, I would recommend two classes of
premiums for milch cows — one for milk, the other for butter. There
was no ploughing match and no trial of working oxen. Now, I would
as soon judge of the merits of a fast horse, by examining him in the
stable, as to decide upon the good qualities of a pair of working oxen
while they were chained to a post. There was a town team from
Florida containing some _ good cattle. A large portion of the cattle
upon the ground were a cross with the Durham. In the hall there was
a good exhibition of butter and cheese, and some samples of maple
sugar that it would be difficult to excel ; also some fine specimens of
preserves, jellies, wines, &c. Some good vegetables, though the supply
was not large. The fruit was exhibited in glass cases. Some fine pears
were exhibited, but the apples (probably owing to the season) were not
as good as usual. The manufactures of North Adams were well
represented ; also the fine ai'ts, floral and fancy departments.
The second day was devoted to the show of horses. As many ani-
mals of that class are raised in the vicinity, much interest was mani-
fested in that part of the show. The address, which was to come off on
the afternoon of the second day, I cannot report upon, as I left about
one o'clock, P. M. Good order prevailed during my stay. The officers
of the society were active in their exertions to promote its interests ;
and in their politeness and hospitality did not forget the delegate from
this Board.
Abel F. Adams.
APPENDIX. XXXV
NORFOLK.
The sixteenth annual fair of the Norfolk Agricultural Society, was
held at Dedliam on the 29th and 30th of September, 18G4.
The first day was principally occupied in arranging the products in
the hall for the full exhibition on the following day. The ploughing
match came off on the first day. There were fifteen teams which com-
peted for the premiums, most of them double teams. Some of them
were made up of four horses, others of three horses, four of them Avith
two horses, others with one yoke of oxen and one horse. They were
such teams as the farmers used in working their land.
These teams differed materially from those which we see on similar
occasions in "Worcester County, where most of them are composed of
a single pair of oxen, which are driven by the ploughman alone. It is
not usual, at our cattle shows, to see fifteen teams at work for the
awards.
These teams were all well trained, and performed their work with
ease, and in the most finished manner.
The interest taken in this ploughing match, is a strong evidence that
the people of this county will continue to cherish and support this
branch of our State agricultural institutions, with all their zeal and
efforts to which it is entitled.
During the first day the stock of various kinds was placed in the
pens for the next day's exhibition. A spading match also came off,
which I had not the opportunity of seeing. At noon a collation was
provided in the upper hall, in true farmers' style, composed of the
substantials of life, such as meat, bread, butter, and cheese. This was
partaken of by about one hundred of those interested in the farmers'
holiday.
All things were arranged for a grand display on the following day.
The expectations of a brilliant day, which was to come, were most
decidedly dampened by the weather. It commenced raining about
nine o'clock, and continued to pour down in torrents until late in the
afternoon.
This bountiful rain, so much needed upon the dry ground, was not
very acceptable to the guests, who could not be convinced that their
clean dresses needed this showery ablution.
The display of fruits and flowers in the lo^er hall was unusually
attractive.
The vegetables also were very plentifully exhibited, and in quality
were all that could be expected in connection with the dryness of the
season.
xxxvi APPENDIX.
The exhibition of handicraft work, both useful and ornamental, has
not been surpassed but by few in the State. Although the rain cut off
the entertainment in the grounds, it increased the attention in the hall,
which became most severely crowded. In fact, all that were able to
procure admission, sought the hall for protection, not leaving a sufficient
number in the field for picket duty.
Many were regretting the inability of Hon. Marshall P. Wilder (the
president,) to be present. They were free to confess that he had been
the life of the society. He did not, however, fail to send in his
contributions for " exhibition only."
This one fact of the relation of Mr. Wilder to this society, affords a
sufficient evidence of its importance and of its permanent continuance.
Although it appeared, at first view, that its principal corner-stone was
removed by the illness of Mr. Wilder, quite as far as could be seen, the
structure was not in the least shaken.
This society stands upon the industrious, skilful, and intelligent
farmers of Norfolk County.
These farmers are booked up in their business. Many of them keep
farm accounts, and are able to inform any inquirer, the cost of their
productions, the market value, and the profits accruing therefrom.
These agriculturists, to me, were the most interesting portion of the
exhibition, knowing that from casualties crops sometimes fail, but such
intelligence never fails. A very slight examination during the rain,
within the paling of the grounds, found a very fair display of neat stock
and some splendid specimens of Cotswold sheep.
Soon after noon, the guests of the society assembled in the dining-
hall to partake of the repast. Plates were laid for about six hundred,
which were all occupied.
John Gardner, Esq., of Dedham, presided, who made some very
pertinent remarks in relation to the discomfiture of the weather, but
complimented the society upon the fullness of the exhibition.
Hon. Henry F. French, of Cambridge, favored the company with a
very learned address in relation to the State Agricultural College.
Hon. George S. Boutwell spoke at some length on national affairs,
expressing his confidence in the speedy I'eturn of peace, union, and
prosperity, on a sound basis of justice.
Several other gentlemen followed by brief and pertinent remarks.
After the exercises at the table, the premiums awarded by the
committee were announced.
Here, as in all otlier societies with which I have any acquaintance, I
find an error in disposing of the premiums, which should be corrected.
It is in preferring monstrous growth and size to good quality and
APPENDIX. xxxvii
quantity, without consideration of the cost of production, or a profitable
return for expenditures.
A monstrous Valparaiso squash, almost worthless, raised at great cost
of manure, will often be admired by a committee and selected for the '
first premium on vegetable productions, setting aside the little excellent
Hubbard for no other consideration than the enormous ponderosity of
the former.
The same mistake frequently occurs in the premiums for pears.
Our pomologists will exhibit a dozen Flemish Beauty pears, the
whole pi'oduct of a single tree, some of them, perhaps, weighing eighteen
ounces, all the others, which were set for growth upon the tree, having
been removed for the purpose of producing this unnatural size.
Another fruit-grower will show the Committee samples of the same
kind of fruit of medium magnitude taken from a tree in equal condition,
the product of which was one bushel. In most of such cases, the com-
mittee would favor the largest size. If twelve peai's from one tree were
sold for ten cents each, it would amount to $1.20. The sale of the
bushel from the other tree would be cheap at $3. Certainly the bushel
should be preferred for the prize.
This same admiration for monstrosities in magnitude is frequently
noticed in the choice of some animals, particularly among those compos-
ing the porcine and bovine races. But I am pleased to say that it does
not apply to horsed and sheep.
These two races of animals have received more attention in breedinor
in this country than all others, and their qualities are better understood
than any other production from the farm, and our New England may
justly be proud that they are not equalled in excellence in any other
part of the world.
The weight of our best blood horses, such as the Morgan and Black-
hawk, is about ten hundi'ed pounds. Ask any intelligent farmer how
much he would like a horse to weigh. He will answer without
hesitation, about ten hundred pounds.
This seems to be a question about which there can be no controversy,
for the very reason that upon no subject of agi-iculture are the people
so well informed.
Our best Infantado Merino sheep seldom exceed in weight one
hundred and twenty-five pounds.
Would a committee well acquainted with the valuable qualities of
sheep give a premium to one weighing two hundred pounds if half the
surface of his skin was covered with hair, in preference to a small
Merino with a perfect fleece? I think not, for the value of this animal
is well understood.
xxxviii APPENDIX.
I do not believe that any man of common capacity would wish for a
sheep as large as a horse, or a horse as large as an elephant. We
should be content with the construction within which nature has fixed
the type of all animal and vegetable productions.
I trust that when we shall become better informed we shall be as
well qualified to judge of the most perfect magnitude for all animal and
vegetable productions,, as we are now to fix upon the best and most
perfect sizes for our horses and sheep.
Let this board protest against allowing premiums for any monstrosities
either in animal or vegetable productions.
Samuel Hartwell.
BRISTOL.
The Bristol County Agricultjaral Society held their forty-first annual
exhibition on their grounds in Taunton, commencing on Tuesday, the
fourth day of October, and continuing three days. Their grounds are
sufficiently extensive to accommodate all classes of the exhibition, and
ample space for the large assembly of people present on each day.
They have a fine track, on which the horses are exhibited and the con-
testants try their speed. The ploughing was in the park, for competi-
tion, in which there were eleven entries of oxen, tfiree of horses, and
four of horse and steers. The ground was well adapted to it, free of
stone, and the sward sufficiently strong to turn well. The work was
generally well done ; some of it, perfectly. All the competitors but
two, used the double plough. The committee had regai-d to the manner,
rather than the time, in which the work was accomj^lished, and although
it requires longer time to perform the 'same work with the double
plough, the better condition in which the soil is left for after cultivation
amply compensates, where the ground is suitable.
The teams showed good training, and the ploughmen skill in managing
them and guiding the plough.
Exhibition of town teams was next in course, of which two only were
present — one from Raynham composed of thirty-eight yokes of cattle,
the other from Taunton, consisting of thirty-six ; in each were some
good oxen.
The afternoon was devoted to the horse and the drawing of oxen and
horses. There were two races announced by the programme for tlie
afternoon, open to four-year-old colts only ; the first to those owned in
the county, with two prizes of $8 and $5 ; the other to all four-year-old
colts owned in or out of the county, with a prize of $10. As usual,
much time was taken up in preparing for, and getting a fair start.
* APPENDIX. xxxix
For the drawing match, fifteen yoke of oxen and nine of steers, six
pairs and eight single horses were entei'ed. This part of the exhibition,
though good, would have been better, had those in authority kept the
spectators from pressing forward on the track, and so near in some
instances as to interfere with the operation of the teamsters and their
teams.
There were several fine pairs of horses, and some single ones that
showed good training and great power in taking up the heavy loads to
which they were attached.
The pens for the exhibition of stock, were some little distance from
the trotting park, and seemed rather a side issue. The neat stock was
not numerous nor did it seem to excite much interest or attention, yet
there were some very good animals. The show of Shorthorns, number-
ing in all, old and young, twenty head, from the State Lunatic Asylum,
was very good. Almost all the different breeds were represented by
their sires, showing that the question, which is the most desirable, is not
fully settled in Bristol County. In addition to the Durham stock from
the asylum, Zenas B. Carpenter, of Attleborough, had a full-blood
Devon bull ; Thomas N. Dean, of Raynham, an Ayrshire ; and E. G.
Dean, of Taunton, an Alderney. Milch cows were exhibited by Charles
Bissett, of Berkley, B. C. Godfrey, of Taunton, and Jason White, of
Norton. There were also several grade heifers present, one owned by
Benjamin Caswell, of Taunton, two years five and a half months old,
which gave at that time ten quarts of milk per day.
I noticed but few fat cattle ; but I saw two very fine pairs of steers
well matched, one pair four and the other two years old. I did not
learn the weight of the older, but the younger ones were said to weigh
2,400 pounds,- and sold for $200, the others for $225. Both pairs were
purchased by one man, and driven off -the ground the first day. Of
sheep, there was a creditable show. Charles T. Hazard, of Newport,
exhibited two Southdown bucks, and George A. Hazard, of Newport, a
Southdown and Leicester buck ; S. H. Peckham, of Attleborough, had
a very good show of sheep. Swine were scarce. I saw but four ; two
of these were exhibited by B. B. "Wales, of Taunton ; the pair, five
months old, together Aveighed four hundred and thirty-five pounds.
Several horses and colts were exhibited. H. H. Freeman, of Norton,
had two large two-year-old colts ; George T. Bullock, of Taunton, two
fine ones; and Isaac Ainsworth, of Fall River, quite a handsome one ;
there were also several others of good promise.
By way of curiosities, were two mountain goats, by Leonard L. Short,
of Raynham ; and an ass and her colt, by John T, Kelly, of Taunton.
The ass, harnessed to a small vehicle and driven by a boy, attracted
considerable attention.
xl APPENDIX.
The different varieties of poultry were very fully represented, with
the exception of turkies, of which there was but one small coop — and of
the different varieties there were some fine specimens.
Of geese, I never saw so great a variety at any show ; I hardly know
from what source it could have been increased. Among them were the
wild goose, and one by William H. Dyer, of New Bedford, and caught
by him some year or more since, swimming in the harbor with wings
clipped ; supposed to be of some African species.
Wednesday, the second day of the fair, was evidently the day of
attraction. Fii'st, in the morning, was the grand procession of all stock
offered for premium or exhibition, with the matched and family horses,
which were out in goodly numbers and of good style.
At one o'clock, P. M., dinner was announced, and preceded by the
Taunton Brass Band, a large number marched to the entrance of the
society's building, and proceeded to the upper hall, filling every seat at
the tables, spread through the entire hall. After the comforts of the
inner man had been provided for, speeches were made in response to
sentiments announced by the president. His Excellency, Gov. Andrew,
first responded in a speech in his usual earnest and effective manner.
Gen. Burnside also responded to a call and gave us an earnest of his
hopeful feelings for the success of our country's cause. A poem pre-
. pared for the occasion, and read, closed this part of the entertainment.
It was very gratifying to see so many of the wives and daughters
present, showing they too felt an interest in these festivals.
The exhibition in the hall was very attractive. That large room was
filled with manufactures and products from Taunton arid adjacent towns.
William Mason, of Taunton, contributed largely of his manufactures and
products, occupying a long table. Of these, were machinery of high
finish for a locomotive, cotton machinery, and rifled muskets that looked
as though they would, in good hands, do effective service ; also a great
variety of fruits and vegetables, consisting in part of forty-one varieties
of pears, seven of grapes, and twenty-four varieties of potatoes ; also
choice flowers. C. Albro, of Taunton, exhibited one hundred and
twenty -four varieties of agricultural products ; Lemuel Short, of Taun-
ton, ninety-six varieties ; and H. G. Read, of Taunton, thirty -one varie-
ties, including four crooknecked squashes of last year's growth. The
show of apples was large and generally good — the different contributors
exhibiting each from forty to eighty different varieties. W. R. Daven-
port, of Taunton, exhibited twenty varieties of pears ; and N. S. Davis,
of Somerset, fifteen of peaches. There was also a fine collection of
cranberries by William King, of North Easton. I noticed on the tables
three lots of quinces from different individuals, a variety of fruit rarely
seen of late in most parts of this State ; and of grapes, there was any
APPENDIX. xli
((nantity, and almost all varieties and good specimens. G. R. Goff', of
Taunton, exhibited nine varieties of wine ; and James Wood, of Taunton,
two bottles of wine. I am imable to speak of the quality or give ^he
name of the different varieties.
Bread, butter, and honey, a very good combination, were exhibited.
George Prince, of Attleborough, exhibited six lots of beautiful-looking
honey, in glass cases. Of the dairy products, there were eighteen lots
of butter that looked very well, and ten of cheese, that I doubt not would
taste well, though probably made where dairying is of minor iin[)or-
tance. Bread puddings and pies were in profusion, showing, so far as
the manufacture of these articles is concerned, the makers, if they are
not already house-keeping, are fitted to do so. I saw bread made by a
miss of twelve, and by a lady of ninety-eight years.
There was on exhibition gold and silver plated ware of beautiful style
and finish. One case presented by Reed and Barton, of Taunton, con-
tained one hundred and fifty-seven pieces. There were also Britannia
ware, jewelry, time-pieces, cutlery, and hardware, woollen and cotton
goods, boots, shoes, musical instruments, and in fact, every kind of man-
ufacture from this manufacturing community. The domestic articles,
both useful and ornamental, exhibited by the ladies, I could hardly
enumerate ; suffice it to say, that it was evident they had felt that their
labors were required, and generously bestowed to render this part of
the show perfect.
In the basement, carriages, implements of husbandry, consisting of
mowing-machines, hay-tedders, horse-rakes, ploughs, harrows, feed-cut-
ters, &c., were exhibited. And, in contrast to our modern plough, was
one from Fayal by W. Chandler Hodges, Esq., of Taunton, of very
unique appearance, hardly resembling a plough.
On Thursday, the third day of the sliow, notwithstanding the unprom-
ising appearance of the weather, the people began to assemble in great
numbers to witness the finale of the show.
The out-door attraction of the day was that noble animal, the horse,
in his various movements, in walking, trotting, and running. The num-
ber of horses on the ground was probably less than it would have been,
but for the National Horse Show, at Providence, on the same days.
I was under the necessity of leaving before the exhibition was through,
but understand the close was very satisfactory ; and that the receipts
would very materially lessen the debt of the society, which by the energy
of the officers and liberality of the people, as I was informed by the
treasurer, had been within the last three years, reduced one-half or
more.
Thus successfully closed the forty-first anniversary fair and cattle-
show of Bristol County. • Hollis Tidd.
/
xlii APPENDIX.
BARNSTABLE.
As the delegate of the State Board of Agriculture, I was present at
the last exhibition and fair of the Barnstable Agricultural Society, held
at Barnstable, Tuesday and Wednesday, October 4th, and 5th.
The weather was fine both days, and the gathering of the farmers
and their friends a large one.
The arrangements were such as evinced on the part of the officers of
the society, and the friends of agriculture, a zeal worthy of the cause,
and the display of the various fold and dairy, gardens, orchards and
fruit-yards, with the exhibition of the handiwork and fine taste of the
ladies, were all creditable to the men and women of Barnstable County.
The fair was held on the grounds of the society, on which they have
erected a strong, thoroughly-built, aftd splendid building, 100 feet by 60
feet. The lower story is for offices and the exhibition hall ; the second
story is a beautiful hall, used for lectures and addresses before the
society ; the building, as a whole, is one of the best for its purposes I
have evei' seen ; the grounds contain fourteen acres, and, considering
the peculiar shape of the land in and around Barnstable, the society
have been fortunate in securing so good a place for their use.
The display of fruit, of various kinds, was a very good one, but what,
more than anything else, drew my attention in this department, was the
very fine exhibition of grapes and cranberries from Provincetown ; the
sands of Cape Cod here were made to bring forth in plenty most
delicious fruits, by a system of earnest and generous culture. I have
hardly ever seen anything to excel, if equal, this part of the exhibition.
I cannot here give the names of those who have shown so much zeal
and ability in this culture, but will say they are worthy of praise, and
their example should be copied ; the entries of fruit were good, and it
was, to me, a very pleasing show.
The entries of vegetables were fine indeed ; the display of garden
produce could hardly be excelled. Some specimens from the " Bacon
farm " were splendid, and were good witnesses of what can be done
with liberal fertilization and generous culture.
The display of domestic animals was fair ; the few cows and bulls
were, however, of a good style and quality ; the fat cattle were not
numerous, but very good, and the working oxen were also very fine ;
these, with the 40 heifers, steers and calves, all of good quality, made
a show which would have been creditable to a better growing district.
There were but a few hogs or sheep, but the few were of good quality.
The poultry-yard was well represented. In this as in the stock
department, L. L. Goodspeed, Esq., held a prominent position.
APPENDIX. xliii
The roads in Barnstable County are not such as would naturally
elicit the sympathies of the sporting people in that vicinity ; therefore
the display of horses was not large.
The ploughing did not compare favorably, in my judgment, with that
of some other societies ; in part, perhaps, accounted for by the uneven
surfalce and peculiarly hard soil. Not being a superior " ploughman "
myself, suggestions to the farmers of Barnstable would be useless
from me.
I noticed in. the ladies' department, bread and gingerbread, which
was in great abundance. Butter in excellent taste. Flowers also were
beautiful. Fancy articles, too numerous to mention, were, as usual,
well ];epresented, and made a fine display. I was unable to remain to
the close of the address, made by Judge Russell, of Boston, but left,
with the assurance that, like all his efforts, it would be a success. There
is every evidence in this society of health and strength, its officers and
friends full of that earnestness which insures success, and promises that
each year will add new interest to their fair, and perpetuate the annual
farmer's celebration. I close this report with an acknowledgment of
the kindness and courtesy of the officers of the society, and of George
Marston, Esq., of Barnstable, to whom I am indebted for much kindness
and hospitality.
S. Johnson.
NANTUCKET.
The ninth annual exhibition of the Nantucket Agricultural Society
was held on the 27th and 28th days of September.
I arrived on the island on the 26th, and on my arrival was met on the
boat by the worthy president of the society, (James Thompson, Esq.,)
who kindly took me to his hospitable abode, and bountifully ministered
to my wants. I am further indebted to him, and other officers of the
society, for kind attention during the exhibition, and for rides about the
island, which, to me, were very pleasant and interesting.
I was surprised to find so many thousands of acres of land lying wild
and useless. I pictured in my mind the amount of Avealth which might
be realized by the laud-owners, if these grounds, which are lying useless,
could be stocked with sheep, now, Avhen mutton is twenty-five cents per
pound, and wool over one dollar. Without going into close estimates, I
would say the amount would be thousands of dollars, almost all of which
would be clear gain to the owners. In my opinion this is a subject well
worthy the consideration of the inhabitants of Nantucket. I do not
xliv APPENDIX.
think the great natural Agricultui'al resources within the limits of this
society are properly understood.
I visited the farm of David Folger, I consider it the model farm of
the island, as far as I had an opportunity to view. It shows by a little
what much more might do, for there is plenty of land there, lying
useless, which is just as good, naturally, as his. He cuts about three
tons of hay per acre, has a good crop of corn ; half an acre of Jackson
White potatoes gave him one hundred and sixty bushels, or at the rate
of three hundred and twenty bushels per acre. They were the finest
looking specimens of this variety I ever saw. His mangolds, Swedes
and carrots are as good as can be shown by any farmer in the Common-
wealth. All the fertilizers used for the gi-owth of these crops was a
small quantity of animal manure, with the addition of kelp and sea-
weed. He also has the best herd of cows I saw there, but I have one
complaint to make against him, — he did not offer them for exhibition.
Certainly every good farmer, if a member of an agricultural society,
should feel himself hound to exhibit all good stock, vegetables, or any
other desirable product of his farm.
The weather was delightful on both days of the fair.
The first day was devoted to the examination of cattle, sheep and
swine, the whole being enlivened by the North Bridgewater brass band.
It was said the entries of stock at. the grounds were more numerous
than at some of the previous fairs. There were ninety cows and
heifers, eight bulls, nine yokes of oxen and steers, six entries of sheep,
and only one of swine. Among the cows and heifers were three pure-
bred Jerseys, all fine animals ; and among the bulls were two pure-bred
Ayrshires.
The inhabitants of the island are indebted to the president of this
society for his liberality, and praiseworthy perseverance in introducing
those pure-bred animals for the improvement of the stofek in future years.
I am informed that Mr. Thompson has, of late, taken a good Ayrshire
cow and heifer on to the island to add to his former enterprises.
The oxen wei'e not remarkable, though thrifty and of fine symmetry.
Setting aside the two Ayrshire bulls, I have not much to say in favor
of the remainder. The young stock on exhibition was a great improve-
ment over the older animals, and I am infoi'med the neat stock has
improved at least thirty-three per cent, in quality since the incorporation
of this society.
There were six entries of sheep, all grades, with the exception of one
full-blooded Soutlidown buck, which was exhibited by George C. Gard-
ner, Esq. The sheep on exhibition, and, in fact, all that I saw on the
island, appeared uncommonly thrifty, and this is another word in favor
of increasing sheep husbandry here.
APPENDIX. x\r
The morning of the second day was occupied by the committees in
the examination of breeding-mares and colts, of different ages, of which
there were a large number on exhibition. In the afternoon the caval-
cade formed in front of the bank, and, at two o'clock, started for the fair
grounds, preceded by the band and a train of carriages, accompanied by
a large crowd of people on foot, who soon made their way to their place
of destination.
There was no test of speed, though there were several fine driving
horses on the track, and skilful horsemanship was displayed.
Eight young ladies, each on a good saddle-horse, rode several times
around the track, and I must say this was an interesting feature of the
exhibition. I should be happy to see this part of the fair repeated by
other societies, if it can be performed with as much propriety as on this
occasion.
After this trial there came upon the track an elderly-looking gentle-
man and lady, seated on, what I should take to be, a worn-out war-horse.
They rode on a pillion, and were dressed in the costume of ancient days.
He with a high-crowned, white hat, tight-fitting coat and breeches, with
large knee-buckles, white silk stockings, shoes and shoe-buckles, carry-
ing a stick several feet long, which he flourished, to hasten the locomotion
of "their horse. The lady was dressed in a close-fitting brown silk
dress, and a bonnet large enough to make a dozen after tlie fashion of
the present day. In their antedeluvian costume they rode their steed
steed several times over the track in front of the stand, to the great
amusement of the crowd.
Vegetalles. — The vegetables in the hall would do credit to .any agri-
cultural society in the Commonwealth, and I can safely say I have never
seen better specimens exhibited in any State.
Fruit. — There were one hundred plates of pears, and about as many
of grapes, all fine specimens of the best varieties, and a few plates
of better quinces than I have seen for several years.
Butter. — There Avere six entries of butter, all so good and equal in
quality that the committee were in doubt where to award the
premiums.
Fancy Worh. — The exhibition of fancy work Avas not as large as
might have been expected, but the apology for the small amount offered
was that the sanitary fair, held here a short lime previous, had exhausted
a large supply of such articles as would help to make a good show in this
department.
Hall. — The hall was tastefully decorated with evergreens, and hung
with appropriate mottoes, among which I noticed one upon the wall of
the vegetable room, which read, " Nature's bounty, and man's industry,
are alike the gifts of God." The hall was lighted both evenings, and
xlvi APPENDIX.
was filled to overflowing with visitors. There was no formal address,
and the time was agreeably passed in social intercourse, enlivened by
the best of music on the first evening, by the band and singing, and the
second' all were delighted with the vocal music by the Nantucket Glee
Club.
The president tendered thanks to all who had in any way contributed
to the success of this interesting and profitable exhibition. In conclu-
sion, I am happy to say there appeared to be no want of enthusiasm to
carry out successfully every department of the fair.
Paoli Lathrop.
MARTHA'S VINEYARD.
The undersigned, a delegate from the State Board of Agriculture to
visit the annual cattle show of Martha's Vineyard Agricultural Society,
can say but little in relation to what was on the grounds the first day of
the exhibition, for the reason that he did not arrive until the "day after
the fair," for which mistake I feel very sorry, as I wished to note the
progress of the society's efforts in improving the neat stock of the
island. For several years past, the society have spent a part of their
funds in buying thoroughbred Ayrshire bulls and taking them to the
Vineyard for the purpose of improving their dairy stock. I think they
have imported some five or six. These animals cannot but help to do
a good work. The Ayrshire cow is an animal pre-eminently adapted for
the dairy, with moderately short pastures. And I wish for the good of
the farmers of the Vineyard that they had a stringent law forbidding the
importation of, or the raising of any neat stock, except Ayrshires and
their grades. This plan, strictly carried out for twenty or thirty years,
would fill the island with a breed of cattle as uniform both in size and
color as well as in the most useful qualities, as could have been imported
from Scotland twenty or thirty years ago.
Sheep husbandry is an important branch of agriculture on all the
islands of this district. They have wisely, as I think, adopted a mutton
breed. They are quite uniform in size and color, resembling the
Leicester breed, although smaller than the improved breed now known
as the new Leicesters, but, in my judgment, about large enough for their
keeping. I think a few Southdown rams introduced among their fiocks,
would thicken the fleece, and add one or two cents per pound to the
value of the lambs for the market, and increase the value of the whole
flock in a considerable degree. The sheep as well as the cattle will pay
for more care than they now receive on the island.
APPENDIX. xlvii
The introduction of the Spanish Merinos, to a small extent, was made
some two or three years since ; but they have not proved satisfactory.
The fact of it is, the Spanish Merino sheep is a fancy animal. The
sheep, after a few months old, is said to be very hardy, and with the
care which they receive I have no doubt but they are ; yet the newly
born lamb is exceedingly delicate, and requires more care than a novice
in fine-wool sheep can comprehend, in so short a time as they have been
on the island. The modus operandi of the Vermont Merino breeder is
very nearly as follows :
Winter Treatment. — Warm stables and warm sheds, with fresh water
always at hand ; the best of hay, with roots and corn, or oats every day ;
when the early lambing season commences, a warmed room night and
day, with a new milch cow, and the flock-master ever at hand. As soon
as the lamb is dropped, the mother and lamb are brought into the nursery,
and if the mother has no milk at the time, which is often the case, the
lamb is fed on warm milk and molasses for a day or two, when the
mother will generally have milk, when the lamb is taught to nurse its
dam. .In this way, some of the most careful flock-masters succeed in
rearing ninety out of one hundred lambs dropped.
Summer Treatment. — The best of pastures, with wheat bran and
oats, generally every day ; a shower, and not even a dew is allowed to
fall on them ; in fact, they are handled in this respect, very much as^
lady handles her dress bonnet. In this way they will shear eight pounds
of unwashed wool on the average ; and instances are on record of
twenty-five pounds of unwashed wool from a sheep weighing only one
hundred and twenty-five pounds. This seems fabulous ; but I have Ho
doubt of the fact, neither have I a doubt that when this same fleece was
fitted for the cards, it would not weigh much over four pounds. But
just so long as they can find purchasers at from fifty to three hundred
dollars apiece, with now and then one that will bring from one to two
thousand dollars, it will pay to bestow all this care and expense on
them ; but how long these prices will be sustained remains to be seen.
The culture of the cranberry is increasing on the island, and with
excellent results ; and every piece of ground suitable should be planted
with them at once. They do pay now and always wiU.
I should recommend a more extended cultivation of the grape ; it
seems to me that the island is excellently well adapted to grape-culture.
I could not learn of but one probable drawback, and that was the pre-
vailing south winds of the summer, which I learn, blow with great
foi'ce, and might injure the foliage, if not protected by a belt of trees or
something of • the kind. But if it should prove that these winds are not
a material drawback, it will pay well either to sell the fruit in the mar-
ket or to make it into wine. The grape requires but little manure,
xlviii APPENDIX.
compared with pears, tobacco, or vegetable gardening. None of the large
towns of New England will ever get grapes enough at five or six cents
per pound, and at that price they can be raised and pay a good profit.
I would recommend a trial of the Concord, the Diana, the Catawba,
and Isabella ; these are well known sorts, and wall ripen on the island
in great perfection.
The display of apples was good, but the number of varieties was
small. The most prominent kind was a variety that probably originated
on the island, — they call it the " Pignose." I do not find it described
in my books ; it resembles in form, color, and taste, Somewhat the Yel-
low Bellflower, and is a valuable variety for the island. The follow-
ing varieties of apples I should think would succeed as well as the
" Pignose " :
Summer. — Red Astrachan and Sopsavine.
Autumn. — Mother and Gravenstein.
Winter. — R. I. Greening, Peck's Pleasant, Ladies' Sweeting, Tol-
man's Sweeting, and Yellow Bellflower, and probably a much larger
list ; it is a well known fact that apples succeed the best that originate
near where they are cultivated.
The display of pears was good but small, only showing that they can
be cultivated on the island with success.
Among the fine displays of field crops and garden vegetables I
noticed very fine onions, and a valuable white turnip, and hard-shell
pumpkins, in great perfection. The climate, it is claimed, has the eflfect
to produce this variety.
The butter on exhibition in the hall was of a very fine color, but
most of it was too salt to suit the taste of an epicure, and needlessly
salt to keep well. *
The farmers of the Vineyard have somewhat neglected the cultiva-
tion of the soil for the, perhaps, more lucrative farming of the ocean.
But, gentlemen of the Vineyard, now that petroleum has, in a measure,
cut ofi" your fat voyages after the leviathan of the deep, you will have
more leisure to cultivate the beautiful land of your birth, and with the
dearest market in the world in close proximity, you can't help but grow
rich, and make the island a vineyard in truth as well as in name. My
hearty thanks are due to the officers and members of the society for
kind attention and hospitality.
Henry R. Keith.
R E T U E l^^^r S
OF
AGRICULTURAL SOCIETIES,
FOR IS 64.
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S34 00
33 00
13 50
27 50
34 00
30 00
16 50
15 00
33 50
34 75
7 85
228 00
146 50
97 00
3 00
54 00
28 00
37 00
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a . ' '
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^
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Massachusetts,
Essex,
Middlesex, .
Middlesex North
Middlesex South
Worcester,
Worcester West,
Worcester North
Worcester South
Worcester South
Hampshire, Frai
Hampshire,
Highland, .
Hampden, .
Hampden East,
Franklin, .
Berkshire, .
Housa tonic,
Hoosac Valley,
Norfolk, .
Bristol,
Plymouth, •
Barnstable,
Nantucket,
Martha's Vineyai
i
o
EH
CO
00
c3
a
dS
"2
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Ivi
APPENDIX.
ANALYSIS OF PREMIUMS AND GRATUITIES AWARDED— Concluded.
Miscellaneous.
►< J,
U -»
r3 a>
t* L
U '••
u a
O 03
■s-a
pJ3
al
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1-3
^^
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13 a
-^5
"2"
si.
at ^
u o
fa ha
4) rt
go
l§2
-cos
er of perso;
ived prei
gratuities
SOCIETIES.
tj 3
3 o ti
nt 0
raisin
s.
nt aw
[ out
e.
§°5
-i2 3
SCO
3-E 9
3 « g
3.^ a
3 p. t-<
3 •§
3.2,-S
•° g-w
a cs a
2-a £
O cS §
2 « 2
0-£
oSte
g S a
a--«
g Pi CQ
a » 3
g Ce EQ
g o cs
g S ta
<!
o
<
<
<1
<
!?;
Massaciiusetts,
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
Essex, ....
f 19 00
$30 00
-
$25 00
-
$123 00
-
Middlesex,
5 00
-
-
60 00
-
52 75
181
Middlesex North, .
5 00
-
-
-
-
56 50
-
Middlesex South, .
13 50
105 00
-
25 00
-
93 50
189
Worcester,
-
22 00
-
-
-
47 50
158
Worcester West, .
2 00
30 00
-
70 00
-
60 00
190
Worcester North, .
18 00
50 00
-
60 00
$134 85
134 85
240
Worcester South, .
-
35 00
-
75 00
-
72 80
139
Worcester South-East, .
-
30 00
-
60 00
-
-
211
Hampshire, Franklin )
and Hampden, \ '
-
20 00
_
-
10 00
108 50
203
Hampshire, .
7 00
15 00
-
30 00
-
48 50
217
Highland,
-
-
-
-
-
61 00
156
Hampden,
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
Hampden East,
14 00
25 00
-
73 00
-
38 86
203
Franklin,
29 00
10 00
-
9 00
-
46 25
198
Berkshire,
34 50
-
-
-
110 25
126 00
360
Housatonic, .
15 00
-
-
30 00
-
101 25
246
Hoosac Valley,
-
-
-
30 00
-
163 00
247
Norfolk,
20 00
81 00
-
75 00
-
38 00
143
Bristol, ....
-
105 00
-
60 00
-
144 00
273
Plymouth,
-
*
-
60 00
-
201 47
343
Barnstable, .
5 00
7 00
-
-
-
81 99
201
Nantucket,
-
13 00
-
12 00
-
100 00
164
Martha's Vineyard,
7 25
18 00
-
60 00
19 99
39 99
135
Totals, .
$194 25
$546 00
. -
$814 00
$275 09
$1,939 71
4,397
I payable in 1866, and $100 payable in 1868.
APPENDIX.
Ivii
NAMES of the Cities and Towns in which resided the persons when
receiving the Premiums and Gratuities awarded hy the County Socie-
ties, and the several aiuounts as disbursed.
ESSEX.
Amesbury, .
. 11 50
Lynnfield, .
$0 50
Andover, .
. 41 00
JMarblehead,
29 00
Boston,
10 00
Methuen, .
50 00
Bradford, .
34 00
Middle ton, .
31 50
Boxford,
. 16 75
Newbury, .
. 29 00
Danvers, .
13 00
North Andover,
. 53 75
Essex,
2 75
Salem, .
74 50
Georgetown,
8 00
South Danvers,
. 26 50
Groveland, .
4 50
Topsfield, .
7 00
Haverhill, .
14 00
125 00
West Newbury,
Total, .
72 00
Lawrence, .
$647 25
Lynn,
3 00
MIDDLE SEX
Acton,
. . $38 75
Feltonville,
. §1 00
Bedford,
. 10 25
Framingham,
. 16 00
Belmont,
. 32 50
Lexington, .
. 27 25
Billerica, .
1 00
Lincoln,
. 36 00
Burlington,
2 00
Medford, .
4 00
Cambridge,
. 16 00
North Reading, .
5 00
Carlisle,
8 25
Beading,
1 00
Chelmsford, .
. 16 00
South Reading, .
3 00
Concord, .
. 133 75
Stow, .
24 00
Dracut,
8 00
Sudbury, .
14 00
Iviii
APPENDIX.
MIDDLESEX— Concluded.
Waltham, .
Wayland, .
Weston, . ,
West Cambridge,
137 25
19 00
33 75
16 00
Wilmington,
Woburn,
Worcester, .
Total, .
$13 GO
30 00
2 00
1548 75
MIDDLESEX NORTH
Acton,
. $0 50
Reading, .
. 16 50
Billerica, .
. 11 00
Stoneham, •
75
Chelmsford,
. 139 25
Tewksbury,
. 60 75
Dracut,
. . . 26 50
Tyngsborougb, .
. 53 50
Dunstable, .
. 105 00
Westford, .
. 13 00
Lowell,
. 141 50
6 00
Wilmington,
Total, . ...
. 21 50
Pepperell, .
. $585 75
MIDDLESEX SOUTH,
AVORCESTER,
Ashland,
. $15 87
Sherborn, .
. 113 25
Framingham,
. 350 34
Southborough,
8 00
Holliston, .
4 50
Sudbury, .
. 27 99
Hopkinton,
4 00
. 27 25
Wayland, .
Total, .
. 51 25
Marlborough,
. $585 44
Natick,
. 82 99
Auburn,
. $3 00
Boylston, .
. 11 00
Barre,
. 67 00
Charlton, .
. 20 00
Blackstone,
6 00
Dudley,
6 00
Bolton,
7 00
Fitchburg, .
. 100 00
H
APPENDIX.
lix
WORCESTER— Concluded.
Grafton,
. 168 75
Spencer,
. 92 00
Holden,
. 27 00
Sturbridge,
. 43 00
Millbury, .
. 65 00
Sutton,
. 90 00
New Braintree, .
. • 13 00
Westborough,
. 29 00
Oakham, .
8 00
West Boylston, .
. 24 00
Oxford,
4 00
7 00
Worcester,
Total, .
. 422 75
Rutland,
$1,136 00
Shrewsbury,
. 25 50
WORCESTER WEST.
Barre,
. 8303 88
Paxton,
. $0 50
Bernardston,
3 00
Palmyra, .
1 00
Boston,
2 00
Petersham,
9 75
Charlton, ...
. 22 00
Phillipston,
7 50
Hardwick, .
. 23 00
Rochester, .
75
Hubbardston,
. 19 50
South Danvers, .
2 75
New Braintree, .
. 67 00
Syracuse, .
25
North Brookfield,
8 00
6 75
Templeton,
Total, . . ■ .
7 25
Oakham,
. 1494 88
W
ORCESTE
R NORTH.
Ashburnham,
. UO 00
Leominster,
. $40 50
Ashby,
8 00
Littleton, .
. 10 00
Bolton,
. 10 00
Lunenburg,
. 69 50
Boston,
1 00
Princeton, .
. 124 00
Fitchburg, .
. 420 35
Royalston, .
. 18 00
Leicester, •
50
Shirley,
. 10 62
Ix
APPENDIX.
WORCESTER NORTH— Concluded.
Sterling,
Townsend, .
Westminster,
Winchendon,
$3 25
37
24 49
21 00
Woonsocket,
Worcester, .
Total, .
f 5 00
8 00
$790 58
WORCESTER SOUTH,
Brimfield, .
. $49 05
Southbridge,
. $91 65
Brookfield, .
. 23 15
Spencer,
6 25
Charlton, .
. 101 50
Sturbridge,
. 137 88
Dudley,
. 38 50
25
Warren,
Total, .
. 36 00
Middlefield,
. $492 23
Oakham, .
. ■ 8 00
WORCESTER SOUTH-EAST
Auburn,
. $3 00
Mendon,
. $113 50
Bellingham,
9 25
Milford, .
. 255 70
Blackstone,
1 00
Northbridge,
4 00
Douglas, . , .
2 00
Sutton,
4 00
Grafton,
2 00
Upton,
. 20 50
Holliston, .
. 22 50
Uxbridge, .
. 20 00
Hopkinton,
. 34 00
. 13 25
Westborough,
Total, .
. 32 00
Medway,
. $536 70
HAMPSHIRE,
FRANKLIN AND
HAMPDEN.
•
Amherst, .
. $1 00
Deerfield, .
. $12 00
Chesterfield,
4 50
Easthampton,
. 10 00
Chicopee, .
. 12 00
Goshen,
6 00
APPENDIX.
Ixi
HAMPSHIRE, FRANKLIN AND HAMPDEN— Concluded.
Hadley,
. 139 50
Springfield,
. 116 00
Hatfield, .
. 33 00
Sunderland,
. 19 50
Northampton,
. 221 70
Ware,
2 00
South Hadley, .
. 50 75
Westhampton, .
6 00
Shelburne, .
. 22 00
9 00
Williamsburg,
Total, .
. 11 00
Southampton,
. $475 95
HAMPSHIRE.
Amherst, .
. $218 00
Leverett, .
. $16 00
Belchertown,
. 18 50
Montague, .
1 00
Boston,
1 00
Northfield, .
75
Granby,
1 00
Pelham,
. U 75
Greenfield, .
9 00
South Hadley, .
1 00
Hadley, . • .
. 96 90
1 00
Sunderland,
Total, .
. 43 25
Leyden,
. $422 15
HIGHLAND
Becket,
»
$66 25
North Adams,
>
. $0 75
Chester,
35 25
Northampton,
• •
. 19 25
Chicopee, .
5 00
Peru, .
. 45 25
Cummington,
3 00
Pittsfield, .
50
Dal ton.
7 50
Sandisfield,
7 00
Hinsdale, .
80 75
Springfield,
50
Huntington,
5 25
Washington,
«
11 25
Lanesborough,
3 25
Windsor,
50
Lee, .
5 00
. 135 75
Worthington,
Total, .
12 00
Middlefield,
$444 00
Ixii
APPENDIX.
HAMPDEN EAST,
Brimfield, .
. f 0 00
Wales, . .
... 100 00
Holland,
. 00 00
Ware,
. 00 00
Ludlow, ...
. . 00 00
. 00 00
Wilbraham,
Total, .
. 00 00
Monson,
. mo 00
Palmer,
. 00 00
FRANKLIN.
Bernardston,
m 00
Monroe,
. $1 00
Charlemont, .
3 50
Montague, . . .
. 16 75
Colerain, ....
31 50
Northfield, .
. 11 00
Conway, . . .
51 25
Orange,
. 15 00
Deerfield, .
. 83 00
Shelburne, .
. 254 00
Erving,
8 00
Sunderland,
'. , 27 50
Gill, . . . .
. 21 50
Warwick, .
. , . 2 00
Greenfield, . . . . '
. 159 30
7 60
Whately, .
Total, .
4 50
Leverett, .
. $722 90
Leyden,
. 21 50
BERK SHIRE
Adams,
. $82.00
Hinsdale, .
. 136 50
Alford, . .
4 00
Lanesborough, .
. 203 00
Becket,
. 54 50
J^66} • • • •
. 86 50
Cheshire, .
. 47 25
Lenox, ...
. 197 50
Curtisville, .
7 00
Monterey, .
1 50
Dalton,
. 20 50
New'Ashford,
4 00
Great Barrington,
. 19 00
New Marlborough,
. 5 00
Hancock, .
4 50
Peru, ....
. 11 00
APPENDIX.
1 • ••
1X111
BERKSHIRE— Concluded.
Pittsfield, .
. 1458 75
Tyringham,
. U 00
Richmond, .
. 15 50
Weishington,
5 00
Sheffield, .
. 31 50
Williamstown,
. 72 25
South Adams,
. 61 25
. 102 00
Windsor, .
Total, .
7 75
Stockbridge,
$1,241 75
HOUSATONIC.
Alford,
129 25
New Marlborough,
. S$38 00
Becket,
11 50
New Lebanon, N. Y., .
1 00
Cheshire, .
4 50
Pittsfield, .
4 00
Egremont, .
. 106 50
Richmond, .
. 15 00
Great Barrington,
177 50
Sandisfield,
7 00
Hillsdale, .
3 00
Sheffield, .
. 168 25
Lee, ....
52 00
Stockbridge,
. 83 75
Lenox,
80 00
Tyringham,
7 00
Monterey, ,
25 25
3 25
West Stockbridge,
Total, .
7 50
Mount Washington, .
. !g827 25
HOOSAC VALLEY,
Cheshire, .
. 138 00
Pittsfield, .
. $3 00
Clarksburg,
. 15 00
Pownal, Vt.,
. 19 00
Florida,
. 33 75
South Adams, .
. 115 00
Hinsdale, .
8 00
Stamford, .
8 00
Lanesborough, .
4 00
. 35 00
Williamstown, .
Total,
. 128 00
Lenox,
. $639 75
North Adams, .
. 233 00
Ixiv
APPENDIX.
NORFOLK,
Braintree, .
. U 00
Needham, .
. $128 85
Brookline, .
•
. 18 00
Quincy,
8 00
Canton,
. 12 GO
Randolph, .
8 50
Dedham, .
180 00
Roxbury, .
3' 75
Dorchester,
. 35 25
Sharon,
8 00
Dover,
. 42 40
Stoughton, .
41 00
Foxborough,
12 00
Walpole, .
11 50
Franklin, .
1
31 00
West Roxbury,
68 00
Medfield, .
9 50
Weymouth,
5 00
Medway, .
23 25
25 00
Wrentham,
Total, .
•
•
18 00
Milton,
$683 00
BRISTOL
Attleborough,
. $20 00
Raynham, .
. $182 00
Berkley, . . •
. 24 25
Rehoboth, .
. 68 75
Dighton,
5 50
Seekonk, ,
5 00
•
Easton,
. 41 50
Somerset, . ...
4 25
Fairhaven, .
25
Swansey, . . . .
18 50
Fall River, .
. 18 50
Taunton, . . . .
543 50
Mansfield, .
. 19 25
Towns out of the County, .
115 00
New Bedford,
. 11 75
Total, . . . ^
Jl,266 50
Norton,
. 188 50
PLYMOUTH.
Abington, .
. $11 25
East Bridgewater,
. $99 50
Bridgewater,
. 448 52
Halifax,
. 46 00
Carver,
. 20 00
Hanson,
. ' 2 00
Duxbury, .
•
75
Kingston, .
9 75
APPENDIX.
Ixv
PLY^IOUTH— Concluded.
Lakeville, .
. 137 70
Plympton, .
. an 25
Marshfield, .
6 50
Rochester, .
9 25
Mattapoisett,
50
South Scituate, .
2 00
Middleborough, .
. 163 10
Wareham,
1 40
North Brldgewater, .
. 105 00
8 25
West Bridgewater,
Total, .
. 113 70
Pembroke, .
11,163 17
Plymouth, .
. 66 75
BARNSTABLE,
Barnstable, .
Dennis,
Orleans,
Provincetown,
1378 32
4 00
7 62
3 25
Sandwich,
Yarmouth,
Total,
$24 00
17 00
UU 19
NANTUCKET,
Nantucket, |393 BO
MARTHA'S
VINEYARD.
Chilmark, .
. $110 79
. 43 80
Tisbury,
Total, .
. $194 08
Edgartown,
. $348 67
INDEX
TO THE SECRETARY'S REPORT,
Page.
Adipocere, paper upon, 228, 230
Agassiz, lecture by Prof., 61, 127, 133, 168, 185
Agricultural College, location of the, 48, 50, 246
Agricultural education, remarks on, 44, 46, 51
Agricultural library, 245, 246
Agricultural machinery, 6
Agricultural schools, 49, 169, 231, 246
Animals most useful to New England, 118, 120, 122, 124
Animals, selection of, .37, 117, 120, 123
Apple-tree, insects injurious to the, 145,147,153
Ashes, use of as' manure, 88, 90, 93, 96
Barns, structure of, . . 218, 220
Bedding for stock, 38
Breeding, principles of, 127, 129, 132, 136, 138
Board, public meeting at Greenfield, 30
Buildings, location of, ■. . . 36, 38, 214, 218
Bull, lecture by E. W., 64,68,72,80
Bushes, how to kill, . . 85, 90, 95, 98
Cabbage, history and culture of the, 196, 198, 204
Cabinet, the State, 242, 244
Canada thistle, how to eradicate, 83, 86, 95, 96
Canker worm, description of the, 155, 157
Cattle commissioners, report of the, 7, 8
Cattle husbandry, discussion on, 38, 39, 117, 165
Climate, control over the, 68, 70, 185
College, the agricultural, 45, 47, 49, 50, 103, 246
Concentrated manures, 6, 42
Contagion, something about, 10, 11, 28, 30, 43
Corn crop, discussion on the 55, 59, 62, 80, 126
Crops, management of, . . 39, 40, 55, 58, 225
Crops, weighing of, ; 225, 227
Dairy, importance of the, 119, 121, 126
Dog law, discussion on the, 167, 168
Drift soils, characteristics of, . . . . . . . . 112, 173, 174, 176
Economy of the farm, 36, 55, 62, 07, 85
Education at home and abroad, . . 169, 171, 172
Experiments with the cattle disease, 12, 24, 29
Farm buildings, essay on, 213, 215, 217
Farm, management of a, 35, 37, 82
INDEX. Ixvii
rage.
Farms, statement on, 41
Fruit, culture of, ... 221, 223, 225
Fruit trees, economy of, 40, 221
Garden vegetables, essay on, 186, 188, 195, 200
Glacial action, evidence of, 173, 175, 177, 184
Glaciers, operation of, 173, 170, 180, 182
Grapes, cultivation of, C4, 66, 70, 74, 76, 80, 236, 241
Huntingdon, T. G., essay by, 186, 190, 196, 205
Hybrids, what are they, . . . . , 79, 133, 135
Indian corn, cultivation of, 55, 57, 80, 126
Insects, injury done by, • . . . . 158, 160
Insects, lecture on, 139, 145
Kerosene destructive to insects, 152
Lime in the animal structure, 128, 165
Loring, Dr. G. B., address by, . . 30, 35
Magnesia, abundance of, Ill, 112
Managing a farm, 33, 35, 43, 55, 59
Manures, use of, 6, 57, 59, 61, 67, 70, 85^66, 189
Marl, accumulations of, 114, 117
Merinoes, management of, 162, 164, 166
Moore, J. B., essay by, 221, 224
Moss, how to get rid of, 96, 97
Museum of Zoology, visit to the, 169, 231, 232
" Natives," description of the, 121,129
New England Agricultural Society, .6, 247
Onions, cultivation of, 190, 192, 195
Orchards, condition of our, 221, 223
Ox-eye daisy, how to exterminate, 97
Pasture lands, improvement of, 81, 84, 86, 89, 95, 100, 164
Percheron horses, account of, 232
Perkins, C. 0., essay by, 213, 215, 218
Plant lice, injury done by, 141,143
Plants, nourishment of, 108, 109
Plaster, use of, 84, 86, 88, 94, 98
Pitch pine, cultivation of the, 208,210,213
Pleuro-pneumonia, recovery from, 7, 10, 28
Pruning the vine, 71, 73, 75
Renovation of pastures, 81, 85, 90, 97, 99, 101
Rogers, Prof. Wm. B., lecture by, 104, 108, 112, 117
Roots of plants, 61, 62, 63
Sanborn, F. G., lecture by 139, 144, 160
Sand, use of as bedding, • . . ■ . . , .38,39
Science and practice, . . . • * . . 31, 33, 45, 105, 110, 137
Sheep husbandry, discussion on, . .... 5, 161, 163, 166
Ixviii INDEX.
Page.
Shelter, importance of, . 38
Shorthorns, allusions to, 37
Silk culture, experiments in, . . . . " 153
Soils, origin of, 104, 106, 111, 168, 180
Species and breeds, 134, 135
Squash, introduction and cultivation of the, 205, 208
Stock, selection of, 37, 38, 117, 120, 123, 126
Study of soils, 112,114,116
Thayer, statement of Dr., 27, 30
Vine, cultivation of the, 67, 69, 71, 74, 80, 241
Walnut, sprouting of the, 92
"Wood, time of cutting, 91, 93
Wool, fineness of, 163,165
t
ABSTRACT OF RETURNS
OF THE
AGRICULTURAL SOCIETIES
OF
MASSACHUSETTS,
18 6 4.
EDITED BY
CHARLES L. FLINT,
SECRETARY OF THE STATE BOARD OF AGRICULTURE.
BOSTON:
WRIGHT & POTTER, STATE PRINTERS,
No. 4 Spring Lane.
1865.
PREFACE.
The returns of the various agricultui'al societies were more meagre
this year than usual, added to which many of them failed to get their
Transactions printed in season to make it practicable to use them in
making up the following Abstract.
I have, also, condensed that part of the returns wliich were received
in time, somewhat more than usual, so as to bring the size of the volume
to reasonable limits, even at the risk of leaving out some topics that
might have appeared under other circumstances.
I must again urge upon the societies the importance of greater
promptness in publishing their returns, and of putting them into a shape
that will secure them a more careful study on the part of farmers into
whose hands they happen to fall. The money invested in printing is
the most judicious expenditure a society can make, and they cannot
fully and honorably discharge theii' duty to the State without incurring
tliis expenditure. C. l. f.
OFFICERS OF THE AGRICULTURAL SOCIETIES,
1865.
MASSACHUSETTS.
President— GEOnGE W. LYMAN, of Boston.
Secretary— VETER C. BROOKS, Jr., of Boston.
ESSEX.
President— J OSETU HOWE, of Methuen.
Secretary— CRARLES P. PRESTON, of Danvers.
MIDDLESEX.
President— W. W. CHENERY, of Belmont.
Secretartj—JOKS B. MOORE, of Concord.
MIDDLESEX SOUTH.
President— WILLIAM G. LEWIS, of Framlngham.
Secretary— 3 MIES W. BROWN, of Framingham.
MIDDLESEX NORTH.
President— E. P. SPALDING, of Chelmsford.
Secretary— REl^BY P. PERIUNS, of LoweU.
WORCESTER.
President— CRABLES E. MILES, of Worcester.
Secretary— J 0R^ D. WASHBURN, of Worcester.
WORCESTER WEST.
President— ROLLIS TIDD, of New Braintree.
5ecre<ar2/— CHARLES BRIMBLECOM, of Barre.
WORCESTER NORTH.
President— ORIO WHITNEY, Jr., of Ashburnham.
Secretary— LEWIS H. BRADFORD, of Fitchburg.
WORCESTER SOUTH.
President—'^. S. HUBBARD, of Brimfield.
Secretary— RE'^RY HAYNES, of Sturbridge.
OFFICERS OF THE SOCIETIES.
WORCESTER SOUTH-EAST.
President— Rkv. GEORGE S. BALL, of Upton.
.Secretary— CHARLES F. CHAPIN, of Milford.
HAMPSHIRE, FRANKLIN AND HAMPDEN.
President— R. S. PORTER, of Hatfield.
Secretary— R. K. STARKWEATHER, of Northampton.
HAMPSHIRE.
President— LEYl STOCKBRIDGE, of Hadley.
Secretary— M. N. SPEAR, of Amherst.
HIGHLAND.
President— CRAULES O. PERKINS, of Becket.
5ecretor?/— JONATHAN McELWAIN, of Middlefield.
HAMPDEN.
PrestWen^— PHINEAS STEDMAN, of Chicopee.
Secretary — J. N. BAGG, of Springfield.
HAMPDEN EAST.
President— J. K. KNOX, of Palmer,
decretory— JOSEPH H. BLAIR, of Palmer.
FRANKLIN.
President— EDWARD W. STEBBINS, of Deerfield.
Secretary— AUSTIN De WOLF, of Greenfield.
BERKSHIRE.
President— ALEXANDER HYDE, of Lee.
Secretary— J ORN E. MERRILL, of Pittsfield.
HOTJSATONIC.
President— T. D. THATCHER, of Tyrlngham.
Secretary— RENRY T. ROBBINS, of Great Barrington.
HOOSAC VALLEY.
President— DAYID UPTON, of South Adams.
Secretar?j—W1LL1AM W. GALLUP, of North Adams.
NORFOLK.
PrmWen<— MARSHALL P. WILDER, of Dorchester.
Secretary— R. O. HILDRETH, of Dedham.
BRISTOL.
President— TREODORE DEAN, of Taunton.
Secretory— LEMUEL T. TALBOT, of Taunton.
VI OFFICERS OF THE SOCIETIES.
PLYMOUTH.
President— CUA'RLES G. DAVIS, of Plymouth.
Secretary— LAFAYETTE KEITH, of Bridgewater.
BARNSTARLR.
President— J^ATUAmEL HINCKLEY, of Barnstable.
Secretary— FREDERICK SCUDDER, of Barnstable.
NANTUCKET.
President— JAMES THOMPSON, of Nantucket.
Secretary— ALEXANDER MACY, Jr., of Nantucket.
MARTHA'S VINEYARD.
President— J Oim PIERCE, of Edgartown.
Secretary— BAmEL A. CLEAVELAND, of West Tisbury.
AGRICULTURAL EXHIBITIONS.
The Exhibitions of 1865 hegin on the following days : —
Essex, at Lawrence, .
Middlesex, at Concord,
Middlesex North, at Lowell, .
Middlesex South, at Framingham,
Worcester, at Worcester, .
Worcester West, at Barre,
Worcester North, at Fitchhurg,
Worcester South, at Sturhridge,
Worcester South-East, at Milford,
Hampshire, Franklin and Hampden,
Northampton, .
Hampshire, at Amherst,
Highland, at Middlejield, .
Hampden, at Springjield,
Hampden East, at Palmer,
Franklin, at Greenfield,
Berkshire, at Pittsfield,
HoosAC Valley, at North Adams,
HousATONic, at Great Barrington,
Norfolk, at Dedham, .
Bristol, at Taunton, .
Plymouth, at Bridgewater, .
Barnstable, at Barnstable, .
Nantucket, at Nantucket, .
Martha's Vineyard, at W. Tishury,
at
Tuesday, Sept. 26th.
Thursday, Sept. 21st.
Thursday, Sept. 28th.
Tuesday, Sept. 19th.
Thursday, Sept. 21st.
Thursday, Sept. 28th.
Tuesday, Sept. 26th.
Thursday, Oct. 5th.
Tuesday, Sept. 26th.
Thursday, Oct. 5th.
Tuesday, Sept. 26th.
Thursday, Sept. 14th.
Tuesday, Oct. 3d.
Tuesday, Oct. 10th.
Thursday, Sept. 28th.
Tuesday, Oct. 3d.
Tuesday, Sept. 19 th.
Wednesday, Sept. 27th.
Thursday, Sept. 28th.
Tuesday, Oct. 3d.
Thursday, Oct. 5th.
Tuesday, Oct. 3d.
Tuesday, Sept. 26th.
Tuesday, Oct. 17th.
AGRICULTURE OF MASSACHUSETTS.
AGRICULTURE AND THE INDUSTRIAL ARTS.
From an Address before the Essex Agricultural Society.
BY DARWIN E. WARE.
We have assembled to celebrate in the county of Essex the
annual fair and festival of its farmers. The season is felicitous.
The delightful coolness of the morning and evening hours ; the
genial, warm-hearted noons ; the clear and crystalline air, in
which the heavens seem higher, the pure sky bluer, the fleecy
clouds whiter and the radiance of the night more silvery than
their wont, are grateful and exhilarating after the sultry heats
of summer. The wistful, anxious days are ended. The perils
of the germinating seed and the tender plant are over. The
crop has passed beyond the power of the worm, the insect and
the drought, and now lies safely mellowing for the harvest.
Upon the foliage of the forests glow here and there the streaks
of many-colored light, that soon will blaze with golden and
crimson splendors in the sunset of the declining year. They
herald the approaching hour of thanksgiving, when the farmer
rests from his labors.
The occasion is one of universal interest. When the farmers
rejoice, let all men make holiday. The least thoughtful per-
ceives that all alike are indebted to him who grows the crop for
the sustenance of their daily lives. The more reflecting, to
whom the present brings up the past from which it came, as the
1
2 MASSACHUSETTS AGRICULTURE.
sea-shell vibrates to the listening ear with the roar of its far-off
ocean home, passes, in thought, from the farmer's herds in the
enclosures of the fair-ground back on the line of the centuries,
over the slow migrations from the East, upon which these faith-
ful animals have been the indispensable companions and servants
of our race, and finds in the associations of the day the spirit
of a hoar antiquity. Cattle of their kin went with Israelites
through the divided waters ; they trod the threshing-floors of
Judea ; they were the flocks the shepherds tended, who saw
the risen star of Bethlehem.
It is not, however, so generally considered that agriculture,
from the necessity of fixed habitations to which it gives rise, is
the foundation of our civilization. The permanent home which
agriculture establishes marks the civilized man ; with this comes
the stable social order, the civil polity, the sentiment of country,
the record of history, the gathering accumulations of progress
by successive generations and the durable architecture of reli-
gion and the state. No roving race could build the Pyramids
or the Parthenon. The ancient Greeks, habitually contrasting
their condition with that of the wandering Scythians of the
North, well knew the ground of their preeminence, and venerated
Demeter, the divine genius of agriculture, as the founder of
civilization. What wonder, then, that on the days of her high
festival, a people proud of their beloved Athens, the sculptured
city of ancient Grecian art, and filled with the patriotism that
fought at Marathon, should, with the greatest fervor of devotion,
throng the precincts of her temple, and with primal rites of
sacrifice and stately pomp of solemn ceremonies, honor her, who
was the mother of their pride and joy !
This lofty plane of life the race has never left. And here,
to-day, in the new world of the West, in the nineteenth century
of our Lord, beneath a roof dedicated to Christian worship, and
mindful of our common country, we render hearty thanks to
the only living and true God, for the grand old art upon which
the towering fabric of our social being enduringly rests.
' But agriculture is not the only art of civilized society. Per-
haps, indeed, at this stage of human advancement, it is not to
be considered as the art that gives to our most modern life its
distinguishing characteristics. There are arts upon which even
agriculture greatly relics — the arts of mechanical and manufac-
AGRICULTURE AND THE INDUSTRIAL ARTS. 3
turing industry. The farmers of Essex are met at Lawrence,
one of the principal and busiest centres of this industry in our
county. I am sure I interpret their feelings rightly, when I
acknowledge the generous social and official hospitality which
has been extended to them. Permit me in most of the obser-
vations I shall present to you, to prolong the courtesy of this
acknowledgment, by considering in some of its phases the
dependence of agriculture upon the arts to which this city is
devoted. In suggesting the dependence of agriculture, let me
not seem to derogate from its just praise. On the contrary, the
highest dignity is claimed for it in the assertion of its greatest
dependence. The place of loftiest elevation is dependent upon
all below that sustains it. Agriculture is the highest art only
by virtue of its power of making all the other arts and indus-
tries subservient to itself. " The glorious privilege of being
independent," of which the poet sings, is a moral not a social
independence. Let the farmer rejoice in this privilege, and in
the many circumstances of his life by which the virtue also is
nourished. The philosophy, however, that claims for the
farmer's vocation, and as a ground of especial congratulation,
that it makes him independent of society and the aid of his
fellow-men engaged in other employments, is based upon a
mistake of fact and an erroneous conception of the principles of
human progress. What can be more unfounded in fact ? The
farmer contracts with the carpenter and mason for his house
and barn ; he buys his furniture, clothing, meat, flour, imple-
ments, frequently his bread, butter, cheese and grain ; and from
the islands of the Pacific, material is brought in ships to fertil-
ize his lands. Probably there is not a farmer in Massachusetts
who could keep himself alive, by farming on his present system,
without drawing upon external resources. It is with the farmer
as with other classes of men, his advancement in his vocation
is proportionate to the extent he is aided by other employments.
The advancement of society is always marked by increasingly
diversified mutuality of social dependence. This is the law of
progress. It is but the manifestation, in the larger relations of
life, of the principle of the division of labor, that in proportion
as men become civilized, their pursuits should be diversified.
The traditional ascription to the farmer of a peculiar social
independence is derived from a state of society existing in Mas-
4 MASSACHUSETTS AGRICULTURE.
sachusetts, within the recollection of persons here present, when
the wool and flax grown by him were spun and woven into
garments by his household, and the crops were mainly consumed
on the farm upon which they were raised. But independence
like this is the independence of an undeveloped social life ; one
that is still found, though in a ruder form, in the log cabins
upon our western frontier ; one that increases as man departs
from civilization, and reaches its extreme limit in the American
Indian and the African Hottentot. The higher the organization
of social life, the more each works for all and all for each, and
in so doing each works most efficiently for himself ; the deeper
and tenderer, too, becomes the sentiment of a common humanity
that pervades all classes.
It was agriculture that established the fixed condition of life,
and the possibility of the minute division and distribution of
employments. But mechanical and manufacturing industry,
when thus established as a distinct department of labor, reacts
at once upon agriculture, and gives it a new and rapid develop-
ment. It creates the demand for a surplus of food to sustain
the mechanic, who no longer supplies himself. As the propor-
tion of society devoted to agriculture diminishes, its efficiency
must be strengthened. From that surplus of food beyond his
own wants which he raises for the new industry, he improves
his own condition, and increases the productiveness of his own
labor by better implements. He becomes able to devote himself
exclusively to the raising of crops, and leaves to the mechanic
and manufacturer to do for him, what they are able to do with
greater skill, and at less cost. The progress of agriculture, until
within a short period of time, has been the effect almost exclu-
sively of improved implements, and consequently has directly
depended upon the progress of mechanical art. Until the
mechanic has fashioned the tools with which the farmer can clear
of its stubborn and luxuriant growths the soil best fitted for him,
the mould of the valley and the plain, he is compelled to work
on the poorest land, because least obstructed by vegetation. The
development of the capabilities of the soil by culture at increas-
ing depths, is measured by the difference between the sharpened
stick of the farmer drawn through the earth and leaving a shal-
low scratch one or two inches deep, and the iron plough of the
mechanic exhibited here to-day, which gouges a furrow to the
AGRICULTURE AND THE INDUSTRIAL ARTS. 5
depth of eiglit inches or stirs to the depth of fifteen inches, the
subsoiL A deeper culture is equal to a larger extension of arable
surface. Under the effects of such mechanical improvements,
the globe of agriculture dilates with multiplied dimensions. From
the sickle to the reaping and mowing machine, from the tramp-
ling oxen and the flail to the threshing machine, from the unaided
palm of tlie sower to the drilling machine, from the slow-picking
fingers of the slave to the cotton-gin, from the hand-hoc to the
horse-hoe and hoeing machine, from the hand-rake to the horse-
rake, from the basket borne upon the head, or the back of an
animal, or the market-wagon, to the railroad train drawn by the
locomotive engine, we have similar gradations of mechanical
progress followed by the enhanced productiveness of the farmer's
labor. But for these improved implements, most of which, in
their American manufacture, supply a world-wide demand, the
crops of Europe and America could not be planted, raised, gath-
ered or distributed, and their populations must suffer and perish
for lack of food. The last census in a single fact represents in
its enormous magnitude the accumulated contribution which
mechanical art makes to the resources of American agriculture.
The tables of the last census prove that in the ten years over
which its reckoning extends, an addition was made to the
improved land of the country of fifty million acres. The whole
improved land of the United States amounts to one hundred and
sixty-three million acres. In the ten years from 1850 to 1860
agriculture subdued to itself an extent of territory very nearly
one-half as large as that of the whole improved land that had
resulted from the farming of the country since its first settlement.
Agriculture and the farmer have received not only these
advantages, but they have shared the benefits of the general
movement which has attended the progress of the mechanical
arts, and improved the condition of society. The mechanic and
the manufacturer have won the first great triumphs under that
leader of the race who raised the standard of dominion over
nature, as the rightful realm of man. The spoils they win, how-
ever, are divided with all. They cannot contrive a mode by
which the enhanced productiveness of their industry, shall not
redound to the common weal. The million man-power of machin-
ery can be wielded only for mankind. No single class can appro-
priate its capacity for human aggrandizement. No system of
6 MASSACHUSETTS AGRICULTURE.
caste, or serfdom, or slavery can make sycophants of steam or
electricity. They acknowledge no sovereignty but that of the
people — the sovereignty of man. The engines of mechanical
force are the great democratizers of states. What makes Massa-
chusetts so preeminently a democratic commonwealth ? It is the
fact, that a social power produced by mechanical «art, and equiv-
alent to a hundred million men, is distributed among the million
and a fifth of her actual population, and diffuses through the
whole mass, the inspiration of a larger personality, and a more
aspiring manhood. The development of her new industries,
and the revival that stirred the hearts of her people so deeply,
and reestablished in her institutions on a firmer basis, the principle
of universal education, were contemporaneous, and under the
auspices of the same public men.
The social power of mechanical and manufacturing pro-
duction in England, is the keen and watchful rival of the
aristocracy. Under the lead of Cobden, and to give the
mechanic cheaper food, it abolished the corn laws, which pro-
tected the privileged class and the culture of their immense
estates. To-day, it demands through John Bright, legislation
that shall liberalize the tenure of land ; and with the sanction
of Gladstone, England's future prime-minister, seeks an exten-
sion of the suffrage. The student of nations, who follows
through the last forty years the policy of Russia in developing
her mechanical and manufacturing industry, is prepared to
understand how such statesmanship should culminate in the
thunder-flash of that emancipating edict which made twenty-
three million serfs, freemen.
The history of mechanical progress shown in one implement
of agriculture, the plough, contains in epitome the history of
man's contest with nature, and his ascent to civilized supremacy.
A hafted wooden tooth, drawn through the ground by a shaft,
and leaving but a slender superficial groove, is the rudiment.
It is held and drawn, with painful, exhausting toil, by slaves.
With the ploughshare, the coulter, the mould-board, the two
handles, and the yoked oxen come the deeper and broader
gauge of the furrow, relief to the overtasked ploughman, and
a free yeomanry. The polished instrument of iron, with the
bended beam, and nicely balanced adjustment of weight, lines,
curves and angles, with which its parts are put together, and
AGRICULTURE AND THE INDUSTRIAL ARTS. 7
which slides through the glebe with such easy guidance in your
ploughing match, carving and turning the curling sod without
a break, represents a five-fold gain in effectiveness over the
plough of eighty years ago. It represents, besides, an industry
more profitable and less laborious, the liberation of the mind
from the cramping bonds of an overworked physical fibre ; it
represents the farmer who is taught in the school, who reads,
and writes, and thinks, who owns his land, and makes the gov-
ernment. And depend upon it, this same human creature who
has dragged the plough, and held the plough, and driven the
oxen, will not rest content until he puts steam into the yoke,
seats himself on the plough's back, and ploughs the earth at
his ease.
The mower of our day is the happy type of an age amelio-
rated by mechanical art. The portraiture of Time that fancy
gives us is out of date. Keep the hoiir-glass. We cannot get
rid of that. But picture him no longer as the gaunt old man
who has worn the flesh from off his bones in cutting swaths
with an old-fashioned scythe, but rather as the well-conditioned
farmer, mounted upon his chariot-machine, driving his team
afield through the falling grass, to the ringing music of the
clipping blades. '
Labor-saving machinery alone, however, cannot insure a
true progress in agriculture. That involves many elements.
Unlike the mechanical and manufacturing arts, the product of
agriculture is not a fabricated, but a natural one. It is a living
plant. Art here can only aid the vital organic force. It may
improve the species by mixture and by culture, it may multiply
the crop, but it cannot construct a plant out of its constituent
elements. The principles of vegetable growth upon which
agriculture depends, are among the subtlest, most veiled, and
intricate of the operations of nature. They lie in the shadowy
region that borders upon the thick, impenetrable darkness that
shrouds the mystery of life. That region, however, has been
explored, and the exploration has disclosed for the first time in
the history of the race, intelligible principles that inspire the
hope of an agriculture progressive and productive almost with-
out limit. The objection does not now apply which Lord Racon
brought against the works on agriculture to which he had
access. A large collection of them, which he owned, he caused
8 MASSACHUSETTS AGRICULTURE.
to be piled up in the courtyard and set on fire ; because, said
he, " In all these books, I find no principles ; they can, there-
fore, be of no use to any man." What the law of gravitation
is in astronomy, what steam is in mechanics, what the Constitu-
tion of the United States is in government, the beginnings of
epochs, such is the newly developed science of chemistry, in
agriculture. That light and heat from the sun, that water,
air and earth were necessary to vegetation, was understood.
Experience had shown that certain crops were better adapted to
some soils than to others ; that a sviccession of different crops
was better than a succession of the same crops ; that fallows
increased the vegetative power of the land. These, and such as
these empirical rules, were known and obeyed ; and yet, in
spite of husbandry of this sort, crops would in time deteriorate,
and the soil lose its virtues beyond the skill of the farmer to
devise the means of restoration. The writings of Columella
and Varro, while they disclose a system of Roman husbandry,
most careful, methodical and painstaking, at the same time
reveal the appalling, irremediable fact, that the production per
acre had largely diminished. Pilled with the ancient faith that
the golden age of the race was in its prime, and that then the
arts were divinely established' in their perfection, the Roman
farmers dreamed that a declining agriculture was due to some
lost charm, some missing precept, which tradition had failed to
transmit down the course of the centuries from hero-ancestors
taught by the gods. Modern agriculture has exhibited the
same stages of decadence. But modern science has revealed
the causes of such decline and placed within the control of
man the powers that will eiiable him to resist this downward
tendency, if he will but use them. Earth, air and water have
been resolved into their priomordial elements. A searching
analysis has shown what essentials of its life and substance the
plant draws from the soil, and what from the atmosphere. The
microscope has revealed the complex physiology through which
by a subtle alchemy the sun in the heavens converts the mineral
earth, and air and water, into an organic growth that is food for
the nations. Among the most valuable generalizations of science
is the demonstrated truth that certain known constituents of
the soil do in the process of vegetable growth, enter into the
essential constitution of the plant, and as a consequence, that
AGRICULTURE AND THE INDUSTRIAL ARTS. 9
these constituents are removed from the soil in the removal of
the plant of which they form a part. These indispensable sub-
stances of the soil compose but a very small portion of its bulk,
and they are not replaced by any process of nature, certainly
not by any process rapid enough to keep pace with the succes-
sion of crops. To restore the conditions of vegetation, they
must be replaced by man. Every crop diminishes the capacity
of the land for the production of another crop. This diminu-
tion may not be perceptible in its immediate influence upon a
virgin soil, rich in the necessary elements of vegetation.
Years, even generations, may elapse before these mineral
deposits shall geem to fail. Rotation in the crops will equalize
the drain upon the different portions of the soil. The yearly
agitations of the plough will bring to the roots of the plant
other particles of earth whose virtues have not been extracted,
and the steady action of the sun upon the changing surfaces
exposed to its rays, will develop new resources of vegetative
power. These and other causes will postpone the day of
exhaustion. That day, when it comes, is one of wrath, of ruin
and desolation for the work of civilized man. The imposing
fabric moulders, crumbles and falls. The fertile plain, once
waving with bountiful harvests and sustaining populous and
well-built cities, becomes a barren waste. The blasted fields of
ancient agriculture are to-day monuments of the vengeance
which nature wreaks upon a culture that does not compensate
the soil. The Roman Campagna was once the garden of Italy
from which the millions of the imperial metropolis drew daily
supplies of food. Here was the site of the luxurious country-
seat, the splendid villa, the estate of the Roman senator. Here
were purple vineyards, and rolling landscapes covered with
golden grain. Here, too, were temples of the gods. Now, a
noisome desert exhales a poisonous miasma and affords the
prowling robber a lurking place in its tangled growths. Only
here and there, where a squalid peasant has fixed his hovel, can
a sign of human habitation be seen. Not the Campagna alone
in Italy, and not Italy alone of the ancient states, exhibits the
ravages of the despoiling husbandman. The Etrurian coast,
Calabria, Asia Minor, the islands and continent of Greece, bear
constant testimony to the desolating power that exists in a
vicious agriculture. With the extension of Roman sway and
10 MASSACHUSETTS AGRICULTURE.
the inadequacy of Roman farms to supply the demand for food,
the fertile lands of Sicily, Sardinia and the Mediterranean coasts
of Africa, became tributary to the granaries that fed the Roman
populace, and the inevitable curse of spoliation smote them too
with sterility.
And to-day, while the historian recounts the stages through
which Rome passed, from a social condition in which a sturdy
yeomanry were largely owners and tillers of the soil, and the
strength of the state in war and peace, one in which a Cincin-
natus could pass from his plough and four-acre farm to the
dictatorship, charged to see that the republic should receive no
detriment, and from the dictatorship back to the modest farm
wearing the crown of gold, after he had vanquished the foe
and saved his country, — and then comes down to the time
when the Gracchi strove unto death, but in vain, to recruit by
a distribution of the public domain the diminishing farmer-class,
and rescue them and their salutary power from the encroach-
ments of an aristocracy of capitalists and patricians, — and so still
further on to the period of over-grown estates tilled by slaves, of
a yeomanry impoverished, of pauperism massed and accumulat-
ing, of the few hugely rich, and of the multitude poor, depend-
ent and corrupt, till Cgesar comes, and Caligula, and the invading
Vandal, with the manners, morals, and events of their respective
times, down to the doomed and irretrievable fall, — while tlie
the historian recites this melancholy story of a risen and fallen
empire, the man of modern science reads, date by date, the
parallel record of the waning fertility of an unrequited soil,
traces the tendency of deteriorating lands to become aggregated
in large estates, to yield themselves exclusively to servile labor,
to degrade the farmer, to swell the proletarian mob, to induce
the necessity of an outlet for population, and of gaining new
resources of food by war and conquest, — and so weaves an argu-
ment that startles if it does not persuade us, that the various
chapters of this tale of glory and decline, are illustrations of the
jiatural laws of agriculture and a warning for all time. To his
mind, one Licbig liad been worth an hecatomb of Gracchi to save
tlie Roman state.
To no people should the warnings of science, pointing to the
ruins of the past, come with more power to impress with serious
alarm than to our own. For there is no people upon the face of
AGRICULTURE AND THE INDUSTRIAL ARTS. 11
the earth that would achieve greatness, that prosecutes an agri-
culture more wasteful, improvident and reckless of the indispen-
sable conditions of an enduring fertility of the soil. We have
ravaged the continent like an enemy's territory. With the axe
and with fire we have hewn down and burned away the primitive
growtlis of the valley, the hillside and the prairie. Crop by
crop, we have drawn from the earth its precious minerals, and
borne them hundreds and thousands of miles to distant cities,
across the continent, over the ocean, and never returned again,
them or their equivalents ; until at last, exliausted of its trea-
sures, it refuses longer to yield the abundant harvest of its prime,
and lapses through successive stages of deterioration into impov-
erishment, unfruitfulness, and sterility. The failing crop, instead
of stimulating the American farmer to seek a remedy in an
improved system of culture, too often prompts him to abandon
the lands he has reclaimed from the wilderness, and sends him
out in search of fresh fields and pastures new, on which to repeat
the process of devastation. From New England, he migrates to
New York, from New York to Ohio and Wisconsin ; and now
Ohio complains of abandoned farms and of migrations to the
West. Under this system, while with the increasing acreage
brought under cultivation, the aggregate product of the country
has immensely increased, lands which half a century ago were
unsurpassed in productiveness, and seemingly inexhaustible, >
have visibly deteriorated. Whole States have been impoverished.
In our own Commonwealth, the average of the crops of corn,
wheat, rye, barley, oats and hay, was quite low in 1807, but it
was some fifteen per cent, lower in 1855. In New York, where
the average crop of wheat eighty years ago was from twenty-five
to thirty bushels, it is now only fourteen bushels per acre. Ohio,
which eighty years ago presented to the farmer a rich unbroken,
soil in the wild state of nature, now yields a diminishing aver-
age per acre of twelve bushels of wheat. In 1850, the average
yield of wheat per acre did not exceed seven bushels in Virginia
and Nortli Carolina, and five bushels in Alabama.
It is a well authenticated fact, that of the one hundred and
sixty-three million acres of improved land in the United States,
three-fourths receive no return of the necessary elements of
vegetable growth that are carried off by the annual harvest. A
distinguished agriculturist calculated in 1850, the annual waste
12 MASSACHUSETTS AGRICULTURE.
of these elements to be equal to the mineral constituents of
fifteen luuulred million bushels of corn, and that the amount of
only two of these elements thus lost hi a single year, was worth
at their market price, twenty million dollars. " To suppose,"
says the' author of these estimates, " that this state of things can
continue, and we, as a nation, remain prosperous, is simjily
ridiculous. We have as yet much virgin soil, and it will be long
ere we reap the reward of our present improvidence. It is
merely a question of time, and time will solve the problem in a
most unmistalcable manner. "What with our earth-butchery
and prodigality, we are each year losing the intrinsic'essence of
our vitality. Our country has not yet grown feeble from this
loss of its life-blood, but the hour is fixed when, if our present
system continue, the last throb of the nation's heart will have
ceased, and when America, Greece and Rome, will stand among
the ruins of the past." Is it to-day, I would ask, quite certain
that our count ly has not already grown feeble from this cause ?
"When we reflect upon the notorious fact, that nowhere has this
deterioration of the soil been so deep, so general, so exigent, as
at the South, under the combined effect of an exhaustive cul-
ture, and the rude husbandry of slaves, incapable of developing
more than a small portion of the native resources of the earth,
and remember the aggressive spirit in which Southern states-
men pushed for the acquisition of new territory on our Southern
border, and for domination in all the public domain, and the
connection of this fatal policy with the present civil war, who
sh»ll say that an accursed thirst for land, more land and new
land, stimulated by a wasteful, profligate agriculture, that robbed
the soil of its wealth, and the man who tifled it of his wages,
has not, in some degree, ministered to that madness of treason
.which seeks with all the arts and engines of destruction the ruin
of the nation ?
It needs not, however, the present calamity of civil war, or
the deserts that mark the limits of ancient states, to make clear
as light that a migratory, nomadic agriculture, that first plun-
ders the earth and then abandons it, must at last enfeeble the
national strength. It is all involved in the proposition which
science has over and over again demonstrated, that every crop
takes from the soil ingredients which are indispensable to vege-
tation, but of which no soil contains an inexhaustible supply.
A(^K10Ur/rURM ANI> TllK INDrS'l'KMAL AIM'S. \'.\
As !i MtH'ossJiry corollnrv lo lliis |»i-o|i()si(ion, scinuM^ (Mijoiiis
U|»()u ii,i;Ti(Mil(tin> Jis Mm i-oiulilioii of a siilf sustaiuiiii;- uiul liisliiii;;
viliilily llio pr(>ct>|)(,, lliiil. wliaUnor is (nkeii l'ri)n\ llic soil l>y i\\o
luirvcsl. Muisl, lul I'oslorcMJ (o i( ii|i,!UM. TIu^ viohilioii of tliis' |n't>-
co\){, iiidii'ls an iiijtiiy upon Iho coiinlrv, n. wioii^- upon (he raco.
1(. (iMHJs (UiMi lo IIh> (^xliuclion of lln^ Iiuuimu spin-it's, or wlial is
(juili^ as bad, lo tluusi, if bMckwiifd IowmpiIs luu'liiu-isin. To
tii'slroy l!u* pro(luc(iv(Mi(*ss of llio soil, lo sipiandfr I1h> cltMncnls
ol" Uuii pi'oduclivtMicss, is lo di'slroy lli<> hopes of civili/.tMl luiniMii ■
ily upon cniili. II, rol>s poslcfily <>f ils jusi, ltirlhfii!;lil lo a
oai'ct'i- of progress. Ily what ri^lil. shidl \v(\ Iho cn'aluri^s of a
diiy, Ilic Iransitory Itniiuils of Ihis fair ami finlih' cailh, a lilllu
Avhtl(> iulrustiMl |,o our k(M>pinu;, despoil il, of Ihai wilhonl whicli
linnian aihanccnicnl, human r\isl(MH'(>, is impossildr, and turn
il, over, sirrilo and impo\ immsIumI, Id |,Iu) pMUU'aliou wo s\uuuiou
info boiu^', and (•hai'i;(^ as \vn aii^ char^t^d, with tho gi-tMil, diisliny
of man ? Is nol Ihis lo ItMupl. fho ortMd.iu^' l*rovid(>nco ? TluMuii'h
thu dark iidiniludc of ('(uinlb'ss n^i^s whihi ui;;hl. brooihMl o\rr
chaos, lo Ihal dawn wIumi lif;hr was kiudlrd in I1h> h(>a\(Mi;, and
tho niorniu^ stars saujj; lo!j;(«lhi'r, ami lhi'()Uj.;h all I be rounds of
cliiuij^o that lii!,ht has shown upon siiu'c li,u;ht was, Ihis iVa'-nicnl.
«\irlh has biM'u prcpaiini',' for Iho habitalion of Iho sons of mrn.
Hy liro and furnace heals, and icy eoii<j,'(da,tious, by Ihe laxaloi'-
rent, and lh(> !'riiidin<;' <;hu'.i(ir, by Ihe earllKpndvo ami Ihe \itl
cano, Ihe ujiheaval (d' mounlains, Ihe ocean's tUUnjiio and Ihe
ri\'er's Hood, liy ti^uipest and whirlwind, by Ihe powerful action
of th(^ sun lhrou<;'li oons of altoriuitin^' da,y and ni"'hl. and i'\ri-
nnolviuj;' si^asons, by tliti kini;'donis (d' v(^^'etab|(> and luiimal life
whosi^ uuilliliuliiu)us tribes ruled by rhi/odoid. and uiaslodon
are now i^xlinet, Ihe moist, a,bsorbenl, llueul, vibratory ainios-
j)heru is cvoIvimI and purilied, tlu^ solid roidv is made and
CMMunbhMl, and ils powdi>red in-ains soi'ted and washiMJ and
iniu};'led in Ihe loam and mould, the How and disti-ibnl ion of
llltMVattn'S ar(^ li xrd, and all things loned lo Ihe leniperalnro
tluit suits the hom(> of man. Throu-di all IIk^ calaidysms of llie
W(nld, lh(^ nnnerals of the hai-vest ha\c been borne as in Ibc ark
thai bore the faleofman upon Ihe walers of Ibc llodd, nnlil at
last tht^y liavo been safely gai'nei-ed up in Ihe ripe and iVnilliil
soil. To lake fi'oui the (>ai'lh this precious diamond tlust ami
]U)t reslore it, lo destroy Ihe |ii-ovidenlial uses of tluiso costly
14 MASSACHUSETTS AGRICULTURE.
products of all time, and so imperil man and his dominion, is it
not a sin against the creation, is it not a forbidden thing, as
truly as though the injunction had been graven on the tables of
stone, and thundered from Sinai with the commandment, " Thou
shalt not steal ?"
Let an advancing morality teach our duty to the soil. It is
but lately that the dumb and helpless brute was protected from
the cruelty of man by the penalties of the criminal code. Let
the appeal of a starved and emaciated soil touch the instructed
conscience of civilized humanity. But whether the duty be
recognized or not, the infraction of the law will bring its direful
penalty.
In the light of these considerations, it is not with unmixed
satisfaction that we regard the progress of mechanical triumphs
over the soil. We welcome, at a time when all the resources of
the nation are needed, the accession of fifty million acres to the
productive land of the country, that was made in the ten years
of the last census ; and we rejoice in an increase of agricultural
product, greatly outrunning the increase of population, accom-
plished by means of improved agricultural implements and
thousands of miles of additional railroad. But it is important,
in connection with the consideration of the conditions of a per-
manently prosperous agriculture, to call attention to the fact
that these tremendous mechanical agencies, whose aggregate
effect is so astounding, are so many mechanical advantages in
accelerating the process of exhaustion. Using these powerful
appliances, you pump the waters from the well no longer by
hand, but with a steam-engine. The greater the yearly crop
gathered, the greater the drain upon the fertilizing elements of
the soil, and the sooner their limit is reached ; the more impor-
tant, too, it becomes to find some counteractive tendency, which
shall restore the equilibrium so injuriously disturbed by the
deportations of the harvest.
Let the processes of nature, ordained by that wisdom that
was at the foundation of the world, direct our inquiry. Through-
out her infinite domain to the remotest star, not an atom of
matter, not a throb of force, even to the faintest vibration that
pulsates in a ray of light is ever lost. The thunder that shakes
the firmament, the lightning that rends the rock, the tornado
that prostrates the forest, the convulsion that rocks the earth
AGRICULTURE AND THE INDUSTRIAL ARTS. 15
and opens gaping scams which swallow up cities, are operations
in which she but combines and rccombines her everlasting
elements. An unending circle of self-adjusting change preserves
forever tlie balance of her stupendous harmonies. Nothing loses
a function except to gain one ; nothing comes to an end which
is not a beginning. Every stage is a stage of transition. All
things flow with the tide of time, and the current is continually
returning upon itself. The trees grow old and at last decay ;
their mould builds up the ascending columns of another wood.
By the processes of growth, the dust of the earth is upraised in
grains of wheat and corn. Wheat and corn, as food, are assim-
ilated by the organisms of animal life. Upon man and bird and
beast alike descends the inevitable decree, " Dust thou art, and
unto dust thou slialt return ; " and so the cycle of transforma-
tion is renewed.
Where, then, among the forces of society, shall we seek the
principle, whose operation shall harmonize with nature's grand
economy, and be the basis of a system of agriculture that shall
be perpetual and self-sustaining in the elements of a fertile soil ?
The conscience of the individual is of too limited a scope to be
trusted to decide upon grounds of permanent well-being, the
issue in which present gain is met by a possible or prospective
loss to unborn generations. This principle, if found, will be
found most effectually established in the economy of the national
industry, and so established that 'the present shall not be called
to the difficult virtue of self-sacrifice, the resources of the future
shall not be endangered, and the very working of the farm shall
lay the foundation for still more abundant harvests. I find tlie
hint of the principle souglit in that rule of good farming which
enjoins the consumption upon the farm of the products of the
farm, and the selection for the market, not of the hay and
turnips, but the mutton and the beef. This economy, carried
out upon a national scale, would give us a distributed home
consumption of agricultural products, at diffused and accessible
centres of a diversified mechanical and manufacturing industry,
and of the commerce which such industry creates. For at
these centres the fertilizing constituents of the harvest accumu-
late. Rejected by the processes of consumption, still as suitable
for the crop as when deposited by the last inundation, they
become again available to all neighboring farms, to which they
16 MASSACHUSETTS AGRICULTURE.
are as truly the raw material of an agricultural product, as iron,
cotton and wool to the machine-shop and the mill. The spread
of cities like Lawrence throughout the land, with different
industries adapted to local capabilities, will give to the agricul-
ture of the nation the conditions of a self-sustaining, perpetually
compensated and lasting fertility. The agriculture of China,
that antedates the buried epochs of the Egyptian kings, and
to-day flourishes and feeds the swarming millions of that empire,
is based upon the principle that seeks from the' city restitution
to the farm of what is taken from it by the harvest. Great as
is the benefit which agriculture already derives from the neigh-
borhood of centres of industry and commerce, it has hardly
begun to use the resources which abound in such localities and
should be made available. Li a true economy, the city and the
town should be regarded by the farmer as a part of his farm
domain. They are so by the laws of nature. They should be
so in the practice of husbandry and the regulations of their
police.
The problem of utilitizing the sewage of cities, which is so
earnestly discussed abroad, has vital relations to the progress of
civilized states. Through the sewers of cities draining into
rivers and the ocean, the highest properties of the soil are irre-
coverably lost. The turbid currents of North River, the Thames
and the Seine, .are richer than Pactolus with its sands of gold.
For that which is pollution to 'their waters is the touch of magic
to the fields, and the power of food for successive generations of
men. The value of this material as a fertilizer is obvious, but
it has been comparatively estimated and put beyond controversy
by the experiments of the Prussian government in reclaiming
land with the sewage of Dresden and Berlin. Land, which
without any applications yielded but three to one from the seed
sown, and seven to one when treated with the ordinary resources
of the farm, yielded fourteen to one when fertilized from the
sewer. As a mere problem of pecuniary saving it is a momen-
tous one. The fertilizing portions of the sewage of the city of
New York are computed, on the lowest estimate, to be worth
seven million dollars per annum. We have authority for saying
that the wasted drainage of the city of Boston is capable of
restoring annually to a high condition thirty thousand acres of
sterile land. The yearly waste of fertilizing elements in Great
AGRICULTURE AND THE INDUSTRIAL ARTS. 17
Britain and Ireland are carefully computed at one hundred and
forty million dollars. There is no direction in which ingenuity
has of late been oftener or more effectively exercised in the
industrial arts, than in contriving modes by which the dross, the
shavings, the chips, all the unassimilated residues that remain
after the completion of the main product, arc converted to some
profitable use. But there is no problem to which the ingenious
mind could turn itself with greater advantage, than that of
utilizing sewage. The invention of a plan, by which the slime
and sediment of cities may be transformed into corn and wheat
for human sustenance and the vigor of the vegetating earth be
perpetually renewed, gives scope for one of the most beneficent
systems of economy ever devised. The revenues of a kingdom
would be a cheap equivalent for such a plan ; the statesman,
seeking for his country unfailing sources of prosperity ; the
sanitary physician, striving to convert the fountains of disease
and pestilence into fountains of life and strength ; the farmer,
anxious to invigorate his exhausted lands ; the chemist, eager
to give new proofs of the resources of his favorite science ; the
engineer, who would render a public service, can afford to give
this subject his deepest thought and care.
The intimate connection that exists between the prosecution
of the arts of mechanical and manufactuxing industry and the
progress of a nation, needs no illustration in this city, county or
Commonwealth. The theme is a familiar one. The annual
manufactures of Massachusetts, valued at two hundred and
sixty-six million dollars, and structures like these we see around
us here, distributed throughout her borders, are works that
manifest her sturdy faith. This faith she has cherished along
with her love of knowledge and of freedom ; or rather these are
the phases of her humane and earnest love of progress. In a
diffused and .diversified national industry, and an exchange of
its products by an unfettered domestic commerce, she has ever
striven to establish tlie firm safeguards of independence, — union
and liberty. How wisely she strove, how unwisely her counsels
were neglected, let the witness be the mad rebellion that now
rages ; which was nourished into being by the hope of aid from
foreign states ; which seeks to destroy the Union, and to found
an empire based on slavery ; and which began in the confident
belief of its leaders that one single crop raised on Southern
3
18 . MASSACHUSETTS AGRICULTURE.
plantations, and not equal in value to the loyal home-consumed
hay crop of the North, would, nevertheless, in consequence of
its abnormal relation to foreign manufactures and the exchanges
of Northern commerce, bring the governments of the United
States and Europe in submission to their feet. In this belief,
when they raised the flag of treason they arrogantly proclaimed
cotton to be king. To-day, Massachusetts with the bayonet
debates on bloody fields the cause of independence, union and
liberty. But it is the same cause which, on questions touching
the national industry, she debated through the eloquence of a
Webster and a Ghoate. And now, when the policy of national
disorganization that has ruled and rioted in the land so many
years has culminated in revolt, the first resource of the nation,
with which it seeks to invigorate and combine its abused and
dissipated strength, is the encouragement of the national indus-
try. The prosecution of a gigantic war upon the principles of
a sound financial policy calls for large annual revenues ; such a
course is necessary to maintain the national credit, and, in the
case of an inconvertible currency, to prevent depreciation and
the rise of prices. These needed revenues the government
derives in largest measure from manufactures. The develop-
ment of manufactures, such as can be made to take root by a
temporary adjustment of tariff and excise, naturally becomes and
has become a part even of the revenue policy of the nation.
Accordingly, the country is sprouting with new growths of
mechanical and manufacturing industry. Let them cover the
land. Let villages and towns, the centres of these imperial and
liberalizing arts, multiply and increase, to develop a progressive
and prosperous agriculture, to deepen the foundations and
quicken the life of society, to distribute the benefits of skilled
labor reinforced by an iron-armed machinery, and increased in
productiveness a hundred fold, to establish the union of the
crop of the farm and the labor of the neighboring factory, foun-
dry, or furnace in ultimate products, which shall become the
staples of a pervading domestic commerce at the lowest cost of
making exclianges ; such a commerce as has been recognized
since Adam Smith declared the principles of the wealth of nations
as the most profitable to communities and states. So knit the
fibres and harden the sinews of the national strength. Science
has callud attention to the general fact that tlie simple sub-
• AGRICULTURE AND THE INDUSTRIAL ARTS. 19
stances of which all material things are composed do not,
except in combinations with each other, enter into or influence
the organic growth of plants. So in the social economy, not
the isolation of the farmer or the manufacturer, but the union
of both gives the needful element of social organization.
Let England strain every nerve to gain and hold possession
of the markets of mankind with her vast and world-embracino"
CD
system of manufactures and commerce, and let her strive with
equal effort to feed from her garden patch the millions whom
she thus employs ; and so doing, let her teach the docile nations
to devote themselves exclusively to the ciilture of the earth,
and persuade whom she may. We will observe her practice,
and draw our precepts for ourselves ; and hail
" The rise of empire and of arts."
20 MASSACHUSETTS AGRICULTURE.
THE IJSrTERESTS OF AGRICULTURE.
From an Address before the Middlesex North Agricultural Society
BY JOHN A. GOODWIN.
We have higher motives than ever for striving to elevate our
various callings, and to render our New England homes more
prosperous and attractive. What can be done to advance the
interests of agriculture in particular, that being the base of the
industrial column — the foundation art, from "whose wants and
desires all other pursuits and professions spring ?
In selecting a topic from so wide a field I can hardly hope to
choose that which may seem to all the most desirable. For
instance : — a friend I see here from Billerica, may think that I
ought to hold him up to censure, and prove tliat he deserves no
premiums from the Society's funds, because he tolerated so
many scores of caterpillars' nests this year on his apple-trees
and worthless wild cherry-trees along his wall, that his orchard
looked as if a fire had passed over it, and vermin enough had
been produced for the destruction of all the orchards in his
neighborhood, next year. He is right — he, and all like him,
ought to be cut off for a year from premiums and good- standing
here, but I must leave him to the gnawings of the caterpillar of
conscience.
Another friend, from Dracut, may think that I am about to
argue against his right to even a gratuity on his fine articles
exhibited, because he allows a plantation of thistles to fringe
the highway all along his land, where I saw them scattering
their seed for next year's crop, by the thousand over his farm,
and by the ten thousand over the farms of his neighbors. Now
this friend, too, is right in supposing that he and all who are
guilty of the like offence ought to be held up, on occasions like
this, as very bad examples, but I must dismiss them with the
THE INTERESTS OF AGRICULTURE. 21
wish that they were compelled to sleep upon the thistles they
raise, until by united effort the vile weeds were banished to
their native Canada to comfort the long-cared gentry gon6
thither to escape the draft !
Neither will I talk about that man of Chelmsford — a disciple
of Nimrod — who to save a few extra cherries, shot all the robins
and woodpeckers about his premises, tearing the twigs off his
trees with the shot more than two years' growth will repair, and
breaking the law at the same time. In this case, the subsequent
bugs and cut-worms convinced the offender of his ungrateful
folly, and no gratuity that we can pay would induce him again
to slay his feathered benefactors.
Perhaps the trustees of our society may expect a discourse
upon their policy of offering premiums for blooded bulls, and
also for those doubtful quadrupeds called native bulls, thus
rewarding one man for introducing good blood among our stock,
and rewarding another man for adulterating the same blood
when it has been introduced ! Although I think the society
thus commits a greater bull than any in its pens, I will not stop
to express an opinion.
No — caterpillar-raisers, thistle-distributors, bird-murderers,
and blood-debasers — though right in thinking you ought to be
talked about, I must pass you by. That thoughtfulness of your
committee, of which I spoke, prevents, and it is this : when they
extended their late but imperative invitation, they said that
twenty minutes would be long enough to speak, and that I must
not on any account take over half an hour ! So having con-
sumed a fair portion of my allowance in preliminaries — in
skirmishing around the outposts — I will devote the remainder
of it to the idea I have, that the great want of agriculture
among us is, a large increase of farms and a much thicker
farming population.
I know the idea is that our section of country is about full,
and that young persons wishing a farm should go to the West.
Yet of the 42,000,000 acres in New England only 19,000,000
are occupied, and only two-thirds of even this space is what is
called improved — that is used for pasturage, tillage, and grass,
or for building purposes. So, less than one-third of New England
is improved, and not one-half is occupied for any purpose.
22 MASSACHUSETTS AGRICULTURE.
In our old farming county, where all the land is " occupied,"
there are 220,000 acres " improved " and 128,000 acres unim-
proved. Suppose one-half of this unimproved land to be unfit
for anything but wood, we still have enough left to make 1,000
additional farms of 56 acres each.
A large part of this land embraces swamps and pond-holes,
surrounded by light soils. The drainage of the former and the
exchange of a part of their contents, with the arid uplands
about them, would yield some of the best soils in the county.
This subject is much talked about, I know, and not a little has
been done, but the thing has hardly begun in earnest.
To see what other people do, take the case of Harlem Lake
in Holland, which lake was thirty-three miles in circumference.
Some sixteen years ago the government commenced pumping it
out by steam-power. At the end of four years the work was
done, and the State had gained 44,500 acres of rich land at a
cost of 180.69 per acre. This tract is now divided into farms
of 49|- acres each, and it is estimated in time to support
70,000 people, or twice the population of Lowell. Such an
undertaking as this cannot be expected in our region, but the
case is interesting as showing whatsis thought profitable by the
sluggish, money-loving Dutchman. In our county, however,
are many small waste tracts, amounting to thousands of acres,
which would pay for under-draining, even at the cost per acre
of pumping out Harlem Lake.
Then these swamps and low places are great reservoirs of
manure. For 4,500 years the humus of the uplands has been
finding its way to the lower levels, leaving the soil impoverished.
It is the part of agriculture to restore the loss. Dr. Dana has
demonstrated this in his profound and excellent work, the
" Muck Manual," a popularized edition of which should be in
the hands of every farmer and gardener, and should be distri-
buted by our society in place of many of its smaller cash pre-
miums and gratuities. He there shows us that a cord, of peat,
muck, or of pond mud, mixed with one-third of a bushel of salt
and one-third of a cask of lime, make a compost as valuable as
a cord of stable manure, and at one-tliird of the cost. He adds
these words, which, coming from so high an authority, should
be emblazoned on the walls of our hall : — " Nature never
THE INTERESTS OF AGRICULTURE. 23
bestowed upon man, soil of greater capability of being made
lastingly fertile , than the sandy light soil of Neiv England!^'
My friend, Dr. Lariiig, of Salem, who happily combines theo-
retical, practical, and remunerative farming, found himself,
three years ago, short of manure. He accordingly got o\it one
hundred and seventy cords of muck from a swamp, and mixing
one hundred casks of lime, put it in little heaps to freeze
through the winter. In the spring, after thorough mixing, it
had become excellent manure, costing him when spread, not
fifty cents a cord, besides the original getting out. With this
dressing and some small additions, he raised seventy-live bushels
of corn to the acre, and left his land in good heart for future
operations. In Maine, many cultivators have adopted Dr.
Dana's method of making manure, so that farms, where few
animals are kept, continually increase in richness, at a small
expense.
But this operation is oiily half the work needed here. For
every cord brought from the low ground, one or two should be
carried back, giving muck composts to the uplands and sandy
composts to the lowlands. Thus, year by year, over even our
most obscure hills and valleys, the area of cultivation may
expand. Nature yielding more and more of her bounty to a
constantly improving skill and an increasing population.
But we have another store of fertility neglected, that is
immense. The 220,000 acres of improved land in Middlesex
County are divided into 4,300 farms. Most of these are three-
storied. The five inches nearest the surface form the first
story ; the five inches next below are the second ; the five or
ten inches next under that make the third. Now statistics
show, and good farmers assure me that they are correct, that
in this county, and in the whole State, the average depth of
ploughing is only five inches. Thus, while we improve only
two-thirds the surface of Old Middlesex, we improve only one-
third the depth.
To make room for more farms, the easiest and best-paying
way is to shorten the length and breadth of the present farm,
and increase its thickness. Agriculture is an exception to the
general rule, and thrives the more as you run it into the
ground ! Good farmers admit this doctrine so generally that
24 MASSACHUSETTS AGRICULTURE.
it may seem a waste of time to dwell upon it. Here is the
trouble — they admit the doctrine in full, but do not admit the
ploughshare half-way.
Just twenty-four years ago, a Boston house imported from
England the first subsoil plough ever in this country. Yankee
skill soon changed the heavy, costly thing into a series of
ploughs calculated for all work and for all teams, from one
horse to four horses or oxen. These subsoil ploughs, following
the common plough in the same furrow, go down into the third
story of the farm, not turning up the subsoil but shaking and
pulverizing it, so that all three stories of tlie farm are opened
to the warmth of the sun, the softening of the rain, and the
purification of the air, with the myriads of plant-roots following
in their wake. Of course, if the subsoil is sand and gravel, or
mostly rock, the work may be overdone, but in every other case
the deeper the cultivation, with manure in proportion, the
better the farming, and curiously enough, the freer the land
from wet in moist seasons, and the freer it is from drought in
dry ones.
Now, my hearers may say — " We knew all this beforcj better
than you!" Exactly so! But if you A;woi^ it, why don't you c?o
it? Why are subsoil ploughs so nearly unknown in so many of
the towns in our society's limits, and the soil tilled by merely
scratching the surface — or by what may be called skim-milk
farming? Why is no premium offered by our society for sub-
soil ploughing, or some recognition made at our exhibitions
that it is even desirable to stir the soil beyond the regulation
depth of the ploughing match? For many generations the air
and sun have been trying to ameliorate the subsoils of North
Middlesex, and the corn and grass-roots, more enterprising than
their owners, have vainly sought to pierce its clays and hard-
pans in search of plant-food for their benefit and ours, but you
would not aid them with the steel fingers that alone can do the
work.
You will often see, both in city and country, a mansion of
which the best part is made into a parlor, furnished more
expensively than all the house beside, but kept continually shut
with close blinds and curtains, and a strong smell of mildew
pervading the dark and solemn silence. Let the clergyman
THE INTERESTS OF AGRICULTURE. . 25
make his brief summer call and one blind is for a few moments
set ajar, while he rests himself in a luxurious but mouldy chair.
At length comes Tlianksgiving, and the parlor is fairly opened,
the only day in the year, perhaps; and when the mould is
rubbed off, the dampness dried out, and the moist chimney has
done smoking and begins to draw, the room for that short day
seems like a habitable and even cheerful place, but on the
morrow relapses into grim solitude.
To think of such a room is melancholy. But how much
more melancholy is it to think of the deserted second and third
stories of the farm, just spoken of — the spacious and valuable,
but never visited parlors of the soil. Into their moist darkness
no parochial visit introduces a chance ray of sunshine, and no
festival, even once a year, cheers the richly furnished recesses
with warmth and life.
Now there are a few subsoil ploughs owned by members of
this society, and there are some as good farmers present to-day
as can well be found. When our friends, the clergy, rebuke the
evil of staying away from church, they have to address them-
selves to the faithful few who have come to church, and to
whom therefore the censure does not apply. So in decrying
poor cultivation, I have to speak to you^ who are mostly right
already, and to whom my remarks may seem like a last year's
almanac — old news and dry reading. Still, it does not seem to
be generally realized that it is easier to raise sixty bushels of
corn on one acre than on two, provided the land is worth
planting at all, and what is true of this crop is true of others,
corn being a convenient type. The last returns showed that
the average yield of corn in Massachusetts was twenty-eight and
a half bushels, and in Middlesex County twenty-nine. Good
farmers say that twice as deep ploughing, with more manure and
cultivation, would certainly double this. Thus, our farmers can
get as large crops from half their land as from the whole, and
save much in hoeirig, carting, <fec., and raise better hay crops
afterwards.
If Dr. Loring, by freely using muck-compost, gets seventy-
five bushels of corn to the acre; if James Day, of Haverhill, by
ploughing a light sandy field deep into the subsoil and working
three cords of manure into sixteen cords of compost, gets ninety
26 MASSACHUSETTS AGRICULTURE.
bushels to the acre ; if Jabez Fisher, in Worcester County, by
ploughing twice, twelve inches deep, and using compost freely,
gets ninety-two bushels ; if J. E. Porter, of Hadley, by using
muck-compost, gets eighty bushels, and B. P. Ware, of Mar-
blehead, ninety bushels, and Dr. Hartwell, of Southbridge,
eighty-six bushels, and Wm. E. Livingston, of this society, by
subsoiling and composting, gets seventy-five bushels — who shall
say that the average of twenty-nine bushels to the acre is not
a reproach to the farming of Middlesex, and a discredit to her
three agricultural societies ? If our farmers would only culti-
vate as much as they can plough well and manure well^ how
much better, even if they left the rest waste, and especially
if they would devote the remainder to sheep-raising, that
profitable, improving, but wofully neglected branch of our
county's agriculturQ.
I believe a cardinal truth to be as follows : He is the best
cultivator who produces a given crop, from the smallest surface,
with equal expense. If this be acted on, the natural result will
be smaller farms, and many more of them.
In conclusion — to occupy the room which improved cultiva-
tion will produce, how is the rising generation to be induced to
adhere to agriculture ? It is a lamentable fact that a constantly
decreasing proportion of the young folks seem satisfied with
country life. There is a longing and pressure for employment
in villages and cities. It has been estimated that of each one
hundred young men who come into the city to go into trade,
only three secure a competence, and only one dies rich. How
shall the other ninety-seven be persuaded not to come to the
city at all — not to peril independence and manliness, and too
often health and virtue ; not to become any man's servant, run-
ning at his call, living on his favor, and always fearful of losing
that ? What anxieties and midnight studies, what desperate
endeavors, what "unhappiness, and what longings for the quiet
old country life, attend on city business, 'even in most cases
where success is the final result ! How shall the ninety-seven
be saved this, and be led to remain in that life where prosperity
is so nearly certain, and where reasonable skill and energy is so
sure of a due reward ?
Rural life must be made as attractive as possible. The
THE INTERESTS OF AGRICULTURE. 27
clmrclics and schools, the lectures and libraries, neighborhood
gatherings and village fairs, sleigh-rides, singing schools, and
the old-fashioned huskings, paring bees, quiltings and merry-
makings, all have their places ; no one of them is beneath
parental interest. It is a bad time when fathers and mothers
forget they once were young.
Let the young people feel that they lose no substantial privi-
leges by living in the country — that their schools are as good,
their opportunity to get acquainted with the world about them
as good, and their general prospects at least as good as though
they lived anywhere else.
I know that it isn't necessary nowadays to urge people
much to be easy with their children. The chief trouble many
of the latter have is to govern their parents, who try to be sub-
missive, but, occasionally forgetting, compel the young folks to
enforce discipline. But, in that period to which every man is
fond of alluding as an era of perfection — to wit: "When I was
a boy" — it wasn't so. When I lived on a New Hampshire farm,
the Fourth of July was hardly known, and the work on many
homesteads often went on the whole of Fast Day, and till
dinner-time on Thanksgiving. The only full holiday boys gen-
erally had, was glorious, never-to-be-forgotten muster-day. Is
it strange they were anxious to leave the farm, and go where
play days came oftener and recreations were more abundant?
Though faring much better than above described, I know /
felt so one cloudy day, when, seeing the village boys on their
way to the river, I leaned for a moment on my axe,* remarking
in a suggestive manner — " They say lish bite to-day," and
received the comforting answer — " Stick to the wood-pile, and
they won't bite you! "
While country youth are allowed to live more easily, care
should be taken that they enjoy constant intellectual improve-
ment— that, with their privileges, they learn the philosophy as
well as the practice of their art, and appreciate its independence
and dignity, becoming more and more interested* in it as they
approach the mile-stone of one-and-twenty.
Thus, with the subduing of our waste lands and the sub-
division of our farms brought about by higher cultivation,
there will be no lack of young enterprise to fill the new fields
28 MASSACHUSETTS AGRICULTURE.
created — no trouble in persuading a fair share of the hoys and
girls to join hands and hearts in that noble calling which the
Almighty taught to Adam, and in the pursuit of which he has,
in every age, enabled Adam's successors to achieve no small
share of prosperity and usefulness.
Then, as in Old Middlesex, in all N6w England and our
whole re-united country, the rural homes increase from year to
year, shall the graves of the fathers still be guarded, and the
virtues of the fathers be cherished; while, with prosperity, intel-
ligence and happiness throughout our borders, each generation,
to the end of time, shall exhibit to the world the spectacle of a
Christian republic, upheld by an undivided people and an
unconquerable race !
THE SOIL OF NEW ENGLAND. 29
THE SOIL OF NEW ENGLAND.
From an Essay before the Worcester North Agricultural Society.
BY GEORGE F. WORKS.
" The Earth is not yet finished."—!. S. Kmo.
The soil of New England is thin, but underlying our fields
and farms, we have others which we never saw. The rootlet?
of our cultivated plants wait patiently and silently, for the
riches so long shut away from them to be unlocked ; for the
salts, the phosphates, the sulphates, and silicates to be disinte-
grated by the action of the weather. They are waiting for the
deep plough to expose them to the decomposing influence of
heat, frost, air and rain-water. The plough, for centuries has
been coming nearer and nearer ; increasing the size of bulb,
root and tuber ; giving more range and food to the roots, which
forming little voltaic batteries, do their share toward preparing
th*r own food ; admitting air to the soil, aiding thus in the
decomposition of humus. First came the anchor-shaped hook
of wood, which we see on Roman coins, and which Cincinnatus
was using when called off to defend Rome against the Gauls.
But the progress was slow ; and two thousand years after, the
plough which Israel Putnam left in the furrow, when called oflf
to defend Boston, bore too great a resemblance to it. It is true
that the decaying vegetation of cycles of years, has spread the
"Western fields with humus apparently inexhaustible, but who
would seek there what he might find in his own vineyard by
digging. It would be a concession to ignorance and indolence ;
and in future years, that which seems inexhaustible wealth of
soil, will be exhausted by the spendthrift style of agriculture
followed there. Already have the worn-out fields of Virginia
come begging to New England for agriculturists to restore their
their fruitfulness ; agriculturists, with the science and industry
30 MASSACHUSETTS AGRICULTURE.
which a hard, rocky soil engenders ; with industry, produced by
surmounting difficulties; science, called in to supply natural
deficiencies.
Not tliose who have the most means have accomplished the
greatest ends. The prisoner, who, with a knife and bit of box-
wood, made a perfect watch, accomplished more than he might
under less painful difficulties. Not that country with the finest
agricultural advantages, has produced the best farmers. The
South Sea Islander has but to stretch forth his hand, and the
overladen bough satisfies his wants. If the soil and climate do
all, men do nothing, like spoiled children of fortune.* Those
stones, useless as they seem to be, have called forth much
mechanical skill. The lever and fulcrum are thrown aside, and
powerful engines lift ponderous boulders from their bed of cen-
turies, upon which the plough-points have been blunted so
long.
In pulverizing the soil, in exposing its particles to the action
of the elements, the agriculturist becomes a chemist. Whether
he knows it or not, he is a chemist, with the fields for his
crucible, the sun and winds for a furnace and blow-pipe. He
mixes the soil with ingredients in such proportions as the plants
he cultivates requires, trusting to the weather to form the proper
disintegrations and combinations. He feeds his plants as he
feeds his animals. A pigeon, fed on food in which there is no
phosphate of lime, dies ; its bones become too frail. The st *ks
of grain, grown on land where silicate of potash is wanting,
break down under the weight of their own ears. Oats grown
on sand treated with nitric acid, will not blossom ; and an oak
is dwarfed to the size of a fern by starvation.
The soil of New England is stony ; but our ancestors reared
whole families on the stoniest of it. The plough of the son
glides smoothly through soil from which those double walls and
liuge moles of innumerable cobble-stones have been taken, at
the expense of the strength of the ancestor. Should we and
those who come after us, practice their patient industry, our
soil might get rid of the reputation of being stony. It is rough ;
but the Swiss peasants build like eagles on the heights of the
* Liebig speaks of a place in Europe where the inhabitants live on milk and
sweet chestnuts; the capc in tlie production of wliich, is the cause of their
intellectual weakness.
THE SOIL OF NEW ENGLAND. 81
Alps, and bring up their children on giddy cliffs where none
beside, but the chamois, climb ; and in some places in Italy, the
women carry up soil in baskets placed on their heads, to form
terraces on the sides of the mountains.. It embraces sandy
plains ; but the plains of Belgium were sandy, but by the appli-
cation of agricultural science, this sand, once almost as unprom-
ising as Cape Cod, now sustains a population sufficient in
numbers to quash the theory of Malthus. •
In draining a marsh, we add to the available surface of the
world. The Duke of Devonshire, who drained the Bedford
Level, and the Emperor of France, who* drained the marshes
of Salone, were public benefactors. Much of the soil of New
England is undrained, cold, vinproductive, wet, insoluble. But
these marshes are magazines of humus ; rich mines which the
rivulets have carried there from the decaying leaves of centuries
of vegetation, rich as the most fertile soil of the West, but now
the abode of reptiles, bearing nothing but coarse grass, and
none of the constituents of the blood, to produce which, Liebig
says, is the true object of agriculture ; nothing to support
animal life ; nothing of the iron, phosphorus and gluten of the
human frame-work ; nothing to support the brain which moves
the world. It is in this, that '' Man may be called to be a
co-worker with the Infinite Mind ; " a promoter of the great
plan, which was commenced when God separated the waters
from the land. The noble consciousness of this power over the
soil, >vhich is little short of that of creation ; the feeling that
one has made land do its share toward the support of civiliz-
ation, renders the making of soil thus easily, infinitely better
than the seeking it ready made.
Tlie soil of New England is hilly and stony, thin and sandy ;
but it has. done its fair share toward the agricultural reputation
of the nation. There arc better farmers in New England
to-day, than in more favored portions of the country. They are
not generally men of one idea. The various kinds of crops
their farms produce, drive them out of that, and they generally
know more or less of the theory of rotation of crops, deep and
♦While in exile, the Emperor was asked why he paid so much Mention to
the study of books on draining. " I am fitting myself to become Emperor of
France," said he, "and one of my first acts shall be to drain tiie marshes of
Salone," and so it was. •
32 MASSACHUSETTS AGRICULTURE.
shallow ploughing, application of fertilizers, iinderdraining, &c.
These things are of very little interest to the farmers of the
West, who cultivate their specialities, and whose soil will
produce a crop, provided the seed is sown.
The hills of Worcester County produce better butter and
cheese than the hills of Ayr. The soil of Cambridge better
pears than France the home of pears. Hovey's Seedling, the
result of careful horticultural science, originated there to be
known beyond the Atlantic ; and the Hubbardston Nonesuch,
Roxbury Russet, and Rhode Island Greening are household
words. There is no better latitude than that from Boston
through to the lakes, for the growth of apples. Exporters say
that apples produced there are less liable to decay.
Very much farther north, the seasons are too short, and much
farther south, they are too long. The trees grow to wood, form
too few fruit spurs, and store too little starch, gum, and sugar,
for the support of blossoms the ensuing year. Thoreau says
in the '^ Atlantic Monthly": "The trees of New England
embrace all the most valuable kinds on the continent. I never
have a botanical specimen sent to me, but I am sure to find
something like it in my rambles ; and I even expect to find the
Victoria regia, on Concord River."
But what must be done to arrest the decay which in many
places is going on ; which, while the land around our cities is
becoming a garden, is blighting some country neighborhoods.
What must be done to keep the sons of New England on. their
native soil ; who now yield to the allurements of the fertile
West ; pour into cities, or adopt any other pursuit rather than
cultivate their native fields ?
In farming there has been too great a strain upon the mus-
cles, and too little upon the brain ; too much physical, and too
little intellectual labor. The muscles have become stiffened,
while the brain has suffered by inactivity. Says Channing:
" Manual labor is a great good, but in so saying I must be
understood to speak of labor in its just proportions. In excess
it docs great harm. It is not as good when made the sole work
of life. It must be joined to high means of improvement, or it
degrades instead of exalting.
" Man has a various nature which requires a variety of occu-
pations and discipline for its growth. Study, meditation.
THE SOIL OF NEW ENGLAND. 33
society, relaxation, should be mixed up with his physical toils.
He has intellect, heart, imagination, taste, as well as bones and
muscles, and he is grievously wronged when compelled to exclu-
sive drudgery for bodily subsistence." We have had too much
art and too little science. Farming has been too empirical.
We have been guided by a sort of independent empiricism,
rather than by enlightened- science. Not that a well instituted
experiment for deciding any particular point should be disjjar-
aged, but life should not be all experiment. Too many of our
farmers toward the close of life, look back upon their earlier
efforts as having been guided by a policy essentially bad. "Time
and capital," says Liebig, " are wasted in experiments." A few
successful results, cannot establish a reliable rule. We have
decried the long experience of scientific men, called it " book
knowledge," " impractical," forgetting that these very theories
are the result of practice, and that our own practice has a
theory to it.
The mechanic, receiving "the data and formulae of forces and
agencies as true, works straight forward to a result, the truth
of which he does not doubt. The farmer, though the laws
governing the growth of a blade of corn, more impenetrable
perhaps, but not more unreal, are as old as the world, is slower to
receive them — the laws of motion Are no more certain and fixed
than those of chemical affinities ; the binomial theorei\i no more
a fixed fact, than that gypsum (svilphate of lime) when sown
upon land, will react upon the ammonia in the air. Therefore,
agriculture, which supports all, has been slow to take its stand
among the sciences.
Boys, deeming agriculture the lowest of arts, the meanest of
vocations, have sought the professions ; the ministry, but have
been forced to turn to the woods and fields for their noblest,
sublimest lessons ; the study of medicine, but in their study of
chemistry, have come to find themselves better farmers than
ever, and discover that a better remedy than any in the whole
pharmacopeia, is the healthful exercise which out-door labor
gives.
It is a pity that the beauties of farming should be better seen
from other stand-points, than the one the farmer himself occu-
pies ; that they who are shut up inside four walls of city brick,
should know more of chemistry, botany, mineralogy, cnto-
. 6
34 MASSACHUSETTS AGRICULTURE.
mology, than those whose daily occupation brings them so much
in contact with these sciences ; that through their distant and
casual glimpses, they should lAiow more of the book of nature,
than those before whom its pages lie constantly open.
The agricultural college will do something toward remedying
this. It will be a guiding light, a starting point, a repository
where all that is known of tillage shall be embalmed ; which shall
elevate the mind to its proper sphere in farming ; which shall
be a place where men may make sure use of the experience of
the past, as stepping-stones toward something higher. It is not
our purpose to enter into any argument for agricultural col-
leges, but it seems that New England, with her mixed crops, her
soil so undeveloped and so capable of development, will absorb
them into her educational system with alacrity. They may
educate men away from the plough, but they need not do so.
If a boy is to become a merchant, he prepares himself not
only practically, by an education gained in the counting-room,
but also in the broad principles of the law, and political economy.
The lawyer must become versed in jurisprudence, ere he dares
trust himself at the bar. The physician must get deep into
pharmaceutics and pathology ; and one by one almost all civil-
ians have been dropped, during this war, from the roll of high
military officers. To-day, what men seemed to doubt at first, is
plain, that 'men who have studied the theory of war deeply, are
best military leaders. But the agriculturist has generally been
forced to pick up his knowledge as best he could, at the plough,
in the newspapers, and by dear experience.
Scientific farming has been brought into great disrepute by
its votaries, or those who pretend to be such. Some of these
might be called amateurs, anything but scientific farmers.
Many of these try to till the soil on the strength of theory alone,
and fail. The large expenses incurred, and the small results
obtained by these, have caused men to shun anything which
savored of science. Many of these having large fortunes, have
tilled the soil for show, pleasure, and experiment, rather than
profit. There are others who have farmed for a livelihood, but
ignorant either of the theory or practice of farming, have seized
upon a hobby, and in following it, have set at naught the rules
of economy and judgment. Tliese hobbies have led them to
cultivate crops unsuitable to their localities.
THE SOIL OF NEW ENGLAND. 35
Grass is the principal crop in New England ; the cattle, beef,
and grain we raise, are accessaries ; and any departnre from a
policy favoring the production of grass, except in localities
warranting a change, is a loss. We sow our grain that the land
may become regenerated for the ensuing crop of grass. We
cannot compete with the West in raising corn. A pound of
beef raised here costs more than a pound brought from there ;
and a horse raised in Massachusetts, costs twice what one costs
raised in Vermont. Investing in fancy fertilizers, has almost
ruined the fortunes and the farms of some. Our bogs lie much
nearer than Peru, and by adding alkalies their humus becomes
soluble.
It is a pity, besides being a proof of bad judgment, to let our
resources run to waste, A farmer who lets his manure heaps
dry up in air, the ammonia fly off to benefit another man's
growing crops, while he incurs heavy expenses in buying fancy
fertilizers, must make up his mind to poor success. Guano is
the opium of tillage, producing illusive and dazzling results,
but exhausting the productive capacity of the soil, by means of
its alkalies. We have in mind a farmer, scientific, and yet
economical and practical, who tills the soil scientifically and
profitably ; who culls from the jarring evidence of the experience
of others, all that worth preserving ; who makes the rules of
nature his own, gathering up all, so that nothing is lost, and
into whose business the capital of thought enters largely.
The agricultural college cannot, it is true, give men common
sense where that is wanting ; but it may help give an impulse,
a zest to a pursuit, which has been so unattractive to so many ;
teach the farmer to appreciate the dignity of his position, as
owner of his domain in fee simple ; keep the sons of farmers
upon their native fields, and tend to staunch this hermorrhage.
But not to colleges alone must we look for a remedy. The
majority of our farmers must serve out a long apprenticeship at
the plough and the hoe. Thought must be called in to our aid.
" Labor becomes a new thing when thought is thrown into it,
when the mind keeps pace with the hands." We must learn
the why, as well as the hoiv. We are acquainted with the
plough as an implement of art ; it also has a scientific aspect.
The sons of farmers must be fascinated with beauties sur-
rounding their toils, of which they never dreamed. The fields
36 MASSACHUSETTS AGRICULTURE.
must be tilled intelligently, and not blindly. The more we
know of how God works, the better will be our own success
and delight. Let the farmer become a man of taste ; let his
house contain a library ; let him become familiar with the
microscope and the wonders it unfolds ; let his grounds be taste-
fully laid out — taste, like civility, costs little. Even laying
stone-wall might be pleasant, and we might forget our thin-
worn fingers, when it will contribute toward adorning our
homesteads. We know a tasteful farmer, who is laying a fine
face-wall in front of his house. An awkwardly-shaped cavity
in it remains unfilled, until a nicely-fitting stone is dug from his
fields. He fulfills a double purpose ; his wall .becomes beautiful
and his fields smooth.
We are influenced imperceptibly by our surroundings. The
face of the country, whether hilly or flat, has a vast influence
on the character of its inhabitants.* The manner in which our
homes are adorned, has a great influence on their inmates.
The child commences its education before it can talk ; and
unattractive surroundings bear a strong, early and constant
influence, toward educating boys away from the plough. The
farmer stamps his character upon his fields and home, in unmis-
takable hand-writing. By the arrangement of his hedges,
orchards, shrubbery and shade trees, he makes landscape. He
is a painter in living colors. He has a pleasant or an unpleasant
home, almost as he pleases.
Taste is consistent generally, with good judgment ; and the
practice of it does not require wealth, or a high education.
Smooth fields are more productive than rough ones, and a taste-
fully arranged farm will sell for much more than one upon
which less taste has been shown. There has been very little
expense incurred in making this difference ; a little thought
has been expended ; a plan worked out, formed perhaps, while
others were idle. We are idle for an hour ; we might have
planted a tree which would have made us happier for a lifetime.
Not every tree is useless which does not bear tangible fruit.
We admire the taste of our ancestors, who planted the elms
before our doors. They have been bearing the fruit of joy and
* A writer says that aflat country produces ^a< heads. Byron is said to have
owed his poetical proclivities to a residence in youth among the Scottish
Mountains.
THE SOIL OF NEW ENGLAND. 37
beauty a liimdred years. The cherries and apples please our
coarser tastes ; these our more refined sensibilities.
The Washington Elm has borne fruit as well as the Stuyve-
sant Pear-tree.
Let the farm be a place to live upon, and not a machine to
run for a limited period, out of which to wring a living. Let it
be such a place, with such attractions, that its sons when called
off to other pursuits, may look back upon the time spent in the
old homestead as the happiest part of their lives ; that the ship-
wrecked sailor may cling more hopefully to his plank, remem-
bering it ; that the merchant may keep a vision of it before his
mind, unobscured by those of wealth and gain, and in the
evening of his life may wander back to beautify with his fortune
his early home.
38 MASSACHUSETTS AGRICULTURE.
THE EDUCATION OF THE OX.
From an Essay delivered before the Worcester North Agricultural Society.
BY A. B. DAVIS, OF SHIRLET.
" Their strength, or speed, or Tigilance, were given
In aid of our defects." — Cowper.
The employment of the term " Education," I am aware,
implies knowledge and a certain capability of moral progression ;
but it might as well be at once understood that, while taking
issue with this position, I recognize and accept the implication
of truth, in the remark attributed to Sidney Smith, that " there
is no other animal but man to whom mind appears to be given
for any other purpose than the preservation of the body."
Twenty years' experience with beasts of burden, has put me in
possession of facts which prove them susceptible of education
and moral improvement to a degree considerably outrunning
the popular apprehension.
To elucidate these facts and call attention to a new source of
good and pecuniary wealth to the agriculturist, is the object
of this paper. Of course it is not practicable to give the full
modus operandi of training upon the basis of the positions
assumed, but I hope by originality of treatment to awaken
interest in a science which must, I am persuaded, form no
■unimportant branch of the practically progressive farmer's
education.
Much of the maltreatment to which domestic animals are
subject, is owing to ignorance of the true conditions of suc-
cessful management; but I propose to urge the discipline of
animals solely on the score of economy, leaving out of view, for
the present, the moral aspect of the case. Pecuniary profit we
suppose to be the farmer's object in the breeding and rearing of
animals. Let us see. A man breeds and rears a pair of steers
for ordinary farm work. Other things being equal, a pair
THE EDUCATION OF THE OX. 39
" trained up in tlie way they should go," would not attain
greater size than if left in natural and lawless freedom ; but
symmetrical development and ease of management being deside-
rata with New England teamsters, early and judicious training
becomes a pecuniary consideration.
The sine qui non of successful ox-training involves the follow-
ing conditions : 1st, likeness of temperament and dispositioi^;
and 2d, equality of size, strength, and age. These conditions
are placed in the order of their importance. Many a poor beast
is made to suffer a kind of martyrdom from being " unequally
yoked " by his ignorant master. And, as a teamster of some
experience, I feel warranted in affirming my belief that no
small number of our class become martyrs to the ignorance
above mentioned.
The hired teamster being required to perform a certain
amount of work, he is not at liberty to correct any vices or
defects in the team given him, but must worry through his
time, often under the most trying circumstances. " It is hard
learning old dogs new tricks," and none are more likely to
appreciate the significance of this proverb than teamsters placed
in situations where they have to deal with ill-bred, mis-matched,
and vicious animals. Where the standard of " education " is
unworthily low, people are wont to regard all reformatory
efforts as Utopian, and not likely to promote their interests in
any direction.
But what are the facts ? Comparing trained with untrained
cattle, the former will command, in the general market, from
five to twenty-five dollars more per yoke than the latter. And
in localities where beauty and facility of management go at
their maximum price, the difference is greater. The common
remark with intelligent buyers is — " Money is no object — we
are willing to pay for cattle that are well matched, smart, and
handy." But there are minor advantages growing out of
judicious discipline which are not so readily apprehended, and
which are not so easily made appreciable. I will notice a few
of the most prominent. One fair resultant — and which will be
readily granted — is the facility of movement acquired in the
process of training.
One of the most common wheel conveyances in use upon the
farm is the ox-cart ; and it is no inconsiderable point of ecou-
,"!f
40 MASSi?LCHUSETTS AGRICULTURE.
omy to be able to change cattle off and on to this vehicle easily
and rapidly. In busy seasons, what is the advantage of smart-
ness and dexterity in a hired man, if the farmer cannot make it
available through his team, with which the man is so con-
stantly required to operate ? Among all the varied positions in
which wagons and carts require to be placed, there- often exists
the necessity of " backing ; " and none but the best trained
cattle are able to execute this manceiwre with facility. Indeed,
an acquaintance with working cattle extending over a period of
twenty years, has failed to furnish a single instance of a pair
perfect in this, respect, who were not the subjects of constant
and persistent training and use, from calves upioard to four
years old. Almost every farm barn thirty years ago was con-
structed so that " backing in " was often necessary, and yet few
oxen of that day were capable of doing it.
In the majority of cases where such a manmivre became
necessary, the oxen were taken off the " spear " or tongue, and
brought "right abou.t face," to push or shove the load in. This
is always a difficult operation, requiring considerable time,
and one can readily perceive the economy of discipline, which
enables the farmer to back any load his cattle are able to draw.
But the advantages of discipline in draft are not less apparent,
whether in cases where " a long pull, a strong pull, and a pull
together " is • requisite; or where an ox's entire strength is
needed for a single spring or lift, (as in turning a large stone,)
the superiority of the trained ox is so marked as to impress
every impartial and unprejudiced witness. With such there is
no " baulking," the common causes of it being removed.
Cattle, properly mated, will generally pull together, and
generally all they can, if their driver so signifies ; and though
his judgment may be at fault, it is very seldom, indeed, that
they would get abused, or be required to pull a third time.
With mis-mated cattle, it often happens that one is spirited
and ambitious, while the other is "slow-moulded," and easily
discouraged in a bad place. Such a pair, in the hands of a
hasty-tempered, injudicious man, soon becomes worthless for
most kinds of labor.
The energetic, " high-strung " ox after a time gets discour-
aged from liaving to receive much of the whipping which his
mate deserves, and much ill-treatment which neither of them
THE EDUCATION OF THE OX. 41
deserves. But, perhaps, the most marked distinction hetween
trained and untrained oxen is observable upon the road. Speed
and endurance are qualities valued in cattle designed for haul-
ing and "holding back" upon New England roads. All the
varied minutiee of superior training are requisite here, and
some of them' may be seen in the best light. But, perhaps, I
have made the desirableness of thorough, judicious training
sufficiently apparent without further illustration ; and, grasping
at the hope lodged in that " perhaps," I take courage to assert
that a yoke of educated os:en, (other things being equal,) will
perform one-third more work with one-fourth less " wear and
tear," than a pair only trained up to the common standard.
Besides this there is the -physical and moral effect upon the
driver, which is above pecuniary price.
Re-asserting what appears in the first part of my paper, viz. :
that likeness of disposition and equality of size and strength are
indispensable conditions, I proceed to some practical hints on the
early training of animals adapted to farm labor. While urging
the propriety of early matching and training, I feel bound to
state what appears to be the only objection to such a course ;
viz. : the risk of a dissimilar development, either in point of size,
strength, organization, or temper — in the process of growth.
And as some security against such a risk, the employment of a
sagacious, experienced person in the selection of calves, presents
itself as a suggestion worthy of adoption.
The farmer must expect to give himself some trouble at the
outset, and will often find it necessary to search among the
herds of his acquaintances, at a considerable expense of time ;
and when successful must not grudge what may seem a sum
out of proportion to what his experience may suggest as the
maximum return. Having selected and brought his calves
together, let them be kept so during the entire period of train-
ing. The manner of rearing calves I shall not discuss, not
deeming it relevant to the subject of this essay; if, however,
they be well kept, their size and strength at three months will
admit of their being yoked and exercised in some of the more
simple movements — such as turning each way; starting and
halting at command ; backing, and "holding up;" "standing
out" and "standing up," separately, &c., &c. In all these
primary exercises, tlie experienced teamster sees the chief
6
42 MASSACHUSETTS AGRICULTURE.
advantages of early training. At this stage animals are supple
and docile, and the ivhip almost finds its " occupation gone," —
£lt least there is no need of severity. One of the most difficult
branches of the science may then be taught with assurance of
complete success. The art of backing, properly, is seldom
taught, and more seldom acquired. Regarding this subject
of " backing," I beg leave to submit a few illustrations.
An ill-founded notion seems to have possessed the minds of
not a few farmers and teamsters, touching the ability of the ox
to force a load back by the horns. To this prejudice I attribute
the general failure of working cattle in this particular. It is,
however, an easily demonstrated fact that Nature has lodged
more strength in the neck and head of the ox, than in his breast
and shoulders. This is patent to the most casual observation of
bulls and oxen when Jjghting. The size and strength of the
horns of the ox also favor this view. In some parts of Europe
this principle seems to be better understood : hence we find the
ox and the cow appropriately harnessed for draft by the horns,
and executing their tasks with apparent ease.
Having exercised sufficiently without draft, let the calves then
be hitched to a miniature cart or wagon and be instructed in
all the manoeuvres required of oxen. At first the load should
be light, and when backing, care should be taken not to injure
the embryo horns. At this point, too, let the " sidewise move-
ment " receive some attention. As this movement is not gener-
ally understood, I will describe it as well as I may, verbally.
Every teamster who understands his business knows that one
of the best tests of superior training is to be found in the
manner in which a pair of cattle approach and place them-
selves astride a cart-spear or tongue. None save those most
thoroughly drilled can do it handsomely.
When approaching the cart the " nigh " ox should be made
to gradually place himself parallel to the spear, (the " off" one
following suit,) and when sufficiently near, should step sidewise,
(his fore and hind legs simultaneously,) over the spear. Tliis
is rather difficult of execution, and should be taught prior to
any requirement of use. In other words, let cattle be taught
to move " sideways " squarely, to and from the driver, as if on
parade. This movement once taught, is of incalculable value
THE EDUCATION OF THE OX. 43
in all multiform exercises of ox-labor. The same rule reversed
will apply when approaching the spear from the left hand.
Perhaps in this place I should indicate my preference among
the ivhips known to teamsters. In some parts of Worcester
County drivers use a whip made of common shoemaker's thread,
by means of a very simple machine, which any farmer's boy
can construct. This cord, which is very hard and stiff, and of
uniform size, is looped on to the stock, and " let out " as it
wears up. For cheapness, durability, and efficiency, I know of
no whip to compare with it, and yet I hesitate to recommend its
general use, for the reason that it can be made too harmful.
It is an error to suppose that an ox-whip should be either large
or long : the stock may be a few inches over three feet — the
lash about six inches shorter. Such a whip can be easily flour-
ished, and will inflict greater punishment when required, than
one much larger. In the manner of castigation as. a means of
breaking and governing refractory animals, it is not easy to
draw the line between " a necessary act," which Cowper says
" incurs no blame," and severity which would be obnoxious to
the charge of cruelty. As I cannot dwell at length upon this
most vital question, I must content myself with stating, and
briefly illustrating, the great governing principle, which is —
recognition of the intelligence, apprehensiveness, docility, and
dignity of the animal. Farmers ! let never a wanton or wicked
blow be struck, nor a harsh, unmeaning sound be made ; let
nothing be done at the instance of mere caprice, or passion ;
cause all persons in any way employed with your teams to
recognize and regard this principle.
If, after sufficient trial, an animal proves incorrigible, by
every principle of morality, by every consideration of wisdom
and economy, release him from the yoke forever. It often hap-
pens that a man possesses an odd steer which he thinks too
handsome to kill, and so sets himself to find a " mate." If such
a steer at the age of three years old proves, on trial, turbulent
and ugly-natured, it will be nearly an impossibility to break him
into sobriety and usefulness. There is so much wildness, will,
and muscle about steers that have run till three years old, that
the task of breaking them is a formidable one, and not generally
advisable.
44 MASSACHUSETTS AGRICULTURE.
After cattle have been taught to " lay up " close to the spear
when backing, they should constantly be required to place
themselves right, before attempting the exercise, and should be
looked after while performing. In this place, I would caution
drivers against a common error — the practice of going before
cattle to back them. Oxen thus treated never perform the
operation handsomely.
While backing, the driver should keep a little back rather
than forward of the ox's middle, as there is a tendency to "wing
out " when handling a heavy load. When using a cart or
wagon upon the farm, and especially around barns, or in the
door yards, the teamster should never ride, er allow any one
else thus employed to do so. This common practice is fatal to
the discipline of trained cattle. The driver should walk steadily
by their side, not often using the whip, nor speaking in any but
a firm, distinct manner, and manifesting- chiefly by motion, his
will. In the matter of ox-yokes my experience has not failed
to impress me with the need of a revolution — most of those in
common use being too heavy, " bungling," and every way
inconvenient. These remarks specially apply to those made by
Nourse, Mason & Co. Indeed, I have met with but very few of
unexceptionable pattern, and those were manufactured in a
part of Worcester County where ox-training is carried to a
point much nearer perfection than in any other locality of which
I have knowledge.
FARMS. 45
F A H M S .
ESSEX.
From the Report of the Committee.
We have had but one entry for the premium this year — that
of S. A. Merrill, the occupant of the Derby Farm, in South
Salem. We think this is the first time, in the history of this
society, that a person who has leased a farm has offered it for a
premium.
The committee visited the farm on the 11th day of July, at
which time the grass was cut and most of it in the barn. We
noticed the fields were very smoothly mown, and raked clean,
and the hay appeared to be of good quality. The general
appearance of the crops indicated that they were well planted
and cultivated thoroughly. The fences and buildings were in
about as good condition as we expect to find on a farm that has
been let for many years. Some of the committee think the
society ought not to give a premium to any farm having such
poor fences and buildings ; others think the tenant could not be
expected to expend much in repairing and keeping in order the
fences, and if his management in other respects was judicious,
he ought not to be deprived of the premium on account of
neglecting that which belonged to the owners to do.
The farm was visited by part of the committee on the 19th
of September. At that time it looked as well as we expected to
find it. Although we have seen some farms where the weeds
were kept down better, yet we have seen many more that were
not kept so clean. Mr. Merrill has given his attention mostly
to raising vegetables for the market, and he has been very suc-
cessful in this. This he thinks more profitable than making
milk. Our impression is, that if his cows had received more of
his attention they would have done better, though we think
that milk can be produced cheaper farther from the city, where
land is not so valuable. The yield of milk appears small to us,
compared with the other products of the farm. According to
46 MASSACHUSETTS AGRICULTURE.
his statement his cows did not average four quarts per day each
for the seven best months of the year for making milk.
The committee, when they visited the farm, were satisfied
that a very large amount of produce was raised for the amount
of labor expended ; and when we notice the price at which the*
early vegetables were sold, we saw more distinctly than we ever
realized before, the advantages which the market gardener
derives from his hot-beds.
We regret that Mr. Merrill, in giving his statement of the
farm, has followed so far the example of those, who, for the
past few years, have made statements of their farming in our
transactions. Where the hay and roots are consumed on the
farm, in making up the account, these should not be reckoned.
What we wish to know is the income.
In the society's offer for premium on farms they say — " For
the best conducted and most improved Farm, taking into view
the entire management and cultivation, including lands, build-
ings, fences, orchards, crops, stock and all other appendages,
with statements in detail relating thereto."
We think Mr. Merrill has improved the farm much, and for
this improvement and his skill and success in raising vegetables
for the market, we award to him the first premium of thirty
dollars. Wm. R. Putnam, /or the Committee.
Estimate of receipts and expenditure on the farm, made up
by the committee from Mr. Merrill's statement : —
The rent of the farm annually, .
Part taxes, ......
Wages of 7 men at $20.00 per month, for 7 months.
Board of 7 men at $4.00 per week,
Wages and board of two boys for 7 months.
Paid boys for weeding onions, .
Wages and board of three men in winter, .
Wages and board of milkman for one year,
Paid for fish-guano for manure,
Paid for grain,
Blacksmitli's bill, .....
The interest, on cost, and depreciation of hot-beds.
Interest on value of carriages and farm imple-
ments, ........ 180 00
$1,000 00
30
00
980
00
840
00
306
00
54
00
564
00
448
00
140
00
600
00
600
00
60
00
$100 00
76
00
45
00
12
00
FARMS. • 47
"Wear of same, .......
Interest on value of 32 cows, at -$40. 00 each.
Interest on value of 5 horses, at -$150.00 each, .
Interest on value of one pair of oxen.
Total, $5,510 00
We think we can form a better estimate of the real income of
the farm if we suppose it continued through the year as a milk
farm. In that case we deduct the hay and roots from the
income, and add the sale of the milk at the rate of the other
seven months. Taking these figures as our data, we find the
sales of farm to be . . . . . . $11,649 49
And the expenses to be, . . . . . 5,510 00
$6,139 49
Leaving six thousand dollars for the services and support of Mr.
Merrill and his family.
Statement of Samuel A. Merrill.
I offer for premium the farm known as the Derby Farm, in
Salem, carried on by me during the past eleven years.
This farm is situated in that part of the city known as South
Salem, and consists of one hundred and seventy-five acres, of
which ninety acres are in pasture, twenty acres in salt marsh,
forty-five acres in English grass, and twenty acres in tillage.
The English grass land has been laid down from one to ten
years. The pasture has been in its present condition during the
whole time I have occupied.
When I commenced on the farm, there were about ten acres
in tillage. No part of it, however, had been used in the culti-
vation of onions, and was not put to this use to any considerable
extent until I had been on the farm s(5veral years. The present
year I have cultivated the tillage land about as follows :
Onions,
Potatoes,
Cabbages,
Tomatoes,
Sweet Corn, .
Beets, .
6 acres.
5 "
4 "
1 acre.
1. "
2
1 "
2
48 MASS4iCHUSETTS AGRICULTURE.
Marrow and Hubbard squashes, . . 1^ acres.
• Miscellaneous vegetables, . . . 1-^- "
Most of my turnips have been raised as a second crop.
Included under the enumeration of English grass land is one
acre laid down this year with wheat, and one acre with barley.
The live stock consists of five horses, thirty-two cows, one
bull, one yoke of oxen, and from six to ten swine. With milch
cows I have not been particular in regard to purity of blood,
but have endeavored to obtain and keep the best grade and
native stock.
Have generally found it most expedient to keep good, fair-
sized horses, weighing from eleven to twelve hundred. The
amount of manure used annually upon the farm has ordinarily
been about one hundred and fifty cords. This has included
that made by the live stock and considerable night manure
hauled from the city, all composted with meadow-mud from the
salt marsh.
It may not be improper to mention, that my experience in
the matter of top-dressing, has led me to use, contrary to the
general practice, green cow-manure for this purpose.
To obviate the objection that such manure is apt to be so
coarse as to be in the way of the scythe and rake, I have found
it well to spread it in the month of March, and then, after the
frost is fairly out of the ground, run over it with a brush har-
row, which reduces it into such small particles as to render it
in no way troublesome afterwards. I have generally drawn
from the city thirty or forty cords of night-manure. This
I have mixed with the meadow mud and barnyard manure,
all in one mass, in about equal portions of each, and forked
it over twice at least, and in some years three times.
As to rotation of crops, I would say that I have found it inex-
pedient to attempt to raise either cabbages, beets, or turnips,
successive years upon the same piece of land. But as to most
other farm products, I have never been convinced that there
was any necessity for alternating the crops — as, for instance,
onions and carrots do not only as well, but much better when
coiitinued successively on the same land. Potatoes do well for
four or five years, and, for aught I know, for a much longer
FARMS. 49
time. The same can be said of corn and tomatoes. Squashes,
liowever, ought not to be planted successively on the same
land.
I have made it a point to get my seed into the ground at the
earliest possible time in the spring, as my nearness to a good
city market renders it expedient to give special attention to the
raising of early vegetables. In order to avail myself of the
advantages of the earliest spring market, I found it profitable
to start my plants, such as lettuce, early cabbages, tomatoes,
etc., in hot beds. For this purpose I constructed, a few years
ago, three ranges of beds, each two hundred and twenty-five
feet long, situated on a southerly slope, and facing the south.
They are made about a foot high, and have a sash covering,
and above this a trellis covering, stuffed with salt hay or straw.
These hot-beds are managed as follows : — In the fall I fill them
with litter, house the sashes, and lay down the trellis cover.
This prevents the earth from freezing inside of the beds.
About the first of March I take out the litter and put in about
six inches of horse manure, and cover the manure with about
four inches of soil, sow the seed, and close the bed nights with
both coverings. After the seed comes up, I water the plants
every other day, and keep the covers open in the day time to
let in air, except when the weather is too cold for the plants.
Transplant into the fields about the fifteenth of April. By this
means I can get cabbages into the market by the twentieth of
June, and some exceptional years I have got them into Boston
market as early as the ninth of June. The lettuce generally
heads in the bed, ready for market, by the fifteenth of April.
Tomatoes are generally ripe and ready for market from the
middle of July to the first of August.
I have never tried the experiment of making butter, but have
taken it for granted that it was more profitable to sell the milk,
especially in view of the fact that there was a good milk route
connected with the farm when I commenced occupying. This
route I have supplied ever since. During the summer the cows
get their whole living in the pasture — no extra feed. In the
autumn they have had the range of the mowing fields. In the
winter, they have generally had ten bushels of beets, with what
English hay, black grass and rowen they would eat. The roots
were fed out to them once a day only — mornings.
7
60
MASSACHUSETTS AGRICULTURE.
As to the farm buildings I am not aware that there is any-
thing pecuhar about them worthy of notice, except that the cow
stanchions are in a long, low-roofed L, running out from the
barn. This I regard as a very good feature, as the hay, which
is wholly kept in the main body of the barn, is by this means
preserved from the deterioration, which the steam and heat of
the cows cause.
The products of the farm for the past season, from April 1 to
Nov. 1, 1864, are as follow:
Milk, 25,714 quarts, sold in the city at an average of
7 cents per quart.
Cabbages and cabbage plants, sold as per sales-book.
Onions, 2,500 bushels, at 11.75 per bushel, .
Carrots, 20 tons, at $15 per ton, .
Mangel wurzel, 10 tons, ....
Flat turnips, 500 bushels, at 25 cents per bushel,
Ruta-bagas, 200 bushels, at 60 " " "
Early potatoes, tomatoes, and other garden sauce.
Squashes, .....
English hay, 80 tons, at $30 per ton,
Salt hay, 20 tons, at $17 per ton
Barley, 30 bushels.
Wheat, 25 bushels.
Rye, 20 bushels.
Wheat straw, 2 tons.
Barley straw, 2 tons,
Apples
, 15 barrels,
. $1,799 98
:, 1,500
00
. 4,375
00
300
00
150
00
125
00
120
00
. 2,202 51
50
00
. 2,400
00
340
00
45
00
56
25
40
00
30
00
30
00
45
00
Sales of pork per year have been from seven to eight hun-
dred pounds.
For seven months of the year I keep seven men and two
boys ; for the rest of the year, three men ; and during the
season for weeding onions, three extra boys. Besides this, one
man is constantly employed on the milk route.
The land is exceedingly well adapted to the raising of hay
and vegetables. The soil is somewhat varied in different local-
ities,— in some places a dark loam upon a clayey bottom ; in
others, a light, warm, friable soil. It is also very well situated as
to the influences of the sun and moisture, needing no draining,
and still capable of resisting droughts.
FARMS.
51
Most of my marketing is in Boston, though the early
vegetables are generally sold in Salem.
In giving this brief statement, I have endeavored to confine
myself to a plain and simple report of the character and capa-
bilities of the Derby Farm ; and if I have ventured upon giving
any inferences, they are only such as are founded upon my
own personal experience, and, therefore, have with me the force
of actual facts.
PLYMOUTH.
Statement of A. G. Pratt, of Middleborough.
In anticipation of the almost fabulous prices realized this year
for all kinds of farm produce, I have endeavored, with the least
expense, to secure the greatest possible yield, from every por-
tion of my farm ; but I would not be understood that I approve,
or recommend, the " skinning process," as practised by some
farmers, which every one. must see would shortly be ruinous to
any farm.
ACCOUNT OF CKOPS AND EXPENSES ON FARM OP A. G. PRATT, FOR 1864.
[Lot No. 1 — Orchard — 2 acres, 17 rods.]
Expenses.
\ acre of rye, .
Picking apples, .
Total,
S3
00
5
00
$8 00
Income.
5 bushels rye at $2, .
50 bushels apples at 50c.,
Total,
[Lot No. 2 — Barn Lot — 2 acres, 13 rods.]
Expenses.
Securing 3 tons hay, .
Cultivating cabbages.
Manure for same,
Total,
S15 00
2
00
2
50
S19
50
Income.
3 tons hay at $25, .
Cabbages sold on lot.
Apples sold on tree, .
Total,
[Lot No. 3 — Neck Lot — 17 acres.]
Expenses.
Spreading manure half day, $00 75
Securing 12 tons hay, . 60 00
Total,
$60 75
Income.
9 tons hay at'$25,
3 tons hay at $15,
Total,
[Lot No. 4 — Meadow — G acres, 4 rods.]
Expenses.
Securing 4 tons hay, .
Total,
L2 00
L2 00
Income.
4 tons fresh hay at $12.50,
Total,
$10 00
25 00
$35 00
$75 00
20 00
10 00
$105 00'
$225 00
45 00
§270 00'
$50 00-
$50 00' \
52
MASSACHUSETTS AGRICULTURE.
[Lot No. 5— Rye and Oat Field — 7 acres, 3 rods.]
Expenses.
Ploughing 3^ acres for oats,
Harrowing and sowing,
10 bushels seed oats, $10,
(grass seed, $5,) .
Securing oats, $6, thresh-
ing, S7, ,
Ploughing 2\ acres for rye.
Harrowing and rolling,
2 bushels seed rye.
Securing rye.
Threshing and storing,
Ploughing for potatoes,
Furrowing, $1, planting, $2,
6 bush, seed potatoes, at 80c.,
10 loads manure for potatoes,
Cultivating, $2, hoeing, $3,
Digging and storing, .
Total, . .
S7 00
5
00
15
00
13
00
4
50
3
00
2
00
5
00
10
00
2
00
3
00
4
80
5
00
5
00
4
00
$88 30
Income.
71 bushels oats at $1.10, .
2 tons oat straw at $10,
37^ bushels rye at $2,
Rye straw sold for
80 bushels potatoes at 75c.,
\ acre rented, .
$78 10
20 00
75 00
22 00
60 00
3 00
Total,
$258 10
[Lot No. 6-
Expenses.
Ploughing the lot,
50 loads manure for corn, .
Drawing manure.
Harrowing and furrowing,
Seed corn, $1.50, potatoes,
50c., ....
Planting 5 acres 100 rods
to corn, ....
Cultivating both ways,
(twice per row,) .
Hoeing corn twice, .
Cutting stalks, .
Cutting and drawing corn.
Husking and storing.
Manure for 60 rods turnips,
Harrowing and sowing with
machine.
Hoeing turnips, $3, harvest-
ing, $8, ....
Total,
-Com Field— 19 acres, 26 rods.]
Income.
170 bushels shelled corn at
$2.05, ....
Corn fodder at $9 per acre,
9 bushels potatoes at 75c., .
Early round turnips, .
Pasturing sheep,
$15 00
25
00
6
00
6
00
2
00
10
00
6
00
25
00
10
00
10
00
15
00
3
00
75
11
00
$144
75
$348 50
60 62
6 75
44 00
12 00
Total,
$461 87
FARMS.
53
Expenses.
[Lot No. 7— Wood Lot— 12 acres.]
Income.
15 cords wood at $3, (stand-
ing,) . . . .
Total,
[Lot No. 8 — Pasture — 9 acres, 103 rods.]
Expenses.
Repairing fence,
Total,
$2 00
$2 00
Income.
Pasturing 3 cows,
Total,
[Lot No. 9 — Pasture — 6 acres, 97 rods.]
Expenses.
Income.
Pasturing 1 cow,
Total,
$45 00
|45 00
^21 00
$21 00
$7 00
$7 00
[Lot No. 10 — Orchard— 2 acres, 36 rods.]
Expenses.
Gathering apples,
Securing 1 ton hay, .
Total,
$5 00
5 00
SIO 00
Income.
10 barrels picked apples, . $32 00
40 bush, cider apples at 16|c., 6 67
1 ton hay, . . . 25 00
Total,
$63 67
[Lot No. 11— Wheat Field— 7 acres, 101 rods.]
Expenses.
Ploughing 3 acres for wheat, $6 00
Harrowing and rolling,
6 bushel seed wheat, $12,
grass seed, $3,
Securing wheat, $7, thresh-
Ploughing 1^ acres for corn,
50 loads manure, half spread,
half in hill.
Carting same, $5, harrow-
ing, $1.50, .
Planting, ....
Cultivating and hoeing, (3
times,) ....
Cutting and drawing stalks
and corn.
Husking and storing,
Securing hay, .
3
00
15
00
15
00
3
00
25 00
6 50
4 00
15 00
4
00
00
10
00
Total,
$112 50
Income.
36 bushels wheat at $2.25,
2 tons wheat straw, .
60 bushels corn at $2.05, .
Corn fodder,
2 tons hay.
$81 00
20 00
123 00
13 50
50 00
Total,
$287 50
54
MASSACHUSETTS AGRICULTURE.
[Lot No. 12 — Mowing Lot — 4 acres, 22 rods.]
Securing Lay,
Total,
Expenses.
$15 00
$15 00
Income.
4 tons fresh hay at $12.50,
$50 00
1 ton bank hay.
18 00
Total,
[Lot No. 13 — Mowing and Pasture — 15 acres, 30 rods.]
[Lot No. 14 — Orchard— 2 acres, 10 rods.]
Expenses.
On trees, .
Total,
Securing hay,
Total,
Securing hay,
Total,
$2 00
Income.
By apples,
Total,
$2 00
[Lot No. 15 — Mowing — 109 rods.]
Expenses.
S5 00
$5 00
Income.
1 ton hay,
Total,
[Lot No. 16 — Mowing — 1 acre, 16J rods.]
Expenses.
$5 00
$5 00
Income.
1 ton hay, .
Total,
[Lot No. 17— Potato Field— 6 acres, 107 rods.]
Expenses.
Ploughing 2 acres for pota-
toes, . . . . S4- 00
Manure for same, . . 9 00
10 bushels seed potatoes at
80c., .... 8 00
Harrowing, Si, planting, $4, 5 00
Hoeing, $8, digging, $10, . 18 00
Planting \ acre beans, . 1 00
Cultivating, $2, hoeing, $2, . 4 00
Harvesting, $1, threshing, $1, 2 00
Securing 4 tons hay, . . 20 00
Total,
$71 00
$68 00
Expenses.
Securing hay, .
$4 00
Income.
1 ton fresh hay,
Pasturing sheep.
. $12 50
12 00
Total,
$4 00
$24 50
Income.
280 bushels potatoes at 60c.,
b\ bushels beans at $3,
4 tons hay at $25,
S3 00
S3 00
$25 00
$25 00
$25 00
$25 00
$168 00
16 50
100 00
Total,
$284 50
FARMS.
55
[Lot No. 18— Orchard— 145 rods.]
Expenses.
Income.
Repairing
fence.
•
$2 00
1 ton hay, ....
$25 00
Securing hay, .
.
5 00
26 bushels apples.
10 00
Gathering
apples,
• •
•
2 00
Total,
Total,
$9 00
$35 00
[Farm Stock.]
Expenses.
Income.
2 cows, at $40, .
.
$80 00
150 lbs. butter, $75, milk.
2 hogs,
• • •
•
75 00
$10, . . . .
$85 00
40 sheep,
• • •
•
80 00
600 lbs. pork,. $100, beef,
Fowls,
• • •
•
25 00
$20, . '. . .
120 00
•
22 lambs, $110, wool, $101,
211 00
• •
•
Fowls, $85, eggs, $32,
Total,
117 00
Total,
$260 00
$533 00
[Sundries.]
Expenses.
Income.
Taxes,
• • •
•
$50 00
150 lbs. dried apples.
Garden vegetables, .
$18 00
25 00
• •
•
•
139 loads manure,
Total,
Total,
139 00
Total,
$50 00
$182 00
Total,
$878 80
$2,783 64
Net income,
$878 80
$1,904 84
MiDDLEBOROUGH, Nov. 30, 1864.
Statement of Austin J. Roberts.
On account of the difficulty of procuring laborers, not so
large an extent of land has been planted this year as usual.
My attention has been turned to the cultivation of some* of
the more profitable crops, and to the greater concentration
of labor.
The high price of help, and the increasing rate of taxation,
will ultimately compel the farmer to make the most of his
land, and farm well, or not farm at all ; and the result will
be that he will reduce the amount of ground in cultivation
until the labor expended shall perform everything in the best
manner.
56 MASSACHUSETTS AGRICULTURE.
I have cultivated this season five-eighths of an acre of
tobacco, (the Connecticut Seed-Leaf.) The crop has been
excellent, and probably will be remunerative. As it is not yet
ready to strip, the amount of yield can only be approximated.
About the first of January, the tobacco will be stripped,
sorted, formed into "hands," and put into bulk, to undergo the
sweating process, and in the course of a week after, will be
ready for the market.
The amount of labor necessary to the cultivation of an acre
of tobacco is very great, but the profits also are large. The
amount of expense attending this crop, including everything,
has been ninety-six dollars, or one hundred and fifty-three
dollars and sixty cents per acre. I have roughly called the
product one thousand pounds, and the average price of the first
and second quality leaf at twenty-five cents. Both estimates
are probably below the true figures, which will be corrected in
the next annual report.
It is an erroneous idea that tobacco is highly exhausting to
a soil which is well cared for. No plant can impoverish land
annually renewed by rich fertilizers, united with a judicious
rotation of crops.
The tobacco fields of Virginia have grown poor, while those of
Connecticut and Western Massachusetts produce far more grain
and grass .than they formerly did, arising from the thorough
tillage of the latter, necessary to good tobacco crops, and the
application of the best manure, with the concentration of labor
upon a small compass ; in other words, making a farmer farm
well, or not farm at all.
Since my last statement one acre of swamp-meadow has been
made into a cultivated cranberry-field. An adjoining bog having
been successfully experimented upon by spreading small quan-
tities of beach sand upon it in tlie winter, which made it very
productive, I determined to reclaim effectually the adjacent
piece. Instead of paring, which would have rendered the bog
too low, I had the sods inverted. Six hundred loads of sand
were carted on, in the winter, on the ice, and levelled to about
five inches deep. In June and July twenty-five thousand
bunches of vines were set out, averaging eigliteen inches apart.
The amount of labor expended, exclusive of turning over the
surface and bunching the vines, which was done by the job, was
FARMS. 57
one hundred and thirty days ; forty of which were expended in
the care of the vines during the summer.
Few, if any, of the vines died, and they appear now to have
become well rooted. The whole expense — the sanding done
at extremely low rates — has .been one hundred and eighty-five
dollars.
Cranberries succeed on the shores of our ponds, particularly
on the south-western side, without artificial flowage. The only
cranberries raised in the town this season, on account of the
untimely June frost, were produced on this and the adjoining
farm.
In order to derive a greater profit from my pear-trees, and
at the same time to have less care in marketing the many kinds
in cultivation, I have grafted three-fourths of my trees to the
Bartlett.
Large and small trees were cut completely down, and as
many scions as necessary put in, thus forming the whole top at
once.
The grafts have grown finely, many of them five or six feet ;
hardly one failed to take.
The apple crop has been small, it not being the bearing year
with my orchards. Forty young trees — the Romanite apple —
have been set out.
My large peach-trees were heavily laden with fruit, though
but very few trees are as yet large enough to bear. Some of
the three-year old trees produced a dozen or so. From the
rapid growth of the trees, induced by cultivation, hardly much
fruit can be expected for two or three years. Seventy-eight
head-trees were added to the peach-orchards in the spring.
In speaking of the crops raised I would state, that every
item of expense* is to be found under the different heads of the
appended schedule, with the value of the product raised. A
debtor and credit account is necessary against each field, (the
farm is divided into twenty lots,) and at the end of the term the
whole amount will be shown.
Corn. — One field was planted, an improved Western variety,
an account of which will be found in " statement" on premium
corn ; the other two lots were of the common Whitman corn ;
one manured with a compost of manure and peat, the other
with hen-manure and ashes.
.8
58 MASSACHUSETTS AGRICULTURE.
The amount of labor expended on the whole has amounted to
seventy-nine dollars.
Potatoes. — This crop has been raised among apple-trees, and
felt the drought rather more on this account. For the extent of
land cultivated, the crop has been fg,ir. The kinds planted were
the Dykerman, Garnet Chili, New York Peach Bloom, and New
York White Peach Bloom. The Dykerman were early, and some
sold at one dollar and seventy-five cents per bushel.
Turnips. — This crop has been good ; the yield two hundred
bushels;, the cost of crop is about eleven and a quarter cents
per bushel.
Hay has come in about the same as last year. The fresh hay
was taken on shares. On account of so much land being
devoted to young orchards, and consequently kept in cultiva-
tion or ploughed once or twice in the season, the hay crop is
smaller than it otherwise would have been.
Rye has yielded fifty bushels of grain, and three tons of
straw. This crop has cost sixty cents per bushel, the straw
being bonus.
Hay Hall, Lakeville, Dec. 1, 1864.
MANURES.
MASSACHUSETTS.
Report of the Committee.
To the Trustees of the Massachusetts Society for the Promotion of Agriculture :
The reports of the competitors for the premiums offered for
the tilling and manuring land for the three years of 1862,-'3,
and '4, have been examined and reduced to tabular statements,
wliich form part of our report. The directions for the cultiva-
tion of the lands appear to have been substantially followed.
Mr. Weld reports his estimate of the product per acre of each
of his lots for the three years.
Mr. Perkins reports on a sixth lot dressed by drilling in
twenty-four and a half pounds of Coe's super-phosphate of lime.
. 17
44
8
55
8
16
7
00
3
02
MANURES. 59
Mr. Ware gives his estimate of the amount of shelled corn
and corn-stover per acre from each lot, and states that one
hundred pounds of corn in ears gave seventy-six and a half
pounds shelled. He has followed the directions for the exper-
iments for the three series of three years each, and we take the
liberty to quote his remarks, — that the said experiments have
been of great value to him, and trusts that they will be useful
to farmers.
Mr. Leonard gives a valuation of the product of each lot for
the three years, as follows —
From lots 1, (corn, valued at 11.00,)
2, (rye, " " 1.60,)
3, (hay, " " 1.00,)
4, (straw and stover, .80,)
^j • • • • • . •
«
And estimates the rye crops on the manured land to average
twenty-two bushels per acre, c ,
The figures in the tables will enable any person to make
a similar calculation, and the result in money value.
Mr. Curtis planted corn in 1862, again in 1863, and sowed
barley in 1864.
Mr. Farmer divided his land of one hundred and fifty rods
into three parts of fifty rods each, and made his experiments on
each of them, apparently for the purpose of testing the relative
value of the manures used.
The manure used on the lots in range No. 1, so called, was
a compost, of three parts of cattle manure and one part of
meadow mud, seventy-five and five-twelfths cubic feet to each
lot, except lot No. 5. On range 2, seventy-two and five-twelfths
feet of compost, one-third meadow mud, and two-thirds horse
manure, two shotes having wintered on it. On range No. 3,
compost of clear meadow mud, with eighty-three pounds of Coe's
super-phosphate of lime to each cord of mud and same number
of cubic feet. He reports no wheat, but wheat-straw, and he
gives his estimate of the product per acre of each of his fifteen
lots in straw, and the first and second crops of hay.
The crop of Mr. Hull appears to be small, but he states that
he selected his poorest acre, hoping thereby to see the best
60 MASSACHUSETTS AGRICULTURE.
result of the manure used according to the directions for the
cultivation of the land.
An imperfect report was received from the Essex County
farm.
It may be noticed that the lands selected for experiments
vary in size from thirty rods to one acre. This explains the
differences in the number of pounds of crop reported in the
tables. The amounts of crop may have also depended on
the fertility of the soil, in the strength of manure used, and the
varieties of temperature and moisture.
The lots two and three, where the manure was ploughed in
four inches or harrowed in, produced the largest number of
pounds of crops, and it appears to be the general opinion that
manures should be lightly covered by shallow ploughing or by
good harrowing, or, in other words, that it should be well
mixed with the soil when spread on the surface of land before
planting.
This report concludes the three series of experiments for
premiums offered by the society, and we think that the farmers,
few in number, who cultivated lands in compliance with the
request of the State Board of Agriculture, and for the chance
of gaining the premiums offered, are well entitled to receive
the thanks of the farming interest of the State for the care,
attention, labor and expense which the experiments may have
required of them, and also to receive the premiums to be
awarded.
Respectfully submitted,
Geo. W. Lyman, for the Committee.
Boston, February 10, 1864.
Note. — The premiums of $100 each were awarded to Mr. Ware, to Mr.
Farmer, and to Mr. Weld. Gratuities of $50 each were awarded to Mr.
Perkins, Mr. Curtis, Mr. Hull, and Mr. Leonard.
MANURES.
61
Table No. 1,
Showing the pounds of crop on each of the five lots for the three years.
NAMES.
1
Lotsl.
Lots 2.
Lots 3.
Lots 4.
Lots 6.
Totals.
r
578
759
621
598
368
920
1.058
782
920
322
75
117
97
78
43
A. D. Weld, (100 rods,) . \
270
393
3.33
232
257
405
510
430
420
330
2,248
2,837
2,263
2,248
1,320
10,916
■
876
891
1,100
838
808
26 1
27i
30J
281
31
C
0. Perkins, (30 rods,) his
74i
74
82i
46|
71i
No. 6 lot omitted,
159
1541
161
150
84
l,136i
l,146i
1,373|
l,063i
994i
5,7141
1,501
1,637
1,506
1,316
942
2,134
2,078
1,774
1,664
1,178
74
77
79
69
55
B
P. Ware, (1 acre,) . . ■
266
228
221
201
115
435
435
455
475
290
4,410
4,455
4,035
3,725
2,580
19,205
f
403
424
456
407
267
264
283
308
264
191
2.30
236
326
256
168
L.
W. Curtis, (1 acre,) . . |
205
294
220
308
232
336
215
252
140
154
104
110
120
90
61
1,500
1,581
1,778
1,484
981
7,324
257
286
677
242
165
177
202
194
169
105
• 79
86
86
61
8
s.
Leonard, Jr., (50 rods,) .
128
140
134
100
15
121
172
151
164
55
762
886
1,242
736
348
3,974
185
168
242
379
86
164
188
228
310
146
131
135
150
149
72
J.
B. Hull, (1 acre,) .
163
180
196
229
106
282
227
200
266
108
925
898
1,016
1,333
518
4,690
19.14
16.80
18.15
14.19
11.71
J.
B. Farmer, First Range,
(50 rods,) . '.
328.
144.
359.
158.
373.
151.
339.
113.
210.
90.
491.14
533.80
542.15
466.19
311.71
2,344.99
16.99
19.30
20.13
14.52
15.68
J
B. Farmer, Second Range,
(50 rods,) ....
117.
36.
148.
81.
283.
140.
3.33.
128.
198.
76.
169.99
248.30
443.13
475.52
289.68
1,626.62
7.92
8.91
8.25
8.74
8.16
J
B. Farmer, Third Range,
(50 rods,) .
49.
17.
59.
27.
56.
27.
65.
30.
37.
73.92
94.91
91.25
• •
103.74
• •
45.16
• •
412.98
Total for three years of
all the lots
56,208.09
62
MASSACHUSETTS AGRICULTURE.
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MANURES. 65
ESSEX.
Statement of B. P. Ware for. 1862.
In competing for the premium offered by your society for the
best experiments on the application of manure — offered this
year, 1862 — I selected an acre of land adjoining the lot upon
which I commenced a similar experiment last year. The soil is
a dark loam, nine inches deep, resting upon a gravelly subsoil
— not leachy, but rather light — nearly level, with the exception
of a gentle swell running across the lot. In April of 1861, four
cords of compost manure were spread upon this land, and it was
sown with oats. On the tenth of June, the oats having attained
a large growth, they were turned under, and the land sown
with carrots, but, owing to the dry, hot weather, the seed failed,
and in July, I sowed flat turnips, which grew finely and yielded
a large crop.
On the fourteenth of May last, I divided the lot into five
equal parts, and manured four of them with compost manure
at the rate of ten cords per acre, which manure was taken from
a heap containing sixty -five cords, all forked over and worked
together. I like to compost my manure all in one heap, (except
some special manures,) as fermentation is more rapid, and I
think there is less waste than in several smaller heaps.
Said compost heap was composed of meadow mud, sea manure
and barn manure, -the whole mass drenched with eighteen cords
of night soil. The same quantity of manure was applied to each
lot, and it was ploughed in eight inches in lot No. 1 ; four inches
in lot No. 2 ; harrowed in in lot No. 3, and spread on the sur-
face of lot No. 4 after planting ; while none was applied to lot
No. 5. The directions of the circular werer followed- to the
letter.
May seventeenth, I planted nine rows of King Philip corn in
each lot, three and a half feet apart, and hills in the rows the
same distance — six kernels in' a hill, and covered the seed one
ajiid a half inches deep. The corn was horse-hoed, or cultivated,
three times during the season, and hand-hoed twice — not a weed
was allowed to grow. October sixth, the corn was cut up close
to the ground and stooked up. November third, being well
dried and in good order, I had the whole weighed and stored
9
66
MASSACHUSETTS AGRICULTURE.
in the barn, where it was husked within a week and carefully
weighed.
Lot No. 1 produced 3,635 pounds of unhusked corn ; 1,462
lbs. of sound ears ; 39 lbs. of unsound ears ; 2,134 lbs. stover.
Lot No. 2 produced 3,715 pounds of unhusked corn ; 1,608
lbs. of sound ears ; 29 lbs. of unsound ears ; 2,078 lbs. stover.
Lot No. 3 produced 3,280 pounds of unhusked corn ; 1,462
lbs. of sound ears ; 44 lbs. of unsound ears ; 1,774 lbs. stover.
Lot No. 4 produced 2,980 pounds of unhusked corn ; 1,284
lbs. of sound ears ; 32 lbs. of unsound ears ; 1,664 lbs. stover.
Lot No. 5 produced 2,120 pounds of unhusked corn; 902
lbs. of sound ears ; 40 lbs. of unsound ears ; 1,178 lbs. stover.
One hundred pounds of ears yielded seventy-six and a half
pounds of shelled corn. One bushel measure of shelled corn
weighed fifty-seven and a half pounds.
From the above data it may be seen that the several lots pro-
duced, of the several kinds of products, at the rates per acre as
given in the following table :
Shelled com. Stover. Unsound corn in ear.
Lot No. 1, 97 bushels ; 10,670 pounds ; 195 pounds.
" " 2,
1061
((
10,390
((
145
a
•
" " 3,
97
a
8,870
a
220
a
" " 4,
851
((
8,320
a
160
a
" " 5,
60
(C
5,890
a
200
u
SYNOPSIS OF THE WEATHER.
First Third.
Second Third.
Last Third
May,
• . dry.
dry.
dry.
June,
. moist.
dry.
moist.
July,
. moist.
moist.
moist.
Augusf, .
. moist.
moist.
•
moist.
September,
. dry.
moist.
dry.
Marblehead, November 14, 1862.
Statement of B. P. Ware for 1863.
The acre of land upon which was commenced the experiment
on the applicatipn of manure last year, I this year — May first —
ploughed eight inches deep ; then sowed upon the furrow two
and a half bushels wheat, after soaking two hours in strong
brine, and ploughed it in with Knox's gang plough, four inches
MANURES.
67
deep ; then sowed three pecks redtop and twelve quarts of herds-
grass seed, together with seven pounds of clover seed ; then
dragged it smooth. *
The severe drought in June nearly ruined the crop, as the
result will show. August fifteenth it was cradled and stocked
up.
Lot No. 1 produced 74 lbs. of clean wheat, and 266 lbs. of
straw. Total, 340 lbs.
Lot No. 2 produced 77 lbs. of clean wheat, and 228 lbs. of
straw. Total, 305 lbs.
Lot No. 3 produced 79 lbs. of clean wheat, and 221 lbs. of
straw. Total, 300 lbs.
Lot No. 4 produced 69 lbs. of clean wheat, and 201 lbs. of
straw. Total, 270 lbs.
Lot No. 5 produced 55 lbs. of clean wheat, and 115 lbs-, of
straw. Total, 170 lbs.
SYNOPSIS OF THE WEATHER.
First Third.
Second Third.
Last Tliird
May,
. wet.
moist.
dry.
June,
. dry.
moist.
dry.
July,
. dry.
wet.
wet.
August, .
. wet.
moist.
moist.
September,
. moist.
moist.
moist.
Marblehead, November 6, 1863.
Statement of B. P. Ware for 1864.
The result of the third year's crop grown upon the land to
which your attention has been called for the two preceding
years, is as follows :
The grass was cut June twenty-fifth, and each lot weighed
-June twenty-seventh, after being well cured.
Lot No. 1 produced
. 435 pounds of hay.
. 435 " "
. 455 " «
. 475 " "
. 290 " "
The extreme drought of June caused the crop to be very
small, although I suppose the relative product of the several lots
was not materially changed thereby.
68
MASSACHUSETTS AGRICULTURE.
This closes the third experiment of three years each that I
have made upon the application of manure with regard to ascer-
taining to what depth manure shall be covered to produce the
most profitable results. I have endeavored to be exact in all of
the experiments, and have been a close observer of the results ;
and from them I am satisfied, that with the various crops, and
taking one year with another, that to cover manure about four
inches deep will yield better results than any other depth, and
better cover it less than more. I feel that these experiments
have been of great value to me, and trust that they may be
promotive of the cause of agriculture.
SYNOPSIS OF THE WEATHER.
First Third.
Second Third.
Last Third.
May,
. moist.
moist.
moist.
June,
. moist.
dry.
very dry
July,
. dry.
dry.
moist.
August, .
. moist.
moist.
moist.
September,
. moist.
moist.
moist.
Marblehead, November 1, 1864.
PLYMOUTH.
From the Report of the Committee.
For the premiums offered by this society, under the direction
of the State Board of Agriculture, for experiments in the appli-
cation of manures, for a three years' rotation of crops, there
have been four entries, one in 1860, two in 1861, and one in
1862. As these experiments are now completed, it may be
well to inquire whether their results are sufficiently decisive
to indicate a general and reliable rule for the application of
manure.
The condition of these experiments, fixed by the State Board,
required the division of the land into five equal plots, numbered
1, 2, 3, 4 and 5. " Divide the manure into four equal parts.
Spread evenly one-fourth of the manure upon plot No. 1, and
then plough the whole field of an equal depth. Apply another
fourth to plot No. 2, and then cross-plough the whole to about
half the depth of the first ploughing. Spread another fourth
upon plot No. 3, and harrow or cultivate the whole field, after
MANURES. 69
wliicli sow or plant the whole, evenly, with any crop preferred.
Fmally, spread the remaining quarter part of the manure upon
plot No. 4." No. 5 was to be cultivated without manure. As
to the points at issue, No. 5 would seem to have been about as
useless an appendage to the others as would be the fifth wheel
to a coach. Fertilizers are as much a recognized necessity for
our soils, under tillage, as is provender for our cattle. In
experiments to determine the best method of feeding domestic
animals, it would hardly be deemed necessary that one indi-
vidual should be kept famishing. That^our soils are rendered
more productive by the application of manure, is beyond dis-
pute. The cases in which they can be economically, or even
safely cultivated without it, are exceedingly rare. The question
is, Which of the four prescribed methods of applying manure
will insure the greatest returns? The theoretical answer is,
that method which will most thoroughly incorporate it with that
portion of the soil usually penetrated by the roots of the plants
to be cultivated.
This thorough incorporation cannot be effected by leaving the
manure upon the surface, as in No. 4, nor, usually, by burying
it beneath an eight-inch furrow, as in No. 1, or, by a single
harrowing, as in No. 3. Although no one method of applying
manure is precisely suited to all soils and all seasons, that of
cross-ploughing in, as in No. 2, most nearly answers the condi-
tions of thorough incorporation and reasonable protection from
the waste consequent on free exposure to the sun and winds.
Ill cross-ploughing land, the furrow, haviiVg no adhesiveness, is
partly pushed aside, and but partly inverted, so that by a cross-
furrow four inches deep, but a small portion of the manure can
be buried to that depth ; it will, especially, after a subsequent
harrowing, be pretty evenly distributed through the soil, from
the surface down to the depth of the cross-furrow. In most
soils, suitable for tillage, the roots of • cultivated plants are
most numerous at some distance not greater than four or five
inches below the surface, and wherever the roots are most
numerous and most vigorous, manure will be [kept sufficiently
moist to insure its assimilation by the planjfc.
In an extremely wet season, manure from the surface may
reach the roots of plants through the percolation of water ; in
an extremely dry one, the roots may reach the manure at the
70 MASSACHUSETTS AGRICULTURE.
bottom of an eight-incli farrow. On very wet or dry soils,
similar results may follow. But such seasons are the effect of
meteorological accidents, which cannot be foreseen, and such
soils are not those usually selected for cultivation.
It has been urged in favor of surface-manuring, that " Nature
always manures upon the surface." Admitting this to be true,
(which we do not,) the answer is, that art is superior to nature,
or all civilization is folly. Nature deposits her seeds upon the
surface, leaving time and chance to supply the needed covering.
We deem it wiser, in planting, to furnish the covering at the
outset, leaving nothing to time and chance, which can be made
presently certain. The same wisdom should teach us to place
our fertilizers in a position to be most easily accessible to the
roots, which are the feeding mouths of plants. It is doubtless
true that nothing is lost or annihilated ; and manure, exposed
upon the most sterile rock, would, through the operation of
mechanical forces or chemical affinities, find its place and its
use somewhere in the economy of nature. But we cannot
afford fertilizers for a continent. Concentration, not diffusion,
should be our motto in the use of manures. The burden of the
song of all writers upon this subject has been, protection for
manure, in the compost heap and in the yard ; protection from
the sun, from the wind, from the rains ; and no good reason
is apparent why this protection should not be continued in the
field, where the facilities for such protection are greatest.
In each of the experiments under consideration, the succession
of crops was nearly .the same — corn, rye, oats, or barley, and,
grass. In two of them, plot No. 2, manure cross-ploughed in,
gave the greatest value of products ; in one, No. 1, manure
ploughed in ; and in one, No. 3, manure harrowed in. The
smallest return, in each instance, was from No. 4, manure left
upon the surface. As the manure upon these plots, numbered
4, was in each case ploughed in for the second crop, it is evident
that its waste, by exposure during the first season, amounted to
a considerable percentage of its orighial value. If anything
has been rendered certain by these experiments, it is that the
exposure of manure upon the surface of tilled land, is not good
husbandry.
In Mr. Leonard's first experiment, commencing in 18G0, the
order of the plots, as to the value per acre of products, was as
follows :
MANURES. 71
No. 2, manure cross-ploughed in, . . $104 6C}
No. 1, manure ploughed in, . . . 98 13
No. 3, manure harrowed in, . . . 88 26
No. 4, manure left on the surface, . . 86 40
In Mr. Leonard's second experiment, commencing in 1861,
the order and value per acre, were :
No. 1, manure ploughed in, . . . . $142 66
No. 2, manure cross-ploughed in, . . 135 86
No. 3, manure harrowed in, . . . 132 27
No. 4, manure left on the surface, . . 128 40
In Mr. Leonard's third experiment, commencing in 1862, the
order and value were:
No. 2, manure cross-ploughed in, . . $136 80
No. 3, manure harrowed in, . . . 130 56
No. 1, manure ploughed in, . . . 119 04
No. 4, manure on the surface, . . . 112 00
In Mr. Benson's experiment, commencing in 1861, the order
and value were :
No. 3, manure harrowed in, , . ' . $124 40
No. 2, manure cross-ploughed in, . . 123 85
No. 1, manure ploughed in, . . . 120 90
No. 4, manure on the surface, . . . 98 20
Perhaps no more satisfactory course can be pursued, with
reference to results so various than that of reducing them to an
average. This course is favored by the consideration that the
weather, which, doubtless, had some influence on these results,
can never be anticipated, except to the extent indicated by the
mean of previous years.
The average value, per acre, of the first crop in rotation, corn,
in the four experiments, was :
No. 2, manure cross-ploughed in, . . ' $66 76
No. 1, manure ploughed in, . . . 66 27
No. 3, manure harrowed in, . . . 62 87 ^
No. 4, manure on the surface, . . . 55 50
72 MASSACHUSETTS AGRICULTURE.
These figures indicate that, for corn alone, manure should
be cross-ploughed, or ploughed in. The excess of products on
land cross-ploughed over that ploughed only, is not, however,
sufficient to warrant the increased ex]3ense.
The average, per acre, of the second crop, small grains, in all
the experiments, was :
No. 2, manure cross-ploughed in, . . $29 53
No. 1, manure ploughed in, . . . 29 51
No. 3, manure harrowed in, . . . 28 84
No. 4, manure on the surface, . . . 24 23
These results are, relatively, about the same as in the previous
crop, and the same remarks are applicable, with the addition tliat,
for a rotation of corn and small grains, the manure ploughed in
for corn should be brought up by the plough, and mixed with the
soil, before the second crop is sown.
The average, per acre, of the third crop, grass, in all the
experiments, was:
No. 2, manure cross-ploughed in, . . 129 00
No. 3, manure harrowed in, . . . 27 16
No. 4, manure on the surface, . . . , 24 78
No. 1, manure jDloughed in, . . . 24 40
We have here different results. No. 2 still has the lead ;
No. 3 and No. 4 have each advanced one step, while No. 1 has
dropped to the foot of the list. The conclusion follows that for
grass, after grain crops, (and the same is doubtless true for grass
as the sole crop) manure should be kept near, but below the
surface. It may appear, however, that, for reasons which will
be suggested. No. 1 occupies too low a place in this comparison.
Averaging the value, per acre, of the four plots numbered 1,
the four plots numbered 2, &c., for the whole course in rotation,
we have the following:
No. 2, manure cross-ploughed in, . . 8125 29
No. 1, manure ploughed in, . . . 120 18
No. 3, manure harrowed in, . . . 118 87
No. 4, manure on the surface, . . 106 25
MANURES. 73 '
These results arc in accordance with the theory that manure
cross-ploughed in should give the greatest returns; the excess
being $5.11 per acre over manure plouglied in, $0.42 over
manure harrowed in, and $19.04 over manure left on the sur-
face. This average excess of No. 2 is considerably diminished,,
as is also the relative standing of No. 1, by the somewhat pecu-
liar results of Mr. Benson's experiment, the only one in which
No. 3 gave an excess of products.
A few suggestions as to the details of this experiment may
not be inappropriate, especially as the Massachusetts Society, by
their award of premiums, have indorsed it as being " more
thorough, exact, and reliable " than any other in this county,
at least ; a decision at variance with that of your board of
trustees, who, on the recommendation of their supervisor,
awarded to Mr. Benson the second premium only.
The land selected for this experiment was heavily manured
the year before the experiment was commenced, the manure
being cross-ploughed in without breaking the previously inverted
sward. It, of course, remained .near the surface till the first
ploughing for the experiments, which, being about nine inches
deep, placed this manure low down in the soil. No. 3, No. 4
and No. 2, measurably, were thus enriched below the surface
by the manure first applied, and at or near the surface by that
applied subsequently ; while the surface of No. 1, during the
first year, was not directly enriched by either application, both
being deeply buried by the plough. No. 1 was thus evidently
placed at a disadvantage, at the outset.
The cultivation was different in this experiment from that in
any other, so far as appears from the statements of competitors.
The manut-e applied to No. 1 was ploughed into a depth of
about nine inches ; yet it seems to have been reached by the
roots of the first crop, corn, as No. 1 gave the greatest yield the
first year. As the second ploughing was but six inches deep,
the manure on No. 1 must have remained undisturbed, where
the roots of the second crop could only reach it by penetrating
some three inches of compact earth, or earth not in tilth;
while, on each of the otiier plots, all the manure was contained
in the six inches of earth kept mellow by the plough. This
condition of things could but be unfavorable to the growth of
the last two crops on No. 1 ; yet the crop of oats seems to have
10
74 MASSACHUSETTS AGRICULTURE.
been diminished but slightly in consequence, being but twenty
pounds per acre less than on No. 2, and twenty-five pounds less
than on No. 3. Mr, Benson's statement that " No. 1 took the
lead the first year in corn, but No. 3 got the lead the second
.year, and kept it," is calculated to convey an erroneous impres-
sion. The value of the products of No. 1 at the close of the
first year, exceeded that of No. 3 by $3.95, and at the close of
the second year by $3.40. The great falling off in the products
of this- plot was in the third, or grass crop, which gave $8.65
per acre less than No. 2, and $9.45 less than No. 3. A different
result could hardly have been anticipated. Manure buried
beneath nine inches of earth is not in a position to cause grass
to set well or to grow vigorously. Had the manure on No. 1,
and the earth in which it was imbedded, been mixed and mel-
lowed by the plough the second year, its grass crop would
undoubtedly have compared much more favorably with that of
the other plots.
In this experiment we find a remarkable difference in pro-
ductiveness between No. 3 and No. 4 ; No. 3, manure harrowed
in, giving an excess of $26.20 per acre over No 4, manure left
upon the surface. As in all other respects the cultivation was
the same on both plots, this sum, $26.20, would seem to repre-
sent the value of the single harrowing. If such were the fact,
we might reasonably expect an approximation to the same
result in Mr. Leonard's second experiment, in progress during
the same seasons, in very nearly the same locality, subject, of
course, to the same climatic influences, on land much less reten-
tive of moisture, and, consequently, less favorable to surface
manuring. But in Mr. Leonard's experiment, the difference
per acre, in favor of No. 3, as compared with No.*4, was but
$3.87. In his first experiment, the difference was still less,
being but $1.86. In view of the fact that Mr. Benson's experi-
ment presents results so peculiar, and so different from those in
other experiments, we may well be pardoned for expressing a
doubt as to the entire accuracy of his figures, or, more reason-
ably, perhaps, of the correctness of his opinion as to the quality
of the soil of the several plots.
On alluvial deposits, or on prairie lands, tracts may doubtless
be selected, of equal productiveness throughout ; but on our
irregular drift; it is difficult, if not impossible, to find an acre
MANURES. 75
so uniform in quality and texture that its products, if entered
for premium, could be safely computed from the yield of its best
or of its poorest rood.
Mr. Benson's plots were each thirty-two rods long and one
wide, No. 3 being the central one. There is nothing in his state-
ment of the mode of ploughing to indicate any undue advantage
to this plot, by turning upon it soil or manure from the adjacent
ones ; but the whole field, as it now lies, forms a sort of water-
shed, being highest in the middle and lowest at the sides. If this
is, to any extent, owing to its having been ploughed with back
furrows in the centre, either during, or previous to the occu-
pancy of the present proprietor, inequality of soil must be the
.inevitable result.
Accidental inequalities in soils arise from various causes, and
their existence is sometimes unsuspected till the land is brought
under tillage. The maintenance of a partition-fence during a
series of years, in the days when sheep were found on every
farm, seeking the sides of such fertces for protection alike from
heat and cold, has induced an improved condition of the soil in
its immediate vicinity, apparent on cultivation long after all
traces of its existence had disappeared. The peculiar produc-
tiveness of a particular strip of land, apparently similar to that
adjoining, was observed by the writer, when it was first tilled
under his notice, thirty years ago. Inquiries made at that time
elicited the fact that, more than twenty years before, the ashes
from a family leach tub were carelessly deposited thereon, not
for purposes of fertilization, but as the most convenient method
of getting rid of a worthless incumbrance. These particular
causes of accidental inequalities in soils are not mentioned as
probably operative in this case, but to show the difficulty of
selecting an acre of land of equal quality throughout. That the
excess of products on plot No. 3 over plot No. 4, in this experi-
ment, was due to some inherent or accidental superiority of its
soil, would seem as probable, to say the least, as that it was the
effect of a single harrowing.
These suggestions are made, not because this experiment
presents results at variance with a favorite theory, but because
the award of so large a premium as one hundred dollars, by
such a body of agriculturists as those constituting the Massa-
chusetts Society of Agriculture, influenced though they doubt- .
76 MASSACHUSETTS AGRICULTURE.
less were, to some extent, by its quantity as well as its quality,
might be thought, by some farmers, to warrant the conclusion
that harrowing in manure is the most judicious and profitable
mode of applying it. Such a conclusion will be more satisfac-
tory, if arrived at legitimately, through an examination of the
facts, than if accepted upon trust.
As [these experiments have been conducted at considerable
expense to the society, considerable space is devoted to their
consideration, in order that their results may be rendered easily
accessible and practically useful to those for whose benefit they
were projected.
Alden S. Bradfokd, Supervisor.
Statement- of Spencer Leonard, Jr.
Application op Manures. — Mr. Leonard, in his statement,
says: In compliance with the rules of the society, I will give
you the result of the experiment in the application of manure,
commencing in 1862, and closing in 1864.
The weather, while the crop was in the field this year, was
nearly as follows :
First 10 Days. Second 10 Days. Last 10 Days.
May, . ' . wet, moist, moist.
June, . . dry, dry, very dry.
The grass was a mixture of clover and bluegrass, and, on the
plots manured was a fair crop. It was cut June 29th, andwhen
well cured, weighed as follows :
Plot No. 1,
121 lbs
" " 2,
179 "
" " 3,
151 "
" « 4,
1
164 "
" " 5,
55 "
As my statements for the years 1862 and! 1863 gave the
amount of crops and mode of cultivation for those years, I will
now give you only the amount of produce of each plot, with its
estimated value for each of the three years. In the following
estimate, corn on the ear is valued at $1 ; rye, 12.60 ; hay, $1 ;
corn fodder and straw, 50 cents — per cwt.
MANURES.
77
18G2. Plot No. 1, 257 lbs. corn, .
" " 177 lbs. stover,
1863. " 79 lbs. rye, .
" " 128 lbs. straw, . ,
1864. " 129 lbs. hay, .
Total value on Plot No. 1 for three years,
1862. Plot No. 1, 286 lbs. corn, .
1863.
1864.
a
it
u
202 lbs. stover,
86 lbs. rye,
140 lbs. straw,'
174 lbs. hay, .
Total value on Plot No. 2 for three years,
1862. Plot No. 3, 277 Ibs.^corn, .
" " 194 lbs.%tover, .
1863. •" 86 lbs. rye, ^ .
" " 134 lbs. straw,
1864. " ISllbs.Jiay, .
Total value on Plot No. 3 for three years,
1862. Plot No. 4, 242 lbs. corn, .
" . " 169 lbs. stover,
1863. " 61 lbs. rye, .
" " 100 lbs. straw, .
1864. " 164 1bs.lhay, .
Total value on Plot No. 4 for three years,
1862. Plot No. 5, 165 lbs. corn,
" " 105 lbs. stover,
1863. " 8 lbs. rye,
■" " 15 lbs. straw,
1864. " 55 lbs. hay.
Total. value on Plot No. 5 for three years.
^2 57
89-
2 05
64-
-13 46
- 2 69
1 29
$7 44
$2 86
1 01-
-$3 87
2 24
70-
- 2 94
1 74
$8 55
$2 77
97-
-13 74
2 24
67-
- ^ 91
1 51
18 16
$2 42
85-
-$3 27
1 59
50-
- 2 09
1 64
17 00
$1 65
53—12 18
21
08-
- 29
55
m 02
* RECAPITULATION.
Total value on Plot No. 1, manure ploughed in 7 inches
$7 44
78 MASSACHUSETTS AGRICULTURE.
Do. No. 2, cross-ploughed in 4 inches deep, . . . $8 55
Do. No. 3, harrowed in, . . . . . . 8 16
Do. No. 4, spread upon the surface, . . . . 7 00
Do. No. 5, no manure applied, . . • . . . 3 02
From the foregoing it would appear that Plot No. 2, where
the manure was cross-ploughed in, has made the largest return :
39 cents more than Plot No. 3, where the manure was harrowed
in ; 11.11 more than Plot No. 1, where the manure was spread
upon the sward and ploughed in seven inches deep ; $1.55 more
than Plot No. 4, where the manure was left upon the surface ;
$5.53 more than Plot No. 5, without any manure. The rye and
clover upon Plot No. 5, being winter-killed, reduced the value
of that plot very materially, and it would appear that to culti-
vate our Plymouth County soils without any manures is a very
unprofitable mode of farming.
VINEYARDS.
WORCESTER NORTH.
Report of the Committee.
Ever since " Noah began to be a husbandman, and planted a
vineyard," the grape has occupied a place more or less promi-
nent among the cultivated fruits in some portions of almost
every civihzed country. Growing, (as history informs us,) in
its liighest perfection in Syria and Asia — this luscious fruit and
the unrivalled beverage it produced, early recommended it to
the special notice of the patriarchal tillers of the soil, who
planted vineyards long before any considerable attention was
given to the cultivation of other varieties of fruit. As civiliza-
tion advanced, the vine accompanied it first to Egypt, Greece,
and Sicily, and subsequently to Italy, Spain, France, aaid Bri-
tain, to which latter place it was introduced by the Romans
about two hundred years after the Christian era. The grapes
of the old world were celebrated for their excellent wine-pro-
ducing qualities, and the products of vineyards, in the same
VINEYARDS. 79
localities at the present day, still retain this distinguishing
characteristic.
In France the cultivation of the vine is very extensive.
Goodrich informs us, that 5,000,000 acres are devoted to that
object, and that the estimated value of the products in 1854,
amounted to !$130,000,000. Although in no other country is
there so large a part of the territory devoted to this object,
still, in nearly all the minor States «of Europe the grape furn-
ishes no inconsiderable part of the products of the soil. Plants
and seeds of foreign varieties were brought to this country by
colonists during the first fifty years after its settlement, but no
considerable attention seems to have been given to their propa-.
gation until after the close of the Revolutionary War. After
our forefathers had succeeded in throwing off the British yoke,
and obtained a name among the nations, their attention began
to be more especially directed to the cultivation of various kinds
of fruit. Among these (though not the most prominent,) was
the grape. Experience soon showed that these foreign varieties
would not withstand the severity of our stern New England
winters without protection ; and that our short and variable
summers, and early autumnal frosts, presented an insurmount-
able barrier to their successful cultivation, (except under glass.)
These efforts in relation to grapes of foreign origin having
thus far failed, the attention of the fruit grower has been wisely
directed to the examination of our more hardy native varieties.
These, especially such as are found growing on the borders of
our New England streams, are more or less characterized by
the hardness of their pulp and a peculiar foxy flavor which
renders them as a dessert fruit, somewhat unpalatable. Expe-
rience however has shown that these objectionable qualities are
susceptible of being materially modified by cultivation. By a
careful selection of the most promising for propagation and by
reproduction, several new varieties have been obtained within
the last few years of acknowledged excellence, and well adapted
to our New England climate. Among those now propagated
in this vicinity, (more or less approved,) are the Concord,
Delaware, Hartford Prolific, Diana, Rebecca, and Early Amber.
The two first of the above-named are undoubtedly the best
and most profitable for the market, possessing the three
important qualities of being hardy, good bearers, and holding
80 MASSACHUSETTS AGRICULTURE.
their fruit well. Several other new varieties, not yet fully
tested, have recently been brought to notice. Rogers' Hybrid
and Grant's lona and Israella, are all highly recommended and
will no doubt soon occupy a high position in the catalogue. In
most of the Middle, and some of the South-Western States,
vineyards on something of an extended scale have within a few
years been planted and are now under successful cultivation.
Many valuable varieties whieh cannot be successfully grown in
New England, succeed well on the banks of the Ohio. The
Catawba seems to take the lead in that locality, producing an#
abundant crop of well-ripened fruit, and richly rewarding the
.husbandman for his labor. In California, also, where the vine,
even in its wild, uncultivated state, bears the choicest fruit,
vineyards have within a few years past been planted, which are
said to produce in abundance grapes unsurpassed both in size
and in flavor. This will undoubtedly eventually become one of
the largest fruit-growing States in this country. Wine has
already been produced there, wliich is said to compare favorably
with the best of foreign importation.
These unmistakable demonstrations in regard to the propaga-
tion and improvement of our native grapes will, we trust, be a
sufficient guarantee for awakening in the minds of this commu-
nity, a much livelier interest on this subject — that instead of
one vineyard (without a competitor,) entered the present year,
there may be found in 1865 a goodly number to contend for the
promised awards.
It need scarce be said, that in selecting a site for a vineyard
in this latitude, a warm sunny exposure should always be
secured. A spot somewhat elevated above the surrounding
level, sloping a little to the south or south-east is the best. It
should also be one not liable to be atfected by the early frost,
otherwise the crop will be in danger of being cut off before
coming to maturity. All cultivators of the vine agree that a
light, dry, warm soil is the best. If it can be found, a soil com-
posed of decaying calcareous rocks should be selected. This
should be well worked to the depth of eighteen inches at least,
and enriched with well decomposed manure to wliich should be
added, (if not already contained in the soil,) some portion of
lime and crushed bones — some wood ashes will also be beneficial, ■
especially in a dry season. If the ground is well prepared and
VINEYARDS. 81
enriched at the outset, an annual top-dresshig will he all that
will be required to keep the vineyard in a flourishing and
healthy condition for two or three years.
Although much has been written and said in regard to the
best method for cultivating the grape, we apprehend, by a large
part of the community, the subject is still very imperfectly
understood. Any careful observer cannot fail to notice, that
most of the vines planted in our gardens, and about our dwell-
ings, have been suffered to retain all their native habits. Instead
of being judiciously trimmed and properly trained, as they
should be every year, they are permitted to grow unmolested,
not only about the arbor or trellis provided for their accommo-
dation, but if by chance a tree comes within their reach, they
are allowed to stretch forth their tendrils to the nearest twigs,
and thus find ample means to assist them in their rambles, and
gratify all their roving propensities. All who suffer their vines
thus to wander unmolested, have good reason to expect their
crop will be a failure. Every grape-grower, whether on a larger
or smaller scale, for the vineyard or garden, should have a suit-
able trellis or arbor, beyond which the vine should never be
suffered to climb. Late in autumn after the vine has shed its
leaves, or in the early part of winter, it should be properly
trimmed ; and, if so situated that it can be conveniently done,
be taken from the trellis and laid on the ground to remain
through the winter, with some slight covering to hold it in
place. This is all the protection that will be required for the
hardy varieties, to enable them to withstand the most severe
winter. Early in the spring before the buds have become much
swollen, they should be taken up and carefully arranged again
on the trellis, there to be trained through the growing and
fruiting season. For further reliable information in relation to
this subject, see the very full and clear statement of Dr. Fisher.
The committee have attended to the duty assigned them, by
carefully examining the only vineyard presented, finding it
highly satisfactory in regard to the location, general arrange-
ment, and mode of cultivation, and in a flourishing and healthy
condition.
Cyrus Thurston, Chairman.
11
82 MASSACHUSETTS AGRICULTURE.
Statement of Dr. Jahez Fisher.
The specific plantation of native grapes which I enter for
premium, consists of sixty-one vines, set six feet apart and
trained upon a single trellis. The whole number are Concords,
and were planted in the summer of 1861, having been grown
from single eyes, started in pots under glass the previous March.
An under-drain was put in directly underneath where the vines
were afterward set. The ditch was dug three feet deep, and
the throat of the drain formed by placing flat stones like the
two sides of a steep roof upon the bottom. Stones and rubbish
were then filled in to within fifteen inches of the surface.
Fresh bones, with the flesh attached, were spread liberally upon
the rubbisli and the earth levelled. The soil is a strong, deep
loam, on a somewhat retentive bottom, having a south-easterly
slope. The row runs very nearly north and south, the vines
being planted on the east side of the trellis about a foot distant,
and leaning towards it.
In the autumn of 1861, the vines were all cut down to within
two or three buds of the ground and left without protection.
In the spring of 1862 a trellis was built of posts and wire.
The posts were chestnut, 2 by 2, except one at each end, which
was 3 by 5, and braced in a foot. The posts were set ten feet
apart, two and a half feet deep, and were dipped in gas tar
before setting. I would now set them but six feet apart. Four
strands of No. 12, annealed, iron wire were attached to the
posts by staples made of the same wire. The lowest wire is 18
inches from the ground, and the others are placed at distances
of 14 inches, so that the top wire is just five feet from the
surface of the soil. These wires are coated with paraffine varnish
to keep them from rusting. During the summer of 1862 a
single shoot was trained perpendicularly from each vine, all
other growth being rubbed off as soon as it started, and all
laterals were pinched back to one leaf, and this operation was
repeated and continued as long as they made new growth.
In the autumn of 1862 the first vine at one end of the row
was cut off at the third wire of the trellis. The second vine
was cut at the first or bottom wire, the third vine at the third
wire, the fourth at the first wire, and the remainder in the same
way, alternating between the first and third wire. Any vine tliat
had not made a good growth was again cut back again, as in 1861,
VINEYARDS. ' 83
nearly to the ground. None of tlicra received any protection
during tlie winter but remained attached to the trellis the same
as during growth. In the summer of 18G3 a shoot was taken
from each of the two upper buds, and trained horizontally along
the first or third wirp as the case might be, in opposite direc-
tions, each vine forming a T- No other growth was allowed,
and the- laterals on these horizoiital shoots or arms were pinched
back as they had previously been on the upright shoots the year
before. These arms were allowed to bear one or two clusters
of fruit each, according to their strength.-
In the autumn of 1863 the arms were cut back, varying with
their condition, but where they had grown vigorously, from two
to four feet were left. Everything else was removed so that the
vines showed nothing but a stick in the form of the letter J.
No winter protection was used. The training during the past
summer, 18G4, has been as follows : From each of the horizontal
arms, upright shoots have been allowed to grow as often as every
nine inches on the average, the intention being to have eight
upright shoots or 'spurs upon each arm, when the latter shall
have reached its full length of six feet. The shoots from the
buds on the end of the arms, were trained horizontally for the
purpose of extending them. As soon as the clusters of fruit-
buds on the upright spurs were sufficiently developed to show
their character, the end of the shoot was pinched off so as to
leave but one leaf beyond the last good cluster, all small or
imperfect ones being removed. If the spur showed no fruit, it
was allowed to grow all the same, and was pinched at about the
same length, or a little shorter. When these spurs had grown
sufficiently, they were tied to the second or fourth wires, as they
belonged to the lower or upper set of vines. The horizontal
shoots from the end of the arms were allowed to grow imtil
they had met the adjoining ones, and two or three joints beyond,
at which point they were pinched off. It would be more correct
to say that they were pinched off at seven feet from the upright
stem of the vine. All laterals, wherever found, were succes-
sively pinched off as often as they made a new growth, so as to
leave but one additional leaf only each time.
The vines have been pruned this autumn as follows : The
horizontal shoot which is now the continuation of the arm, was
cut off at five feet and about eight inches from the central stem.
84 MASSACHUSETTS AGRICULTURE.
Each upright spur is cut off so as to leave but two buds, not
counting the undeveloped buds around the junction of the spur
with the arm. The ground has all this time been cultivated
with a horse-hoe, except the space between the trellis and the
trunks of the vines, which is kept loose by the hand-hoe.
To exhibit this mode of treatment in full, it will be necessary
to give the proposed operations for one year more. The vines
are to be laid upon the ground, before it freezes up perma-
nently, and kept there by a little soil thrown upon them. Next
spring, just before the buds start, they are to be tied to the
trellis, and from the upright spurs, the upper bud will be
allowed to grow and show fruit. If from any cause this bud
fails to start, the lower one will take its place, but otherwise the
latter will be rubbed off. One of the best of the base buds
which were only partially developed the autumn previous, will
be permitted to grow, while all the others are to be rubbed off.
Both these shoots will be tied to the wire immediately above,
and pinched off the same as the past season. That portion of
the arm which grew the past summer, will form spurs precisely
as the first portion has already done. In the autumn of 1865
the old upright spur, with the shoot that has grown from its top
bud, bearing fruit, will be cut entirely away, leaving only the
shoot that grows from the bud at the base, and that shoot, or
spur as it will then be, will be cut back, leaving but two buds
as before. The spurs on the end of the arm, are to be pruned
in the same manner, and then the vine is fully established, the
same course of pruning and training being followed out year
after year.
My reasons for adopting this method and its advantages over
others, I will endeavor to give briefly. It is very well known
that whoever plants a grape-vine in a fair soil, gets, the third,
fourth or fifth year, one or two very fine crops, but after this
time the fruit depreciates in size and quantity, and although the
vine may be sufficiently vigorous, the crop seldom equals that
of its earlier years. The reason I conceive to be this : When a
vine is three or four years old it makes a growth of wood, vary-
ing from two to ten or more feet in length on the different
shoots. The best fruit buds are somewhere near the centre of
these shoots. Everybody knows that it is common practice to
prune grape-vines every winter, but without a thought of the
VINEYARDS. 85
why, one cuts one way and one another. The usual plan is to
employ in substance one of two modes. One consists in cutting
out a portion of the long shoots or canes entirely, the' other in
cutting off the greater length of all tlie canes. In the first case
there will be a good show of fruit the following year, because a
part of the best fruit-buds are left, but if the same system be
followed out for a few years, the vine requires more and more
room to spread itself in every direction. The best fruit is borne
at a distance from the centre, and mostly at the top of the vine
if any portion of it grows upright, and after a few years the
parts of the vine nearest the root become barren, and the fruit
is borne only at the extremities. This system must finally run
out for want of room, and will not answer for vineyard
cultivation.
In the second plan above mentioned, if all the shoots are cut
away for the most of their length, tlie best fruit buds are lost,
and the result is necessarily a poor crop. The vine extends
continually, but more slowly than in the other case and is
otherwise less satisfactory.
To overcome these difficulties, that is, to get strong fruit-
buds, and at the same time to keep the vine always at home, I
have adopted the plan described. I am not aware that anything
connected witli it is original with me, for it has been in use
essentially for many years. Its practical working is tliis : As
the strength of a vine is expended principally at its extreme
ends or top, the whole vine is made to be the top by the system
of horizontal arms from which the upright fruit-bearing spurs
grow, no one having any special advantage over another. The
two arms being of equal length and bearing the same number
of spurs are equally balanced. The effect of pinching off the
ends of the bearing shoots early in their growtli, is to cause the
remaining buds in the axils of the leaves, which are to produce
fruit in the following year, to rapidly develop, and form fine,
large fruit-buds. The continual pinching of laterals prevents the
vine from neglecting these buds during the whole of the growing
season. The same causes also operate to develop the fruit which
is upon the same spur, and it grows very large and ripens evenly
and early. Another effect produced is, that the leaves that
are left. to grow, being few in number, grow very large and
healthy. A single large leaf is of more value than a number
86 MASSACHUSETTS AGRICULTURE.
of small ones, and is more able to resist disease, and especially-
premature decay. When we come to prune in the autumn,
although we are obliged to cut away some very fine buds, yet
the second one from the base of the spur is nearly or quite as
good as any of those removed, and will give very fine clusters.
Many of mine this year weighed upwards of thirteen ounces
each. The principal advantage, even aljove all the others, is that
the vine is always kept within a small com.pass, and is a perma-
nent affair ; inasmuch as it will bear as much fruit, and carry
as much foliage at five or six years, as at fifty or one hundred.
I think that the special efforts of the grape-grower should
always be directed to producing the buds for his future crop,
the present one being already mostly beyond his control.
I have not usually given the Concord any winter protection ;
it is generally so well ripened and so hardy in its nature, as to
endure ordinary winter weather without protection ; but in
unfavorable seasons it is liable to be insufficiently ripened
to withstand the influence of extreme cold without suffering,
and in such cases there follows a partial or even a total failure
of a crop. In fact, the winter of 1860-1, showing a tempera-
ture of 22° below zero on the 8th day of February, killed all
the wood which stood above the snow-line on that day. This
might not have happened, and probably would not, if the wood
had been well ripened in the autumn previous. The autumn
of 1860 was very wet, and slightly cooler than the average of
seasons, and the foliage of grape-vines and even apple-trees was
killed by a severe freeze on the first day of October, while still
green and growing. Vines planted in the way I have described,
can be easily laid down at a cost of not more than one day's
labor of a man and a boy for an acre, which is a very cheap
insurance, considering the risk of so valuable a crop. My vines
are planted on the east side of the trellis, a foot from it, and are
trained in a slanting direction to the lower wire. Above that
point they are carried up on the west side of the trellis, so that
when pruned, and the ties cut, they fall toward the ground on
the w.est side by their own weight. A boy can hold them down,
while a man throws three or four shovelfuls of soil upon them
to hold them in place.
Although I have entered and described the vines traiped to a
single trellis, yet it is in most respects like fifteen others iii the
GRAIN CROPS. 87
same vineyard, except that about one-half of them are one year
be^iind in the time of planting the vines. A portion of it was
originally planted for other and different modes of training, all
of which I became convinced must fail in the end. I therefore
replanted with young vines, rather than attempt to retain the
old ones, and removed the latter last autumn to give way to the
former. In so doing, I sacrificed the prospect of a crop of some
tons of grapes this year, feeling that the end justified the
means, and that the longer I put off the sacrifice, the greater it
would be.
I think it. is an erroneous idea that a grape-vine necessarily
requires a very rich soil for its successful culture. My vineyard
has had no manure other than the bones before mentioned, for
four or five years, and is now too rich for the Concord, which
comprises ninety-five per cent, of my vines. Some of the
slower-growing varieties require a considerably better soil. A
soil too rich in fertility forces an enormous growth of wood,
every shoot of which must be pinched back, thus vastly increas-
ing the labor without any compensating result. If this pinching
is neglected the succeeding crop will be more or less a failure.
A rather poor soil is preferable for this reason, and if too much
so to produce satisfactory growth, a top-dressing will be a
sufficient means of obviating that difficulty. In view of these
considerations, I would not trench or plough the land for a
vineyard of Concord grapes more than twelve inches deep. I
prefer that in this latitude, where the heat of the five growing
months, from May 1st, to September 30th, averages only 64.11
degrees, that the great majority of the roots should lie near the
surface. A dry bottom, however, either through natural or
artificial drainage, is essential to tlie seasonable maturity of
both wood and fruit.
It may be proper to state that although the vineyard is now
of four summers' growth, yet it was planted with vines one year
younger than are ever purchased for that purpose.
88 MASSACHUSETTS AGRICULTURE.
GRAIN CROPS.
WORCESTER NORTH.
Statement, of Leivis A. Goodrich.
Corn. — The soil on which I raised my corn offered for pre-
mium, is clayey loam. It was in grass in 1863, and was
manured with eighteen loads of barnyard manure, of thirty
bushels to a load, two hundred pounds of plaster, and two
hundred pounds of superphosphate. It was ploughed in
November, 1863, and in spring for present crop, four to six
inches deep, and harrowed one way, in May ; the cost of plough-
ing and other preparation was |8 ; the manure cost 83, and was
spread and harrowed in ; the plaster and phosphate cost $8, and
were dropped in hills about three feet apart, and the corn
dropped on that. The cost of seed 'and planting was $6. The
cultivator was run through, and it was hoed twice, costing
about $10. It was harvested from the 15th to the 20th of Sep-
tember, by being cut and stooked in the field until dried ; the
cost of harvesting and husking was $7. The whole cost is 869
for the acre. Amount of stover, four tons ; the weight on one
acre was 4,440 pounds of shelled corn or 79|^f bushels.
•
Statement of Cyrus Kilburn.
Winter Wheat. — I raised my wheat on a clayey loam soil,
ploughed about seven inches deep. I applied only one barrel
of superphosphate, and September 22d sowed two bushels of
blue-stem winter wheat, and cradled it the last of July. The
crop was injured by the Timothy grass sown with it. By
repeated experiments I am convinced that no grass seed should
be sown with winter wheat till the next spring ; the grass being
more hardy will start first and check the wheat. I think this
an important item in the successful cultivation of winter wheat.
The amount of wheat was twenty-four bushels to the acre, and
about one ton of straw.
Cost of phosphate, ....
" " ploughing, ....
" " seed -and sowing,
" " harvesting, ....
$26 00
IT
00
5
00
8
00
6
00
GRAIN CROPS. 89
Statement of Alonzo P. Goodridge.
Rye. — The soil on which I raised my spring rye was a sandy
loam, on which in 1862 and 1863 I raised corn ; and was
ploughed six inches deep, and rye sowed about the 1st of May ;
one and one-fourth bushels of seed were used to the acre ; it
was reaped 26th of July, and the acre yielded 1,600 pounds,
being about 28|- bushels to the acre.
Cost of ploughing, ....
" " sowing, .....
& L/ (i> Vl K • • « • • •
" " harvesting, ....
$14 00
$3 00
3 00
2 00
6 00
NANTUCKET.
. Statement of Charles W. Gardner.
Corn. — Having entered as a competitor for the premium for
the best experiment in raising Indian corn, I will say that the
land is a sandy loam, that has been in grass for the last fifteen
years, — last year produced about one-half ton to the acre. The
piece contains about six acres ; but the worms have troubled a
part of it so badly, that I will enter but three acres. Last
February I commenced carting and spreading barn manure,
composted with peat muck and soil, forty loads to the acre, each
load containing twenty bushels. Ploughed the first of April,
five inches deep ; planted from the 15th to the 21st of May, in
hills three and one-half feet apart each way. My object in
spreading the manure so early in the season is that it costs less,
and that the manure gets more thoroughly mixed with the soil,
and the after-crops are more even than when the manure is
dropped in heaps and spread at ploughing.
RESULT IN CROP.
385 bushels ears, worth 90 cents per bushel, . . $346 50
2^ tons top-stalks, worth $10 per ton, . . . 25 00
3 tons butts and husks, worth $6 per ton, . . 18 00
$389 50
12
90
MASSACHUSETTS AGRICULTURE.
COST OF
CULTIVATIOK.
Cost of manure, 120 loads,
. $60 00
Ploughing, .
9 00
Seed and planting,
8 00
Cultivating twice.
4 00
Hoeing,
3 00
Interest on land, .
3 60
Cost of harvesting and husking.
. 14 00
Net profit,
1101 60
$287 90
EOOTS AND VEGETABLES.
MIDDLESEX.
From the Report of the Committee on Vegetables.
The ground that actuated your committee in their awards
was this : asking ourselves what sized vegetables we should
select for our own consumption, all, with one accord, said, the
well-matured, medium-sized, — not too small, for there is too
much work in preparing them for the table, — not too large, for
they are coarse and woody, unfit for eating, and are not as
salable in any market for culinary uses. This opinion is fully
sustained by all market-men, and by the committee.
Therefore the committee took into consideration this view of
the subject: Does the awarding of premiums for monstrosities
or freaks of nature tend in any way to promote agriculture ?
The answer was, no. The question then arises : How can the
desired end be promoted ? We answer in part by giving
written statements in full, — of which too many are so meagre
that they hardly come within the rules of the society, — of the
kinds of soil on which they were raised, the kind and quality of
manure as well as the quantity, and whether they are a fair
sample of the crops exhibited, or selected from a field or the
garden ; time of sowing, culture, distance between the plants,
and the different varieties of vegetables best adapted for differ-
ent soils. These questions, for questions they are in reality, if
ROOTS AND VEGETABLES. 91
minutely and correctly answered, would do more good, in our
opinion, tlian all the premiums ever paid by this society shice
its formation for overgrown vegetables.
J. B. Farmer, /or the Committee.
NANTUCKET.
Statement of David Folg-er.
Beets. — After so much has been said and written upon root-
crops, and especially the mangel, by those whose knowledge and
experience ought to entitle them to credit, as one of the most
important crops for a dairy-farm, there still exists a strong pre-
judice against feeding them extensively. Knowing* that this
prejudice has gained ground among us, leads me to extend
my remarks beyond the limits of an ordinary statement of the
results of a crop entered for premium. After eight years
of experience in feeding mangels, I feel prepared to meet any
objections against their extensive use as a succulent on all
dairy farms, whether for the production of milk, or the manu-
facture of that milk into butter. The milk is better and the
butter sweeter and of a better color from their use than with-
out. There is also a large saving in hay, for the cow that has
eaten a half bushel of beets in the morning, will eat much less
hay during the day. In fact, there is a large saving also, in the
growth of this crop ; as the mangels grown upon one-fourth of
an acre of land, will do more towards wintering stock, than
the hay grown upon four times the breadth of land, the same
amount of manure being used in both cases. There are many
varieties of this family of beet, but after trying several, I give
the yellow globe the preference, as I think it keeps better far
into , the spring than any other. I do not think the yield so
large as that of the long red, but have no doubt they contain
more nutriment. They should be planted in rich, mellow soil,
well manured, and thoroughly pulverized. Plenty of room
should be given each plant, for I consider it more profitable
and far preferable to raise large vegetables than small ones, and
beets in particular do not do as well, if not carefully thinned
early in the season. Tliey can be readily transplanted, and
it is my practice to fill in all the spaces in this way.
92 MASSACHUSETTS AGRICULTURE.
My crop this year would have been larger had there been wet
enough to transplant. As it was I had four hundred bushels,
worth thirty cents per bushel, making $120, at a cost of 836.65.
A few words in regard to feeding this vegetable. I think they
should never be used before the 15th of January ; later would
be better. Many farmers no doubt have been led to discard
them from too early feeding.
The seed was planted about the 1st of May, and the crop
harvested the last week in October.
Note. — There were several statements on roots returned to the societies, as
for instance, at Nantucket and elsewhere, but the quantity of manure was not
stated. Thirty loads of manure in Nantucket means nothing to speak of in
Berkshire, and as the value of a statement depends mainly on the quantity of
manure, it i* worthless with this item left out. Competitors should remember
that the load is not a sealed measure. A cord is a load, and so is a bushel
for a wheelbarrow !
MILCH C 0 WS.
ESSEX.
From the Report of the Committee.
Dairy. — "We regard inquiry in relation to these two subjects,
quantity of milk produced and the value of milk for butter, as
of special importance to the farmers of this county. Every
farmer may have an opinion as to the amount of milk his cows
give in a year, and also how many quarts of that milk it will
take for a pound of butter; but very few know from trial
what their cows average, or what is the general quality of the
milk.
There is far too little knowledge of the cost of keeping our
cows, and the best manner of keeping them, especially among
those farmers who furnish milk for the market. The produc-
tion of milk is fast becoming one of the leading agricultural
interests of the county. The rise and increase of manufactur-
ing cities and villages have created a large demand for milk ;
and, as the population increases, the production of butter will
»
MILCH COWS. 93
become less and the quantity of milk raised for market greater.
This change in dairy farming calls for a change in the kind of
stock, and in its management. Cows that are profitable for
butter, will, perhaps, hardly pay the expense of keeping at the
■wholesale price of milk ; and the reverse is equally true.
We need careful and repeated experiments to show us what
breed is best for our purpose^ and how cows should be kept to
secure the largest return at the least outlay. In old butter-
making times, but little butter was made in the winter, and the
cows would thrive better that season on the hay* and other
fodder produced by the farmer. But the milk-producer must
keep his quantity of milk in winter nearly equal to that of
summer; consequently he must bestow extra care, and must
use considerable extra feed. The kind, quantity, and manner
of using this extra feed is unsettled, and opinions among prac-
tical farmers vary much. The only way to settle these matters .
is by careful, patient experiment. And then how little is
known of the amount of milk our cows produce. One man
tells you cows generally do not average more than five quarts
per day; another thinks a cow very poor if she will not average
eiglit on like keeping. Perhaps it may not be out of place here
to state the result of a trial made by the chairman of your
committee a year or two since. .
The object was to ascertain how much an average cow
would give, on fair keeping, and how much difference there
was between such a cow and the best. Accordingly three cows
were selected which had been kept upon the place several
seasons, and whose qualities were therefore known, and which
calved, as nearly as possible, at the same time. No. 1 was a
cow that had always been considered a fair milker ; No. 2 was
one of the best, — both natives ; No. 3 was a grade Ayrshire.
No. 1 calved April 12th, and the 22d of the next March.
No. 2 calved April 25th, and the 19th of the next April.
No. 3 calved June 10th. and the 21st of the next June.
The milk was measured carefully every Wednesday, and the
amount reckoned an average for the week. The following was
the result :
94
MASSACHUSETTS AGRICULTURE.
MOKTHS.
April, .
May, .
June, .
July, .
August,
September,
October,
November,
December,
January,
February,
March,
April, .
May, .
Total,
Amount of Milk.
Qts.
Qts.
171
47
314
345
308
406
290
320
273
305
231
298
194
279
171
259
104
247
46
250
—
190
-
54
2,102
3,000
Qts.
345
427
395
334
357
296
310
326
295
270
169
41
3,565
QuAKTS PER Day.
101
9
lOi
96
10
9
8-2-
Z3
I'
3.
18
13|
12|
Hi
Hi
07
10
lOA
lOi
'J
52
Average amount per day during the whole time : No. 1, 6.2 ;
No. 2, 8.5 ; No. 3, 9.4. The milk was sold at wholesale, and
actually brought,— No. 1, I52.4T; No. 2, $79.71; No. 3, $97.57.
The keeping in each case was precisely alike, and consisted of a
few roots or shorts, with as much hay and other fodder as they
would eat. During the summer months, nothing but good
pasture. It was thought at the time that Cow No. 1 barely
paid the cost of keeping and a fair interest on her market
value. Taking this for granted, then No. 3 paid a profit over
cost of keeping, sufficient to buy a good cow at that time.
Dr. Loomis, in a paper published in the Patent Office Report
of 1861, estimates the average annual amount of milk produced
over a large extent of territory, at only 1,800 quarts per cow.
If this is correct, or even if 2,100 quarts per year be the average,
then it follows that many farmers are making milk at little or
no profit. It also follows that with better stock, the same
expense in keeping Avill yield a larger return than in almost
any other branch of agriculture. Doubtless it is practically
impossible for all to obtain extra cows : but when farmers are
convinced that they cannot alTord to keep a medium cow, the
demand for better stock will increase, and the supply will
increase with the demand. Another important consideration is,
MILCH COWS. 95
that every part of this county is so near a market that all kinds
of fodder fit for cattle will always command their value in
money. Hence there is no necessity for keeping stock to eat up
our fodder as there is in towns farther back. The kind and
amount of food most economical and suitable for milch cows
during winter, is a matter scarcely less important to the milk
producer than the kind of stock.
The whole subject affords a wide field for investigation and
experiment, and we hope that next year some of our farmers
will observe and make note of what they are doing, not only for
their own but the public good.
Joseph S. Howe, for the Committee.
MIDDLESEX.
In making a report on herds of cattle, or milch cows, blood
stock and kindred topics, certain great salient facts and promi-
nent points ought to be repeated and insisted upon from year to
year. The attention of cattle breeders and farmers cannot be
too often called to them.
Cattle, instead of bankrupting the soil, give back as much
richness as they take from it. They afford the readiest means
of keeping up the fertility of a farm, and generally a cattle
district grows richer every day, while a grain district, without
the introduction of foreign manures, at great cost, grows poorer.
Here in Middlesex County cattle-breeding is receiving every
year more and more attention, so that our soil, sterile as it is,
compared with other portions of the country, is in no danger of
exhaustion. Our herds, like our farms, are small, but by care-
ful attention to breeding and by means of blood stock, our
farmers can show cattle equal to the best. The great object
with us is to convert grass into milk, and the cow that does this
most effectually is the cow for the Middlesex farmer.
It is computed that in this State fifty-two per cent, of the
milk is consumed as food, while forty per cent, is manufactured
into butter, and eight into cheese. In lliis county, doubtless,
a larger per cent, of milk is consumed as food. After making
all due allowances, milk as an article of consumption for food is
of much more importance than its manufacture into cheese.
Milk used as food must be produced near its place of consump-
96 MASSACHUSETTS AGRICULTURE.
tion. Few, even of those engaged in raising or feeding live
stock, are aware of tlie enormous value of this source of the
farmers' wealth and the proportion it bears to the other products
of the soil.
Suppose that by judicious selections, an infusion of better
breeds and a more accurate knowledge of the principles and
practice of breeding and feeding stock, we could add twenty
per cent, to the profit of our animals in early maturity and in
an increased product of milk, butter, or beef, we should have
an annual additional value equal to that derived from an
increased capital of six hundred millions. We, in New Eng-
land, cannot raise such splendid herds as graze the blue-grass
regions of the West. Our object is rather the production of
milk ; the feeding of cattle for the pail, rather than the shambles,
although beef here as elsewhere, is the ultimate end of cattle.
It is now many years since our agriculturists have turned
their attention to the improvement of the native cattle by cross-
ing them with blood stock, and already the most happy results
have been attained. This is evident from the better quality
and earlier maturity of the stock sent to our great Eastern
markets, from the cattle-raising districts of the West, to say
nothing of the evidences of improvement nearer home.
Our so-called natives spring from a mass of mongrel olood
and ill-assorted races. With such an origin, of course they can
possess no fixed hereditary traits, and no reliance can be placed
upon them as breeders. Hence, the general introduction of
blood stock among us constitutes a most important era in our
agricultural history. We have every variety of climate, soil,
and vegetable product, within the compass of our vast territory,
which extends through twenty-five degrees of latitude and fifty-
six of longitude, including nearly the whole temperate zone.
Hence, every variety of cattle can be naturalized and made to
flourish here.
In New England, the Ayrshire and its grades seem best
adapted to the soil and the wants of the people, which demand
a liberal supply of [milk as an article of consumption for food.
We have "crossed the Ayrshires with our native stock, with the
happiest results, so far as our dairies are concerned. The small,
fawn-like Jersey cow, of the Channel Islands, has been natural-
ized here, and her milk, so rich in butyraceous particles, imparts
MILCH COWS. 97
its golden hue to our butter. It is well understood that one or
more of these Jersey cows should be present in every herd, at
least where butter is one of the principal objects in view. In
fact no breed seems to have sprung into greater favor within
the last few years. Large herds of this breed of cattle arc still
rare.
Probably that exhibited by Mr. Hurd, of Concord, will vie in
point of numbers and excellence with any other in the country.
And in this connection the committee cannot but express a
regret that the fine herd of Jerseys, belonging to Mr. Reed, of
Tewksbury, were not on exhibition. .The committee also regret
that they did not have the pleasure of seeing the fine herd of
Ayrshires, belonging to George W. Lyman, Esq., of Waltham,
as these two herds would have added greatly to the interest of
the show.
In this county,' the Ayrshire cow for milk, and the Jersey for
butter, are exactly adapted to our scant pastures and climate.
The Middlesex farmer, your committee are proud to say, houses
his cattle, as a general rule, in the most sumptuous manner.
Our barns are generally all that they should be, furnishing
warm and comfortable shelter to the live stock in w^inter.
In a r.eport on the subject of milch cows, (foreign breed,)
wiiich the chairman of your committee had the honor to sub-
mit to the Middlesex North Agricultural Society last year, he
said : " The barns of New England form a most important fea-
ture in their agriculture. Thousands are annually built on the
most approved plan, for the storing of hay and other crops, and
for the shelter of cattle and the saving of manure. In this
Commonwealth alone, in 1860, there were 84,327 barns, an
increase of more than ten thousand during the ten preceding
years." Our farmers now generally treat their cattle in the
matter of feed, shelter, &c., as they should be treated.
They cannot own vast herds, like the stock-growers of the
West ; their farms arc too small ; but their stock, though few in
numbers, can be brought by careful breeding, to a high degree
of perfection. As has been said, the production of milk is the
great object with us, although, of course, it is desirable that our
cows when given up as milkers should take on flesh readily.
Mr. Flint, in his able and exhaustive work on the Milch Cow,
has gathered and digested all the information extant in relation
13
98 MASSACHUSETTS AGRICULTURE.
to the dairy and dairy animals. This work has been most
widely diffused, with the happiest results. It is a manual which
should be in every farmer's possession.
Peter LAWSON,/or Committee.
Statement of C. W. Smith.
I offer for the society's premium my herd of cattle, consisting
of a bull, seven cows, and a heifer. The bull is Ayrshire. The
cows and heifer are grades, with the exception of two natives.
The grades are crossed with Devon, Durham, Ayrshire, and Dutch
blood. Two of them I raised myself, one was raised in Lexing-
ton, by Andrew Wellington, one in Concord from G. M. Bar-
rett's stock, and the rest were raised in New Hampshire. Two
of the herd are eight years old, two of them are six years old,
two four years old, and one three. Their feed in winter has
been swale hay and corn fodder, with about a peck of turnips,
and from one to two quarts of cob meal per day. In summer
they have common pasturing ; when the feed is very short, I
give them one feed of green corn fodder or millet per day, but
no grain of any kind. The quantity of milk given by each cow,
soon after calving, is as follows : No. 1, 23 quarts per day ; No.
2, 19 quarts ; No. 3, 18 quarts ; No. 4, 18 quarts ; No. 5, 15
quarts ; No. 6, 14 quarts ; No. 7, (the heifer,) 12 quarts.
The quality of their milk is above the average. "We churned
three meals of their milk this week, and made at the rate of 45
pounds of very extra butter in seven days.
Three of them have been in milk eight months ; two of them
five months ; the others came in the present month.
The profits of my dairy I cannot state very accurately. I
have sold my milk for 30 cents per can of 8^ quarts.
I claim that my cows are superior for quantity and quality of
milk.
Waltham, September 28. 18G4.
Statc7nent of John C. Dillon.
I offer for your award my herd of cattle, consisting of eight
milch cows and heifers, one yearling heifer, and three heifer
calves, viz. :
MILCH COWS.
99
TABULAR STATEMExN'T.
Where
«1^
Us
55
Date
Date
Kame.
Breed.
Age.
1- :^
r,-'
Kaised.
2?.
of Trial.
of Cnlvlng.
1. Duchess of Orleans,
Waltham,
i Ayrshire, 7 years,
201
15
June 10,
May 10.
2. Susie, .
Waltham,
I Ayrshire, 5 years,
17:
14
May 15,
April 15.
3. Minnehaha, .
Wavland,
1 Ayrshire, 0 years.
18
14
May 23,
April 23.
4. Clierry, .
Wayland,
1 Ayrshire, 6 years.
17^
13
June 6,
May 6.
5. Jofey, .
Weston,
Mi.ted, !.5 years.
16
14
June 8,
May 8.
6. Beauty, .
Weston,
i Ayrshire, 4 years,
17.
m
Sept. 1, '63,
Aug. 14, '63.
7. Jenny, .
Weston,
1 Ayrshire, .3 years,
H;
10
June 10,
Feb. 5.
8. Mary, .
Concord,
1 Ayrshire , 3 years,
14
9
July 1,
June 14.
9. *Belle, . .
Weston,
1 Ayrshire, 15 mos. 20 dys.
1 Ayrshire, 5 mos. 5 dys.
1 Ayrshire, 4 mos. 10 dys.
-
-
10. tRose, .
Weston,
-
-
-
-
11 JLady Constance, .
Weston,
-
-
-
12. § Daisy, .
Weston,
J Ayrshire, 4 mos. 12 dys.
1
"
"
""
* Belle is from Duchess, and was sired by Mr. Giles' premium seTen-eighths Ayrshire bull.
t Rose is from SuRie, and was sired by the premium Ayrshire bull, " Zero."
t Lady Constance is from Duchess, and was also sired by " Zero."
§ Daisy is from Jo.sey, and was sired by Mr. George Dunn's Ayrshire bull.
At and preceding the date of trial, the cows have had only-
fair pasture, and were kept in the barn at night. I must except
Beauty, whose yield last fall is returned ; her feed was good
pasture, with green corn at night, and a quart of Indian meal
each morning.
In reply to the fourth question : my cows' food in winter has
consisted of English hay and corn-stalks while milking, and
meadow and swale hay and barley straw while dry. This sum-
mer they have had only a good and sweet, but rather over-
stocked pasture, with a very little green corn fodder since the
24th of July. Last year each cow had a quart of corn meal
every morning until she began to dry up, wiien by degrees the
meal was discontinued. This season the cows have not had
any grain, and owing to the oppressive drought, much of the
fodder corn, on which I depended to help out their pasture,
dried up, and was of little value ; and some younger corn which
I was beginning to feed, was entirely cut down by a severe frost.
In fact, the cows have, as their appearance will testify, had
rather a hard time of it ; and their produce is only creditable
when considered in reference to their keeping.
As to my management and method of feeding : my attention
is directed in the first place to keeping my stock at all times
comfortable and contented. This, in summer, is usually a
pretty easy task, and has consisted with me in furnishing them
a good, fair pasture and an occasional change of bite, and in
100 MASSACHUSETTS AGRICULTURE.
providing a sufficiency of fodder corn to eke out tlieir pasture
feed during the months of August and September. I bring the
cows up at six, P. M., when they are milked and remain in the
barn all night. I milk again at five, A. M., and then let the
cows out for the day.
There is a cellar under my barn into which the manure is
dropped through scuttles, and from time to time I throw
through these same scuttles, sandy loam, in the proportion of
two loads of sand to one load of manure. On wet days in the
fall, this is thrown over into the front of the cellar and thor-
oughly mixed, and after standing a short time to drain, is drawn
out and spread on my reclaimed meadow. The cellar jfloor is
then covered about three inches deep with well seasoned peat
muck, and receives the manure of the cows during the winter ;
and also dry mud, as nearly as I can estimate, a load of mud to
a load of manure. This last manure, when thrown over and
thoroughly mixed, I spread broadcast and plough in in the spring,
for planting ; and, used in this way, I consider the compost
nearly, if not quite as valuable, load for load, as clear manure.
About the time the fodder corn fails, the pumpkins begin to
come in ; and with these, of which I give each cow about half a
peck a day, and the after-grass on my mowing land, I keep my
cows in good heart and milking condition till I take them into
the barn for the winter. After this, being earlier or later in
different seasons, my practice is to feed with good English hay,
corn-stalks, and the remainder of the pumpkins and a few small
potatoes, till about the middle of January, when I begin to dry
up the cows which are to calve early in the spring.
I have hitherto usually milked my cows till within a month
or six weeks of their time of calving ; but from some experi-
ments I have made, I am inclined to think it will be found more
profitable to allow them a longer rest. At the same time I
think it advisable to milk a heifer nearly up to the time of her
having her second calf; believing that if allowed to go dry a
long time the first season, she might wish a still longer rest
afterwards ; whereas, if milked nearly up to her time of calving
again, she will in subsequent pregnancies give milk a shorter or
longer time, according to her food and treatment.
In the winter I milk at six, A. M. ; then give a foddering of
hay, (the poorest I am feeding ;) at about eight, I feed again,
MILCH COWS. 101
and about nine, turn out to water, leaving them out a longer or
shorter time, according to the state of the weather. I now
clean out the barn and arrange the bedding. If the weather be
cold, they will return as soon as they have drunk, when I give
them another foddering, and while they are eating it I give
them a gentle carding, and then leave them till three o'clock.
I have heard some sneer at and others doubt the economy of
the time spent in carding cattle. I believe it pays pecuniarily,
and if I knew it did not, I should (if I could afford time,) con-
tinue to do it, thinking myself amply rewarded for the trouble
by the improved appearance of my stock, and the loving look I
receive from each cow, as she stretches on tip-toe and curls her
tail on her back at my approach.
At three, I feed again, and at four, if the weather is not very
inclement, again turn out to water and fix up the barn. When
the cows return they find a nice mouthful in their cribs, and at
six, are milked again, and afterwards receive a good supply of
the poorer kind of fodder for their consideration during the
night. If the weather be warm, the cows will frequently
remain out the greater part of the day ; and, sometimes, on
very cold days, I only let them out once, about noon ; in these
cases their times of feeding are ' of course varied to meet the
circurastaijces. Before feeding, I always clean out the cribs,
throwing aside whatever may be left for litter, with which,
either in tlie shape of refuse hay or sawdust, I keep them
always moderately supplied. At intervals of a week or ten
days, I give each cow a half peck to a peck of small potatoes
raw, as an alterative, and every three or four days I give .each
about an ounce of salt.
Abovit a week before I expect each cow to calve, I put her at
night into a good-sized, well-littered pen, but do not otherwise
vary her treatment. Three days after calving I begin to give her
better feed, and, if all be well, in five days I consider my milk
factories in good working order, and supply them with materials
accordingly. Tlio calves, if destined for the butcher, are
allowed to suck the cows tiir tliey are sold ; if to be raised, I
usually let them suck once, and afterwards feed them from the
pail with new milk till they arc two weeks old, when, by
degrees, skimmed milk is substituted for the new, and at about
six weeks their allowance of milk is gradually lessened to about
102 MASSACHUSETTS AGRICULTURE.,
two quarts per day, which is continued to them till nearly the
time for taking them into the barn. This is my usual system,
and the one I prefer ; but this fall my milkman has been so
pressing for all the milk I could spare, that I have rather
stinted my calves, which have had nothing but pasture since
the twenty-fourth of July.
I cannot state the precise quantity of butter made from my
cows in one week, as I have given my milkman the privilege (of
which he has fully availed himself,) of using me as a reserve,
and taking from one to ten cans a day, at a day's notice.
The superior qualities I claim for my herd, are, a more than
average yield of milk and butter, good, healthy constitutions,
and kind and docile tempers ; and lastly, that they are well
calculated, with judicious care in the selection of a bull, to pro-
duce dairy stock, " native and to the manor born," and
" adapted to the peculiaries of soil, climate and physical con-
formations of Middlesex County." The sentences marked as
quotations were appropriated as being peculiarly expressive,
from Mr. Lawson's report in 1862, and from this and other
writings of that gentleman ; and also from remarks of Messrs.
Flint, Goodale and others.
I have been led to think it may not only be interesting but
profitable, to endeavor by judicious management aud without
any unprofitable outlay, to assist in producing a Middlesex
breed of cows equal to the world-renowned Ayrshire, Hereford,
Durham and the Channel Islands. My theory, at starting, is a
very old one, and is, simply, that a good milker, descended from
a good milker, and sired by a pure-bred bull of a good milking
stock, will, if put to a pure-bred bull of the same or another
good milking race, produce calves of which the heifers will in
all probability inherit the excellencies of their mother ; and
that the longer any good qualities can be shown to have existed
in both lines of ancestry without deviations, the more cer-
tainty may we expect such qualities to be transmitted to each
successive generation.
Minor matters, such as color, size, form, horns, &c., are mere
matters of fancy, and each will endeavor to please his own taste ;
still, by degrees, opinions will become more unanimous, as the
best cattle will, even in these matters, eventually set the fashion.
I need scarcely add that my own judgment, — confirmed by the
MILCH COWS. . 103
authorities I have quoted, — leads me to prefer the Ayrshire
bull, as the most eligible cross for the production of dairy cattle
suited to this section.
I have sold from my cows since the fair last year, seven hun-
dred and seventy-six pounds of butter, for two hundred and
forty dollars and fifty-six cents ; eight hundred and thirty-five
cans of milk, containing eighteen hundred gallons and one-half,
for two hundred and forty-one dollars and fifty-three cents ;
and four calves for twenty-seven dollars. I think I am quite
within the mark in estimating the butter and milk used in my
family at seventy dollars more, and I value the three calves I
am raising at fifteen dollars each. The above Items, amounting
together to six hundred and twenty-four dollars and nine cents,
are all the precisely appreciable produce of my stock. Besides
this must be considered the value of the skim-milk and butter-
milk for the hogs, the manure for the land, and last, but not
least, the pleasure I derive from witnessing the prosperity and
comfort of my stock, and the gratitude and affection they evince
in return for the attention I bestow on them. The greater part
of the work about my cows in summer, and the whole in winter,
— during four months of which I keep no help, — is performed
by myself.
Year by year, for the last five years, I have increased the
number of my stock, in spite of my neighbors' indignant admo-
nitions that I never should be able to keep them ; still, my
cattle looked a little better than the average. I have always
had hay to sell in the spring, and each year have had in tillage
more land and sold more marketing than the preceding one.
At last my secret was found out : " he half keeps them on
grain." It was in vain for me to protest that I never gave a
cow more than a quart of grain a day, or that I always sold more
hay than would pay for their grain. I was condemned. I
therefore determined, no less for my own satisfaction than for
that of my neighbors, to try whether I really was dependent on
my miller or not. In one sense, the experiment will be a most
satisfactory one, as I certainly cannot be taunted with pecu-
liarly good fortune in choice of a season, and my cows still
live. At the same time, I do not feel inclined to continue my
present treatment, believing, — with the approval of good author-
ities,— that two cans of milk per day from one cow, are far
lOi MASSACHUSETTS AGRICULTURE.
more profitable than the same quantity from two ; and that ive
cannot expect a cow to return us any more 7nilk or butter than
we furnish her materials for.
Weston, September 19, 1804.
Statement of Joseph L. Hard.
My cows in the winter were fed with fair English hay and
cut feed, giving each cow two quarts of corn meal per day.
The bulls received not over a quart per day. In summer the
milch cows and bull " Don " have been fed principally on
green fodder, southern corn and oats having been sown for that
purpose.
They have been allowed to run two hours in tlie pasture in
the morning, and one hour in the evening. My feed, owing to
the drouth, having given out, they have, at times, been kept out
all day. The pastures suffering from the same cause, the cows
have received four quarts of cob and corn meal per day.
All my Jersey cattle are stabled every night, excepting
" Prince Albert " and " Abraham," who are kept out all
summer, excepting when brought in for a short time for some
special reason.
For quantity of milk, I have only tried "Victoria," "Nellie"
and " Beauty," who, in full flow, average about eighteen quarts
per day, the first giving eighteen and a half, and the others
seventeen and three-quarters each.
Quantity of butter I cannot state, but I claim that the cows
exhibited by me give a very large quantity of exceedingly rich
milk.
The only known profit that I have yet derived from my herd
is the pleasure that I have experienced in seeing them and
exhibiting them to others. I expect, however, by next season
to realise a profit from the sales of the stock, — offers that I have
had for many of my animals justifying that expectation.
Concord, September 22, 1864.
Statement of George 31. Barrett.,
The herd of cattle that I offer for examination and premium,
were all raised in Concord but one ; she, by Lyman, of Waltham.
The herd consists of seven cows and a bull.
MILCH COWS. 105
No. 1. — Breed, Ayrshire ; 7 years old, calved Oct. 1, 1863.
No. 2. — Breed, Ayrshire ; 7 years old, calved Oct. 5, 18(33.
No. 3. — Breed, Ayrshire ; 4 years old, calved April 5, 1864.
No. 4. — Breed, Ayrshire ; 8 years old, calved Nov. 10, 1863.
No. 5. — Breed, |f Ayrshire, ^L native ; 6 years old, calved
March 10, 1864.
No. 6. — Breed, ||- Ayrshire, J^ native ; 4 years old, calved
April 8, 1864.
No. 7. — Breed, native ; 6 years old, calved Oct. 8, 1863.
No. 8. — Bull, breed, Ayrshire ; 4 years old, weight, 1,180
pounds.
The four cows that are forward with calf, were wintered
partly on meadow and partly English hay, with two quarts of
shorts and one quart of peanut meal per day, and have run
at pasture this summer. The other three were wintered on
meadow hay, and have run at pasture this summer, with very
short, dry feed. The bull has been kept most of the time on
meadow hay, with a little meal about two months of the time,
and has been worked.
No. 1, gave last October, 20^ quarts per day ; 18 per cent,
cream.
No. 2, gave last October, 18 quarts per day; 13 per cent,
cream.
No. 3, gave last June, 19 quarts per day; 12 per cent,
cream.
No. 4, gave last November, 17|^ quarts per day ; 12 per cent,
cream.
No. 5, gave last June, 18 quarts per day ; 11 per cent,
cream.
No. 6, gave last June, 18 quarts per day; 11 per cent,
cream.
No. 7, gave last October, 19 quarts per day ; her milk was
good ; the precise percentage of cream I do not know.
I claim superiority for the quantity and quality of their milk.
They were all raised by me, except No. 4 and No. 7 ; No. 4
was raised by Lyman, of Waltham, and No. 7, by Tuttle, of
Concord. Nos. 1, 2, 4, and 7, were milked until July, and
u
106 MASSACHUSETTS AGRICULTURE.
gave from eight to ten quarts, each, per day, in June. The
other three are giving, two of them 10|, the other, 12 quarts
per day, now.
Concord, September 22, 1864.
PLYMOUTH.
From the Report of the Committee.
The herd of Nahum Stetson, Esq., of Bridgewater, seven in
number, (including those for exhibition,) were mainly blood-
stock, and show conclusively that he has spared no pains for
a series of years in perfecting his stock for the dairy.
The herd of grade Jerseys of the Messrs. Pratt, of Middle-
borough, were very fine cows. Three of this herd are from a very
superior native cow, purchased at the auction sale of the Hon.
Daniel Webster, crossed with the full-blood Jerseys. The
other cow was three-fourths Jersey, from Mr. Hobart's imported
stock. The milk from all these cows is very rich.
The first premium for the best cow was awarded to Charles
N. Martin, of West Bridgewater, grade Jersey, six years old,
a most perfect model of a cow ; calved June 7th. From the 5th
to 15th of September she gave 224 lbs. of milk, which produced
16^ lbs. of butter. She was fed on grass, and one quart of meal
per day.
We noticed two of the Kerry breed for exhibition by the
Hon. Charles G. Davis. This breed of cattle are from Killarney
District, south of Ireland. When a year old, they are turned
out in large numbers on a common, a mountainous, barren
region, comparatively, where they graze throughout the year;
they remain there until nearly full grown, when they are
collected and disposed of to drovers, are then driven north,
and sold ; are a very hardy race, generally dark color, or black,
and reputed to be great milkers.
Seth Bryant, Esq., of East Bridgewater, presented a full-
blooded Jersey for exhibition, sixteen years old, which he
imported, and we have no doubt the cow has paid a greater
income than any one in the county. The owner informed us
that she had kept in better condition, and has done better the
past season than she ever has.
MILCH COWS. 107
Two-thirds of the dairy stock present were full-blood or grade
Jerseys, showing that the public are being divested of whatever
prejudices there may have been against that breed of cattle, at
least, so far as to give them a trial, and we have yet to learn a
single instance where there has been a trial of them for dairy
purposes that has not been satisfactory.
We are informed by Harrison Staples, Esq., of Lakeville,
who received premiums on two full-blood Jersey cows, that,
previous to purchasing them, he had three cows which were
considered very good ; after he purchased the Jerseys they were
all five milked together, and there was a decided improvement'
in the butter made.
A large part of the milk in the county is used for making
butter ; hence the importance of introducing rich milkers.
No FARMER OUGHT TO REST SATISFIED WITH A COMMON AVERAGE
COW, BUT STRIVE FOR THE VERY BEST, having in vicw the purpose
for which the milk is to be used.
In purchasing, how often a few dollars extra would secure
a valuable cow, which, if we obtained only a few additional
quarts of milk daily, it would be net income over and above
the annual expense of keeping ; or, instead of the penny wise,
we should adopt the pound foolish operation, by paying a few
dollars less, we obtain one which just pays for keeping.
And we very much doubt if a majority of the cows in our
county ever have paid their keeping. True, there may be good
cows, which, owing to the scanty fare they have had, have not
developed their milking qualities so as to show what they really
are.
In connection with the statements in regard to those cows
which yield large quantities of milk, rich for the dairy, we have
heard the question raised. How would they do in our compara-
tively barren pastures ? By such questions we are reminded of
what is said of the prospects of the hay crop, almost every
season : " It will be very heavy on lands in good condition, but
old meadows will be light." It would be a miracle if otherwise.
So in reference to a cow if turned to a pasture where she would
have to feed from morning until night, and a scanty allowance
at that, if she should yield anything like a remunerative supply,
of milk.
108 MASSACHUSETTS AGRICULTURE.
Whatever breed of cows we have, if they are great milkers,
and kept in good condition, they must have an abundance of
succulent food and roots — the higher the keeping the richer the
milk, and better the health of the cow.
Ephraim B. Thompson, Chairman.
NANTUCKET.
From the Report of the Committee.
In the stock presented there were peculiarities which incline
your committee to make some general observations. With
three exceptions there was not a blood animal exhibited.
Neither were there any cases of pure-bred cows. The cows
were what are called natives. Of late years there has been
improvement by crossing with Ayrshires, but we saw none that
were above half-blood. To the mind of a person understanding
the benefits of either pure breeds or a mixture of half-and-half
of two pure breeds, as half Shorthorn and half Ayrshire, or
half Alderney and half Shorthorn, these cows brought regret.
As natives, they were very good. Some of them would produce
as much milk, with the same feeding, as blood cows. But when
you come to their progeny, how little you can rely upon it.
The calf may take after a grandsire of the scrub race, or a
kicking or otherwise worthless grandmother. This is why we
hear continually from farmers the story of such and such a
heifer being far less promising than the mother, and of the dis-
appointment this result has occasioned. The progeny of native
cows cannot be relied on. There is no certainty that they
will follow in good points the dam. And here is just the
precise difference between blood stock and that which has no
pedigree.
Now what should a farmer do in relation to procuring profit-
able stock. In the first place we must remember that his milch
cows are only so many machines to turn his grass into gold.
Therefore there are certain things beyond the mere milking
capacity which are important. When a cow has become too old
to be profitable as a milker, it is then important to profitably
prepare her for the butcher. There arc milch cows in Massa-
chusetts which sell readily for slaughter, after they have ceased
MILCH COWS. 109
to be profitable for the dairy, for more than a hundred dollars
each. If these cows would fatten for thirty or forty dollars, —
which they would, — then the breeders get sixty or seventy
dollars clear on a cow, while the raisers of poor mongrel stock
get nothing.
So that the thriving farmer will look to milk first, and then
to the capacity to take on flesh. A prudent merchant would
pay but little for a ship that he could not at some future time
repair and make valuable for some other business. So he who
purchases a house looks to see if it can be repaired without
costing more than it is worth.
By what we have said, it will readily be perceived that your
committee are in favor of blood stock for profit.
The next question that arises is, " Among the various blood
stock, which is best ? " We answer this by saying that each
one exceeds the other under certain circumstances. The
question then with us is. Which is best for poor, or at least,
very ordinary pastures ? that is, in a few words, which is best
for Nantucket ?
With good feed, a very ordinary cow may be made a respect-
able milker. With poor feed, the best cow will utterly fail.
The farmer then should first look at his own means of feeding.
The Shorthorn cow is heavy ; it is troublesome to her to travel ;
she requires thick grass ; in fact, she wants to be " up to her
knees in clover," and then she will pay most richly, both as a
milker and for the butcher. But it would be the height of folly
for a farmer, who has only poor pastures, to buy Shorthorns.
The Ayrshires are lighter on tjie foot, more nimble, capable
of enduring severer winters, and of recuperating readily in the
spring. As milkers they produce a larger quantity of milk and
butter, in proportion to the food they cat, than any other of the
pure breeds. Like all other cows, natives as well as pure
breeds, they will make poor things on starvation. These, how-
ever, will be very good cows, and perhaps the very best, for the
thin and meagre pasturage of Nantucket.
The Jerseys have their peculiarities. For richness of milk,
and the butter made from it, no pure breed can excel them.
Some say that they require more tender care than the Ayrshires,
but, to breed in with natives that are good milkers, a very
superior cow would probabft/ be produced. We say "probably,"
110 MASSACHUSETTS AGRICULTURE.
because no mongrel cow will certainly produce a good milker,
however excellent the mother may be. Yet, to cross good-
natives with any of the pure breeds, the chance of getting a
good milker is increased more than fourfold. For poor pas-
tures and hard winters, they are not equal, as is said by some
breeders, to the Ayrshires. Other as reputable breeders, say
that no cow exceeds the Jerseys in hardiness. A farmer, with
a herd of Ayrshires, or Ayrshire grades, could not do better
than to have a Jersey or two to color and flavor his milk and
butter. For a private gentleman, the Jersey is far superior
to any other cow.
The Devon is not usually a good milker. The Devon, crossed
with our native cow, would be good for a mere stock raiser.
For working oxen and the shambles, they are very valuable.
Their beef is excellent. No beef is sweeter, and none so well
" mixed."
But the best milkers, in proportion to their size and food, are
grade Ayrshires. A cross obtained from an Ayrshire bull, and
a puj:e-bred Shorthorn produces a stock that for beauty, for the
milk-pail, and, at last, -to take on fat readily, would be hard to
beat. It is a most excellent and profitable stock for Nantucket,
if a farmer has good pasture lots for fall feed, and raises roots
enough to mess them through the winter. A cow of this kind,
owned by Isaac Macy, Esq., is the most beautiful animal in
appearance, and the best milker of her age in the county.
There are about fifteen thousand acres of poor pasture land
in Nantucket, fenced and unfenced, exclusive of mowing lots.
The climate is usually mild. From present indications farming
has got to take the place of whaling in a very great degree.
Ploughing the land, instead of ploughing the sea has yet to be
very much the means of support. It becomes all, then, to look
thus early to the improvement of their stock, so that Nantucket
may soon be as famous for its excellent cattle and good blood, as
the islands on the British coast, or the valleys of England or
Scotland.
We have said that care does much to make the cow. Milk is
not, as the Scotch have it, all "made through the mouth;"
good feeding is not all. To have your cows, whether natives or
bloods, do tlieir best, there arc certain other requisites.
1st. They should have a warm barn.
MILCH COWS. Ill
2d. That barn should be cleaned often.
3d. The cows should be fed regularly ; that is, at regular
hours.
4th. They should be milked and managed with all gentleness.
5th. They should never be forced to remain out in the cold,
or starve.
6th. They should be "curried" every morning.
7th. They shoiild be milked dry every time, and by a milker
that milks quickly but tenderly.
We will say a few words now in regard to selecting cows.
They are meant to apply to native cows, as blood cows, or pure
crosses, need no great selection. We only mean to allude to
those marks easily found and readily seen ; marks which any
careless farmer may observe.
First, for Nantucket, the cow should not be over large. Her
hinder quarters should be larger than her fore. She should
have a large, soft bag. Her milk veins which come out of the
bag, and lead along and go up into her belly about half way
between her fore legs and hind ones, should be large, and the
more zig-zag and knotted, the better. The whole cow should
be in the shape of a wedge, her head and shoulders being thin,
and the thickest part across the hips, looking over the back. It
would be a good sign to have her wedge-shaped the other way,
too ; her head being the point, and the very thickest part from
the hip bones down to the bottom of the bag, or udder. Let
her have a small head, a slim tail, a bright eye, and mild coun-
tenance. As to the milk mirror of Gudnon, there is no doubt ;
and to a person of sharp perception, and one who has looked at
it and studied it carefully, it is a great guide. All good milkers
have it large, and some poor milkers. These, however, may
have been made poor milkers, by neglect in some way, or by
disease.
James Thompson, Esq., the president of the society, has pur-
chased a small lot of Jersey cows, and a thoroughbred Jersey
bull. Here is, perhaps, the only chance for pure-breeds, and as
pure-breeds are so much more reliable for profit than natives,
we hope every farmer will get as much of this stock as possible.
These animals of the president's are from the very best Jersey
stock, and as it will be impossible from so small a lot to get
pure-bloods very fast, it is to be hoped every farmer will hurry
112 MASSACHUSETTS AGRICULTURE.
to get half-breeds, and commence " breeding in," as soon as
possible. You can now have your choice between an Ayrshire
and a Jersey bull, and if you have but a single cow, and she a
native and a good milker, the quicker you raise a half Jersey
or half Ayrshire calf, the sooner you will have a cow that not
only will give more milk than the mother, but better milk also.
There were a number of Galloway cows, or Buffalo cows, as
they are called, and one took the premium as a milker. These
cows have been generally good, but as they are of no particular
breed, there is no use in any farmer breaking his neck to get
the calf of one, however good she may be, for like all other
mixed and bloodless stock, there is no certainty that the calf
will in any way resemble its mother, except in lack of horns.
We will close this somewhat extended report with a quotation
from the report of the North Worcester committee of 1863:
" It is true that thoroughbred animals are yet so scarce that all
cannot avail themselves of the thoroughbred cows, but all or
nearly all can use pure-bred bulls, and no man can afford to
patronize a native, so-called, when he intends to rear his calves,
and where the services of a pure-bred can be had for a reason-
able advance from natives or grades. It will pay the farmer
when he intends his calves for veal, as the increased weight with
the form will generally insure a sufficient remuneration for the
extra outlay. Before closing, lest any undervalue a pedigree,
allow us to state that the value of a pedigree consists in its
guarantee that the animal is of the race or breed claimed, and
has in itself the power of transmitting the qualities for which it
is itself noted, and that the longer the pedigree, the quality
being the same, the more sure your animal is to transmit its
qualities. As the object of all agricultural societies is to
improve our agricultural interest, it becomes a question of
importance whether we should offer j^remiums for grade or
mongrel bulls at all, for, by so doing, we are encouraging the
rearing of inferior animals."
Edward M. Gardner, Chairman.
HORSES. 113
. HORSES.
W0RCE6TER WEST.
From the Report of the Committee.
In addition to the award of premiums I propose to give to
the society my ideas of the breeds and classes of horses most
deserving attention and encouragement in Massachusetts, and
what is the best mode of rearing them. In doing -this I do not
expect to meet the views of the members of this society or of
other societies that are engaged in raising to any great extent,
as all have their favorite breeds ; neither do I expect to give
you a particular description or history of all.the valuable breeds
of horses in New England, — there is no animal on which there
is more difference of opinion than on the horse. The Morgan
horse has been reared with success in Vermont, and to some
extent in Massachusetts, and is a hardy animal. His constitution
is well adapted to our climate.
The Morgan combines all that seems necessary to make a good
horse, being of medium size and powerful action, — a good
feeder, — possessing docility of disposition, and maturing at an
early age. I frequently hear an objection made against the
Morgans that they lack in size ; that objection is easily obviated
by crossing ; but when you have done that you do not have the
Morgan horse. Then comes the question : do we get, by cross-
ing, as good a horse as we do in the full-blood Morgan ? "JIVhat
we gain in size do we not lose in symmetry, compactness, ease
of motion, and vigor ? I think not, if crossed with the right
breeds, although I think a larger horse than the medium size
of the race of the animal is attended with a loss of power and
action, and should not be permitted, except for special purposes,
and with pure or full bloods.
The Messenger horses have been reared quite extensively in
Maine, and with great profit to many of the down-east farmers.
The Messenger horse is much larger in size, — more rangy, but
does not mature as young as the Morgan ; but when matured
they are capable of great endurance, and are usually of good
disposition. I have known many Morgans and Messengers that
were fast trotters.
15
114 MASSACHUSETTS AGRICULTURE.
I am informed that the famous trotting stallion " General
Knox," which created quite a sensation at the New England
Fair, held in Springfield the present month, was a cross of"
Messenger and Morgan, and I have no hesitancy in saying that
I think him to be the finest trotting stallion I ever saw.
. The Black Hawks are not second to any breed of horse reared
in this country ; they make fine carriage and saddle horses, and
for style and action are not surpassed. They are fine-limbed
and active, good roadsters and fine drivers, but not well adapted
for the farm, or draught. The Black Hawks are a branch, or
originated from the family of the Morgan horses, and they
partake largely of the vigor and action of the Morgans.
The Hamiltonians have been raised with much success in
Northern New Yo^-k, and have gained a good reputation, — I
might say, become celebrated. It is enough to recommend them,
that they are of the Messenger family, but they are not so much
sought for in Massachusetts as either of the above-named breeds
I have mentioned.
The classes of horses to be considered, are, first, the stock
horse ; second, the brood mare. First, the stock horse — like
begets like, and a good stock horse is indispensable in propagat-
ing good stock, and without him our efforts to raise good horses
could not be crowned with miich success. Second, a brood
mare is very important, and good mares should be used in
breeding. It is too much the practice of farmers to put mares
to breeding after they become broken down and are unfit to be
used for general work. That is a great mistake, and should be
corrected ; to raise a good colt the sire and dam should be of
good symmetry, and the practice of using a sire much larger
than the dam, so far as I have noticed, has not been attended
with good results. They should be of nearly equal size, the sire
a little the largest. By taking pains in propagating with the
sire and dam, colts will be raised that will be of a profit to the
farmer and a pleasure to look upon as they are growing to
maturity.
The family horse is almost one of the indispensables ; but very,
few would be willing to be deprived of the services of this
noble animal. A horse of this class should be trained to the
saddle as well as the carriage, as he is hardly a family horse
unless he can be used under the saddle. He should also be of
HORSES. 115
docile disposition, and great care should be observed in select-
ing a horse for this use, as he should be a good roadster, with
fair speed, life, ambition, and be a good feeder, with a good dis-
position, well broken ; all combined makes a good horse, and is
most desirable and profitable.
There are many other families of horses that I might speak
of, such as the Indian Chiefs, Drews, Fox Horses, English
Hunters, <fec. Of classes there is the trotter and the racer,
which have their friends and their enemies. They have more
enemies in words than in acts, and when a race is to come off,
all are there ; those who denounced it are there ; all classes of
citizens are there ; men of all professions are represented, and
are interested, — all enjoy it.
To have a good horse, get good stock to commence with, that
will produce a good colt. Keep well, train when young, do not
work him hard while young, and you will have a good horse.
Henry Smith, Chairman.
NANTUCKET.
The stock of young horses, on the whole, looked very well,
but we would urge upon the people of Nantucket to give more
attention than they have heretofore done to the raising of this
noble animal. The great demand for horses at the present
time, caused by the destructive tendencies of the lamentable
civil war in which our country is now engaged, should be aa
inducement to all to do their part towards making the supply
in some degree commensurate with the demand. But we want
horses of the right stamp ; not the ill-framed, diseased, puny,
lifeless animals which are so often seen, but horses of good blood,
with strong, vigorous frames, betokening that man appreciates
that they are designed to be used, and not abused, by himself.
A good sound horse must, like a good sound man, have good
parents capable of giving birth to a healthy offspring. The time
has gone by when horse breeders can hope for success, when
they take for a breeding mare one that has already been worn
down by hard and laborious service. Only those animals
should be allowed to procreate which ,are of good form, in
perfect health, of easy movement, and free from vicious habits.
Too much attention cannot be given to this matter, and we
116 MASSACHUSETTS AGRICULTURE.
enjoin upon our farmers to give heed to the teachings of all
physical laws with reference to this point.
Then, too, the training is of the utmost importance. Prob-
ably no people in the world are more particular in their care
of this noble servant of man than the Arabs. As soon as the
colt is born they bestow upon it the utmost care. It is fed with
regularity, and has its honie in the family tent. Subjected
to the kindest treatment, it learns nothing but docility, and
obedience to its master's commands becomes a part of its
nature. No regular system of breaking is necessary, for it is
always ready at call to do whatever may be required. Our
mode of life renders the system of course somewhat different,
but we may well pattern after those wild men of the desert
in watchful solicitude for the young animal. The treatment
should invariably be kind and gentle, and the course of train-
ing should be based upon the presumption that the colt is
docile and willing to do. As in training a young child, impa-
tience should be banished from the mind of the teacher. If the
young horse is shy, a little kindly soothing will prove far more
effectual than the lash ; and by a resolute but mild treatment,
his disposition may be moulded as the master may desire.
The horse is an animal quick to learn, and he will readily
perceive if he is driven by one who does not feel within himself
a controlling power. Hence we should never allow a young
horse to be driven by a person of a timid or vacillating dispo-
sition. The germ of future trouble would, in that case, be
surely sown.
In conclusion, we would suggest that the society should pro-
cure some horse for the use of the people of the town by which
our stock may be improved. The market must, for a long
series of years, be far better than it has ever been before, and
if we would compete with -people abroad, it behooves us to see
that we begin aright. The best blood will produce the best
animal, and the expense of raising, does not vary materially,
whether a good or a poor horse is to be the result. Prom
pecuniary consideration, if from no other, we trust that this
suggestion will be carefully weighed.
Augustus Franklin, for the Committee,
SHEEP HUSBANDRY. 117
SHEEP HUSBANDRY.
MIDDLESEX SOUTH.
From an Address hy George S. Boutwell.
I have selected this topic for this occasion because I am
quite sure that Massachusetts, and possibly our county and
neighborhood, may engage, profitably in sheep husbandry.
There are two classes of subjects on which a man may write
with profit, — those that he understands thoroughly, and those
that he is ignorant of entirely. If his subject is of the first
class, he will interest his hearers and readers. If it is of
the second he is sure, in the preparation of his papers, to
educate and improve himself. If, however, a man undertakes
to write upon a subject with which he is well acquainted, but
yet has never carefully studied, his conclusions and opinions
answer to the average conclusions and opinions of those who
listen, and hence but little advantage is obtained by anybody.
My present claim to consideration is due to the fact that I enter
upon the discussion of a subject, of which I had as little knowl-
edge as can be assumed of any one ; and if, therefore, you fail
to obtain instruction I ask you to believe, whether the address
gives evidence one way or the other, that I know more of sheep
husbandry than when I entered upon the present investigation.
I have read several elaborate essays from the antiquated article
on sheep in Rees' Cyclopaedia, to a comparatively recent paper
prepared by Prof. Wilson, of Edinborough, and published in the
Transactions of the New York Agricultural Society for 1858.
These discussions are too minute for repetition here. They are
largely devoted to different breeds of sheep, many of which
have never been introduced into this country, and many also
that are not esteemed anywhere. It is a noticeable fact that
the article in Rees' Cyclopaedia contains nearly everything that
is found in the papers of modern writers. The value. of the
Southdown sheep seems to have been as well understood at the
commencement of this century as now, though the breed has
been greatly improved within fifty years.
It is to be assumed, I suppose, that every one knows a sheep,
though there are children in the public schools of the State, and
118
MASSACHUSETTS AGRICULTURE.
'-■■ \
03
IS
SHEEP HUSBANDRY. 119
probably in the schools of the county, who have ncrver seen the
animal. The origin of the domestic sheep is not known, though
it is presumed to have been in Asia or Africa, and the wilds
of both countries now abound with animals from which the
domestic sheep may have sprung.
It is generally conceded that civilization has improved tlie
disposition, manners, flesh and fleece of the race. In a wild
state the sheep is usually furnished with horns, is covered with
coarse wool or hair, and the flesh resembles that of the goat.
The size of a domestic sheep varies from less than one hundred
to nearly four hundred pounds, live weight, but neither the
quality of the flesh nor the value of the fleece is proportionate
to the weight of the animal.
As a general fact in Great Britain, the largest sheep are found
in the highly cultivated lowland counties, and the smaller ones
upon the mountains. It is probable, however, that in Great
Britain, at the present time, the favorite breeds are introduced,
and raised with tolerable success, in all sections.
These seem to be the Southdowns, under various local names,
and the Leicesters and Lincolnshires. The Southdowns are dis-
tinguished for the economy with which they may be kept, for
their fattening properties, for the quality of wool, and for their
peaceful character. They still command large prices, and within
the last fifty years, single bucks have been let by the year in
Great Britain for fabulous sums of money ; say from five hun-
dred to six thousand dollars. An offspring of this breed called
the Oxfordshire Downs, has been introduced into this country,
and is a favorite with sheep raisers generally.
In this State they are more known in Essex and Plymouth
Counties than elsewhere. They appear to have attracted notice
in England.about eighty years ago, and were thus described by
a writer of that period. They have no horns, but grey faces
and legs, fine bones, long small necks, rather low before, high
on the shoulders, and light in the fore-quarters, sides good, loins
tolerably broad, backbone rather high, thigh full, twist good,
mutton fine in grain, and well flavored. Wool short, close and
fine, and in the length of staple from two to three inches.
Weight, per quarter, of wethers two years old, eighteen pounds.
This would give a total live weight of one hundred and forty or
one hundred and fifty pounds.
120 MASSACHUSETTS AGRICULTURE.
By careful selections and judicious crossings, the Southdowns
have been much increased in size and improved in quality.
The qualities of good sheep have been thus stated. Head
small, neck thin and short, eyes gentle and bright, breast and
shoulders wide and broad, straight and deep carcase or barrel,
feet and bones small, joints short, muscles plump and full,
skin a dark-red or slate-color, wool of a yellow white, curly, of
moderate length and thickly set, the fat and flesh soft, with
some degree of firmness in handling, the countenance pleasant
and inclined to quietness. Good judges avoid sheep that have
short and thick heads, neck long, thick and concave in the
higher part, carcases long and thin, chests contracted, flesh
thin, feet large, flesh hard in handling, wool coarse and hempy,
and countenance unpleasant.
The Lincolnshire breed are larger than the original South-
downs, the former weighing about twenty-five per cent, more
than the latter. It is quite likely that the original diflerence
does not now exist. The wool of these animals is often from
ten to eighteen inches iii length,, and yields twelve to eighteen
pounds to the fleecel
The Leicester is a variety rather than a breed. The live
weight of a Leicester is from one hundred and fifty to one hun-
dred aild seventy-five pounds for ewes of three years, and
wethers often weigh two hundred pounds at two years of age.
If value is put upon the head and pluck, skin and tallow, as
well as upon the wool and flesh, the loss in weight by killing
and dressing is from ten to seventeen per cent. The Leicester
is a long-woolled sheep, with flesh more finely grained than any
other long-wool variety, and it is supposed to be the product of
a cross between the Lincolnshire and the Ryeland. When the
Spanish Merinos were introduced into England, a resemblance
was observed between them and the native Ryeland, which led
to the conjecture that the latter were really Spanish sheep,
introduced by the Phoenicians many centuries before, when
tliose early navigators had colonies in Spain and Britain.
The breed of sheep now most highly prized in Massachusetts,
is the Oxfordshire Downs. This, it is claimed, is the product
of a cross between the Cotswold and the pure Southdowns.
The breed was introduced into the State by Mr. Fay, of Lynn.
It is however to be said that at the close of the last century the
pure Cotswold was a mythical rather than a known variety of
SHEEP HUSBANDRY. '121
* ■
sheep in Great Britain. In Oxfordshire the name was preserved
and applied to a variety that was in truth a mixture of two or
three kinds. The Cotswolds are represented as among the
larger varieties of the island, often weighing thirty and occa-
sionally forty or fifty pounds to the quarter, yielding a fleece of
from eleven to fourteen pounds weight, and usually producing
two lambs in a season. The wool of tiie Cotswold is long, and
that of the pure Southdown short and fine. By the crossing,
the Oxfordshire Down yields a heavier fleece and produces more
mutton than the pure Southdown.
Before the improvements of the present century the pure
Southdown weighed from one hundred to one hundred and
forty pounds alive, and yielded two and a half pounds of wool
at a shearing, while the Cotswold, as then known, weighed fifty
per cent, more and produced a fleece of nine pounds, while the
average of the Lincolnshire was eleven pounds of longer and
coarser staple.
In 1854, Mr. Fay exhibited two imported bucks at the Essex
fair that weighed over two hundred pounds each.
The Merinos and the Saxonies, the latter descended from the
former, yield only a light clip of wool, a small weight of mutton,
and when brought directly from the continent, they are not
hardy enough for this climate. Although our climate is quite
different from that of Great Britain, it is a singular circum-
stance that domestic animals obtained from England thrive
better in America than those brought from the continent of
Europe.
There can be no doubt of the adaptation of Massachusetts to
sheep husbandry. In some sections the business may not be
profitable, but in others it certainly is. All the hilly and
mountainous districts are adapted to sheep, and thus far they
have thriven upon the barrens of Plymouth and Barnstable.
It may be assumed that highlands are preferable to lowlands,
dry pastures to wet meadows, and short, sweet pastures to the
most luxurious vegetation. The downs of England, where the
variety of sheep above mentioned is found, are dry, sandy dis-
tricts on which sheep only can be supported. From the fact
that the sheep will feed upon four hundred different plants,
we may assume its fitness for any soil, however barren or
unpromising for other purposes.
16
122* MASSACHUSETTS AGRICULTURE.
Expensive estates cannot be devoted to sheep, therefore this
branch of husbandry must be limited to low-priced lands.
The cost of keeping a full-grown sheep, is, as far as I know,
a matter of uncertainty. In 1856, a Mr. Horace Clark, of
Wilbraham, estimated the cost of keeping ten sheep at fifteen
dollars a year. This seems to me altogether too low. If, as
is stated by English raisers, eight sheep are equal to one cow,
the cost cannot be less than three dollars in any section of the
State, and in others it would be five, or even eight at present
prices of hay and grain. I feel quite sure, however, that ten or
twelve sheep may be wintered upon the provender that would
be given to one cow. Mr. Clark's account shows a net annual
profit upon ten sheep of forty-one dollars. If the cost of keep-
ing had been put at three dollars instead of one dollar and fifty
cents, the net profit would have been twenty-five dollars, which
is certainly better than ordinary farming, the gain being at the
rate of fifteen per cent, upon the value of the animals. Mr.
Beebe, of Wilbraham, returns a gross annual profit of more
than six dollars a head for several years. If three dollars be
deducted for keeping, the surplus is ample if the business were
extensive.
Mr. Thomas J. Field, of Northfield, was engaged in sheep
raising. He is very well known as a trustworthy and honorable
man. Mr. Field made the following statement and estimate in
1853 and 1851.
Value of flock March 1, 1853 :
100 ewes, 1400 00
220 ewes, old, 120 00
160 yearlings and two-year-olds, . . 400 00
1 buck, 80 00
•11,000 00
Gained during the year, .... 1,026 55
Sold during the year :
61 sheep, fat,
50 ewes in October,
1,101 pounds wool, .
$2,026 55
$186 00
121
00
605
55
$912 55
SHEEP HUSBANDRY.
\ •
On hand March 1, 1864 :
134 ewes, $536 00
38 fat sheep, 133 00
142 yearlings, . . . . ' . . 356 00
3 bucks, 100 00
82,037 55
Deduct cosset bought, . . . . 10 00
12,027 65
In this account, Mr. Field does not appear to have taken any
notice of the cost of .keeping three hundred sheep a year, and
if we consider this to be three dollars each, the net profit will
be 1126.55, or at two dollars there would remain a profit of
1426.55.
Mr. Soule, a merchant in Boston, but a farmer in Rhode
Island, informs me that it is his practice to keep about thirty
sheep. These he buys at Brighton, in October or November,
crosses with an Oxfordshire Down, clips the wool in the spring,
sells the lambs in early summer, and converts the old sheep
into mutton in early winter, or about a year after his purchase.
This course he finds very profitable. The lambs are early and
sell in Providence at high prices, ranging from four to eight
dollars, while the parent stock cost only a moderate sum each,
the preceding autumn. The clip of w^ool and the mutton
usually yield a sufficient sum to pay the cost of the sheep and
the keeping of the flock, while the price of the lambs is carried
to the credit side of the transaction.
The whole proceeding, it will be observed, combines the busi-
ness of the merchant with that of the farmer. The examination
I have been able to make, leads to the conclusion that sheep
husbandry is as profitable, under favoring circumstances, as
other branches of agriculture.
If the question of profit be settled, there remain but three
difficulties. The introduction of sheep requires enterprise,
knowledge, and good judgment. One thing- is certain, ive can-
not afford to raise poor sheep, and good animals and good
varieties are very expensive. If the business were to be under-
taken, especially at the present high prices, there must be
124 MASSACHUSETTS AGRICULTURE.
considerable outlay in the beginning ; and this outlay might
require the joint efforts of several persons. If farmers raise
stock of any kind, they ought to raise that ivhich is good. In
this particular we are already too negligent and altogether
behind some other sections of the country. To be sure, where
stock ■ raising is the leading business, more attention will be
given to breeds and specimens. In the small town of Middle-
field, containing less than seven hundred inhabitants, the
farmers paid a thousand dollars in a single year for a single
animal, each from the Devon and Shorthorn Durham breeds of
cattle. But, I am sorry to add that that same year, the good
people of that town, raised by taxation only five hundred dollars
for the education of their children, and", under the district
system, divided it among fourteen schools and twenty-eight
teachers.
But they are already taking more interest in schools, and
realizing great profit from the improved cattle. A gentleman
in that town wrote me about three years since that he had just
killed a cow of the Shorthorn Durham breed, that weighed
nine hundred pounds, and had one hundred pounds of tallow.
I am well convinced that farmers of Massachusetts, waste much
time and lose large amounts of money by neglecting to raise
good stock.
I hope, therefore, that sheep husbandry will not be attempted
unless those who engage in it are prepared to introduce valuable
animals, at such cost as may be necessary.
Another difficulty exists in the want of good fences. There
is, however, no serious trouble in protecting the heavy varieties
of sheep, whether Oxfordshire Downs, or Leicesters. A four-
rail fence properly set, or a board fence, or a wall with a pole
for a rider, is quite sufficient.
Dogs are the great enemy of successful sheep husbandry in
New England, and as long as they are allowed to wander at
large, it can never become a profitable and comfortable business.
Aside from and beyond the direct and immediate profit of
sheep husbandry, the improvement of our worn-out acres
devoted to pasturage, is a consideration not to be overlooked.
It is very well known that sheep improve pastures, especially if
they are so kept that they are driven to close feeding. They
destroy all the common weeds, briars, and bushes.
SHEEP HUSBANDRY. 125
If, however, they are furnished with an abundance of white
clover, and other succulent grasses, they do not care to taste
many of the four Imndred plants on which in extremity they
will feed.
Tliere Jire hundreds of acres of pasture-land that can be
reclaimed in no other way, and it is probably true of half the
breadth of pasture in the State, that by sheep feeding its produc-
tiveness may be increased five per cent, a year, for ten years.
In that period a town would be able to keep as many cattle as
at present, and twice as many sheep as cattle. Upon this theory
it would be wise to engage in sheep husbandry, even though the
direct profit should not exceed that of other branches of agricul-
ture. My present impression is that Mr. Soule's plan is one
which offers more advantages than any other to those residing
in the vicinity of good markets. In England, flocks change
hands often. One set of farmers rear sheep to the age of one
or two years, and then sell to tliose who have superior facilities
for fattening the animals;
It may be wise for farmers who own hill pastures that are
exhausted, or plain lands of inferior quality, to consider whether
the plan adopted by Mr. Soule may not be successfully copied,
and thus their lands improved, and a profit obtained, as large
at least, as that derived from other branches of farming.
In my visits to various parts of Massachusetts, and to other
sections of the country, I have observed that the prosperous
farmers are those who have one leading branch to which all
their labors are directed, and the thriftless men are they who
have no leading object, no branch of industry on which they
rely. There can be no real success in farmings unless those
engaged in itfolloiv it ivith ardor and in the spirit of progress.
It is a reasonable hope that the teachings of the schools,,
the colleges, and especially of the agricultural college, together
with family influences, will do something to render agriculture
more attractive to young men, and that, in the meanwhile, the
great body of the farmers will readily accept the contributions
made by mechanics, by which the business of farming can be
more economically pursued.
126
MASSACHUSETTS AGRICULTURE.
>>
J
"5
3
iSl?(ljiiL^^j^:k;^l
SHEEP HUSBANDRY. 127
ESSEX.
From the Report of the Committee.
It would seem needless, at the present price of moat and
wool, for us to say anything to urge the farmers of Essex
County to keep sheep. We are satisfied that all who have kept
a flock as part of their stock are convinced that it is the best
paying of their farming operations in dollars and cents ; and
the profit does not stop here. Look over our pastures through
the length and breadth of the State — bushy, rocky, uneven and
hilly, most of them unfit for cultivation — and it would seem,
by the constant cropping they have sustained, that they have
nearly come to the end of their capacity to bear grass. In proof
of this we see the woods are taking possession of them in all
places remote from villages and dense populations. In the
older cleared portions, where there has been but a small
quantity of foreign manure applied, that is, manure not made
on the farm, it has become necessary to give milch cows ground
bones, or they become poor and stiff, and, in some instances,
have lost the use of their limbs beyond remedy.
^ Many of the owners of these pastures have not the fertilizers
on hand, and are not able to procure them in sufticient quanti-
ties to make a permanent improvement on them. But we have
the lands. What is the remedy ? Nature, eVer kind, ever
faithful to herself, will restore them if we do not interfere, by a
growth of wood ; and we believe that sheep kept in these pas-
tures will do the same thing. The first process is a long one,
beyond the lives of one, perhaps of two generations. The
second is shorter, and the length will depend much on the
manner in which the flock is kept. We are quite sure lands
can be so restored, for the best of reasons, that we have seen
instances where it has been done. We think that the quickest
and most permanent method would be to stock the pastures
fully with sheep, and to feed the flock in addition with grain
or oil meal. If the pasture is fully stocked we are sure it will
be certain death to most bushes and briars which infest it.
The question whether coarse or fine wool sheep are best
adapted to the county seems to be disputed, and it is probable
ever will be, considering the diversity in our soil and the differ-
ence in management of different individuals. It is contended
128 MASSACHUSETTS AGRICULTURE.
that the small. Merino, with its compact frame, is best adapted
to our sterile pastures, that it returns a larger amount of finer
wool for weight of carcase, and that it can be kept at less
expense per pound than can the larger breeds. On the other
hand, those who claim that the larger varieties are most profit-
able, contend that they are most prolific, giving one hundred
and fifty per cent, of lambs where the Merino will give but
seventy-five — that they shear more wool, worth nearly as much
per pound at the present time, and that the cost of keeping is
but a trifle more for a coarse than for a fine wool sheep. But
we will not go into a discussion of the merits of the different
breeds. We hope that the farmers of Essex will try some
kind as part of their stock, and will not only show us specimens
of their flocks, but will also give us an account of their success,
with details of their management, and their profit and loss, at
the next show. Francis Dodge, Chairman.
POULTRY.
NORFOLK.
A Prize Essay on the Breeding' and Management of Poultry.
BY E. A. SAMUELS.
It is now very generally admitted, both by experimenters and
writers on the subject, that poultry husbandry, taking into
account the amount of capital invested, and the labor required
in its management, is one of the most profitable branches of
farm industry. Constant experiment and careful observation,
in various districts, have proved that at least one hundred per
cent., usually one hundred and fifty, and, with judicious man-
agement, two hundred per cent, may be realized as clear profit.
Unfortunately, the importance of the subject has been but
little appreciated among farmers generally ; and, although the
annual production and consumption of poultry in the United
States " probably exceeds $15,000,000," it is but recently that
a regular system of management has been adopted, and the
poultry-yard allowed a respectable position with the cattle-house
and slieepfold.
POULTRY. 129
The question, from which the greatest profits accrue, the rais-
ing of poultry for market, or the sale of eggs, is still, I think,
unsettled ; both systems have their earnest advocates, and
strong arguments have been advanced, together with results of
many experiments ; but I am inclined to think that a judicious
union of the two branches can be made more profitable than a
persistent adherence to cither. Of course, circumstances in
this as in other callings, control results ; and there are many
considerations to be taken into account before a decision can be
arrived at ; for instance, what is the character of the country
where the fowls are to be kept ; what are the facilities for trans-
portation to market ; what amount of attention can be bestowed
upon the flock.
In an agricultural neighborhood, where food can be procured
at producers' prices, (that is, if the poulterer does not raise his
own food,) and where the fowls can have access to fields and
pastures, at least twice a week ; where railroad transportation
is convenient of access, (and certainly no Massachusetts farmer
can complain on this score,) and where constant attention and
care can be rendered, the raising of poultry for market will
probably be found the most profitable. But in districts less
agricultural in character', where food for the flock must be
transported, often from considerable distances, and where only
a limited amount of attention can be bestowed, the production
of eggs will, undoubtedly, be the most remunerative. Gener-
ally, however, as before remarked, the judicious combination
of both systems will insure the greatest profit.
The labor required in poultry husbandry is not necessarily
expensive, for inferior farm hands, such as boys or women, as in
Great Britain, can be employed. Farmers, in the harvesting of
strawberries, pease, and other products, requiring light labor, do
not hesitate to employ every available hand, and often at quite
remunerative pay. Why cannot constant employment be given
in the poultry yard to some of these lighter hands on the farm,
at times when they are not needed in the field, where, if a
judicious system is adopted, their labor may be very remunerative?
Poultry husbandry is undoubtedly profitable binder almost all
circumstances ; the object of the farmer is, therefore, to make
it remunerative in the highest degree. He must obtain a flock
of the best fowls, whether for breeding or laying, or both, and
17
130
MASSACHUSETTS AGRICULTURE.
adopt a system involving the least expense, both of labor and
money.
At the time when the " hen fever " raged so terribly in this
country, a few years since, a great variety of breeds was intro-
duced, some of which were undoubtedly valuable, but the most
of them nearly worthless for general use. Undoubtedly, the
mixtures of these breeds have been of great benefit to the com-
mon stock of the country ; but we are in the days of Jerseys,
Ayrshires, and Devons, and nothing but pure foreign breeds
will do ; for in cattle husbandry, the result of careful breeding
and culture is that the Ayrshire and Jersey are best for the
Bolton Orats. Bred by S. & W. S. Allen, Vergemies, Vt.
dairy, and the Devon and Durham for beef; so in poultry .hus-
bandry, the most careful and accurate observation and experi-
ment prove that the Black Spanish and Hamburg fowls are the
best breeds for laying, and the Dorking, and, perhaps, the game
fowls for breeding and the market. Of course there are many
other good breeds ; for instance, the Polish Topknots, Spangled,
Polish, Bolton Gray, Leghorn, Creeper, and Dominique ; but
there arc objections to all these breeds, in some cases serious
ones, far surpassing any peculiar to the others I have named.
The different varieties of the Malay fowl — such as the Shanghai,
POULTRY. 131
Cochin China, Chittagong, and Brahma Pootra, arc ahnost
worthless, except as a cross with the common barnyard fowl ;
for they are generally poor layers, clumsy, although persistent
and indomitable sitters, and their flesh is coarse and ill-flavored.
The farmer has therefore but four breeds to select from, if he
wishes to arrive at the maximum degree of profit. These
breeds have well-marked and infallible characteristics, all dif-
ferent from each other to a certain extent, but uniting in the
most desirable qualities.
The Black Spanish fowl is certainly the most desirable breed
we have, where a good layer and table fowl is desired. The
full-blooded bird is of a jet black plumage, with reflections of
greenish blue, and both sexes have very large, high-colored wat-
tles and combs, and ivhite faces. The males are courageous,
but attentive and kind to the females, who are most excellent
layers, but poor sitters, and inconstant nurses. The flesh of
these fowls is extremely delicate, white, and juicy. The eggs
are of good size and excellent flavor. Together with these
desirable qualities, this breed is easily reared and fed, (the birds
being but small eaters,) and they reach maturity at an early
period. Care must be taken in severely cold weather to protect
them, as their large wattles and combs are easily frozen.
The Hamburg fowl is another excellent laying breed, often
being called the " Everlasting Layers." There are five varie-
ties:— the Black, Golden Spangled, Golden Pencilled, Silver
Spangled, and Silver Pencilled. These are all desirable breeds
for laying, but the eggs are rather small, and the birds not so
large for. the table as the Black Spanish, although of equally
good flesh. The males are kind and attentive, and the females
seldom desire to sit. This is the breed that Martin, in his Book
on Poultry, wrote of, as follows : — " The hen betrays no disposi-
tion to incubate, but continues to lay eggs, as if for no other
purpose than to repay her keeper." This breed is not very
hardy, but, in. a warm house, will lay throughout the winter.
The Dorking fowl stands, unquestionably, at the head, where
a breed for poultry is desired. Both sexes have usually a pure
white plumage, sometimes gray or mottled ; their hind toes are
doubled. The males are peaceable and attentive to the females.
The hens are good layers, and excellent sitters and constant
mothers. These fowls are very heavy. Their flesh is delicate
132
MASSACHUSETTS AGRICULTURE.
POULTRY. 133
and juicy, yielding an abundance of what is called " white
meat," in consequence of their great depth of breast. The
eggs arc large, and of delicious flavor. Perhaps, for general
purposes, this breed is to be preferred, as in it are united the
most desirable qualities.
The game fowl is valuable as a stock fowl. The only great
objection to it is its extreme pugnacity, on account of which the
young are with difficulty reared, "sometimes a large part of
the brood being killed or blinded " before they are half grown.
The females are good layers and mothers ; and their eggs,
though small, are deliciously flavored. The flesh of this breed
is extremely delicate and fine grained, and in great repute. A
cross of the breed with the Dorking is valuable for general
purposes.
Although poultry husbandry properly includes the manage-
ment and breeding of several species of domesticated water-
fowl, together with the turkey, Guinea fowl and other species
more nearly allied to those already considered, I do not pro-
pose, in the present paper to treat of them or their merits, but
shall confine myself to those above mentioned.
Accurate observation and experiment have proved that the
maximum number of fowls in one flock should not exceed fifty.
If more are kept, they should be divided into several flocks.
The first necessary step then before selecting the poultry, is
the preparation of houses and yards, each furnishing suitable
accommodations for fifty fowls. In the preparation of these
houses, economy, together with the best facilities for giving
the the fowls greatest care with the least amount of labor, are
objects always to be kept in view by the farmer. In selecting
a site for a poultry house, a porous, sandy soil is the most
suitable, and a south-east exposure should be chosen. If a
brook or spring of pure water is accessible, and can be admitted
into the yards, it will add not a little to the comfort and health
of the fowls. The dimensions of the house need not exceed
eighteen feet by ten, and the height eight feet at the back or
north side of the house, and six feet at the south. This plan is
most desirable, because the roof will be simple and sloping to
the south, and there will be no waste of material or space.
The material should be well-seasoned stock ; the frame may be
made of three-inch joist and covered with one-inch boards ; the
134 MASSACHUSETTS AGRICULTURE.
roof and back should be shingled ; the rest of the joints should
be battened. The sills of the building may be sunk two or three
inches in the ground, but not more. I think that the experience
of a majority of poulterers has been that a wall foundation for
the poultry house, unless it is thoroughly cemented, is very
undesirable, both on account of its harboring rats, weasels, and
other vermin, and its being less comfortable in winter. The
floor should never be made of boards, but of earth, which can
be renewed, more or less frequently, at will, and the droppings
of the fowls, rendering it the best of manure. Some recom-
mend that a pile of saw-dust be kept near at hand, and a few
shovelfuls thrown into the house daily. I think that loam and
sods of green sward are better, because they not only absorb
and retain the ammonia, but furnish amusement and acceptable
picking for the fowls. There should be several large windows
in the front of the building, which may be protected by laths.
The entrance should be at one end. The interior should be
divided into two apartments, one ten, the other eight feet in
length, which may be separated by a partition of laths, with
a door for passage through. These apartments are designed,
the larger for roosting, and the other for laying places. The
roosts are most conveniently placed in the form of a ladder,
inclined to an angle of about forty-five degrees ; the lowest
should not be more than three feet from the ground, for valua-
ble fowls are often injured, sometimes fatally, by flying up and
down from high roosts.
There should be two tiers of nests in the laying apartment,
one on each side of the passage to the roosting apartment ; and
as secrecy is the great point the hens strive for in laying, the
following is a very convenient plan for adjusting the nests. For
entrances between the two apartments, have two small doors
sufiiciently large for the passage of the fowls ; one at each end
of the lath partition. The nests should be placed in rows,
above each other, and accessible by hen ladders. They should
be boarded up on the side next the main passage-way of the
building, and separated 'from each other by board partitions.
Small baskets are most suitable for nests, being easily removed
and cleaned, in case lice or other vermin have taken up their
quarters in them to the annoyance of the fowls. These baskets
should have a liberal allowance of clean, short straw, or moss,
POULTRY. 135
and in each a " nest egg " of wood, turned into the shape of an
egg, and painted white. The boards, behind each row of nests,
should be hung on hinges, for greater convenience in changing
or preparing the nests, and for the removal of the eggs, which
should always be soon after the fowls have gone to roost, in the
evening. The poultry house and the fence (which should be
about twelve feet high, made of laths,) around the yard being
built, the next step is the choice of fowls. The female should
not be less than one year, nor more than three years old. She
should be nervous and noisy ; and, if intended for a breeder,
of large body and wide wings. The male should be aboiit two
years old, of perfect health, full bodied, broad chested, nervous
and courageous, yet kind and attentive to the females. He is
too old if more than three years of age. If the fiock is intended
for breeding purposes, at least one male should be provided for
every ten females ; but, if eggs are desired more than chickens,
perhaps two cocks for fifty hens will be enough ; indeed, some
poulterers affirm that they get more eggs from hens where no
cock is kept than otherwise. Be this as it may, few cocks
should be kept with laying hens, as their presence rather
induces or stimulates their sitting propensities.
The poultry-house prepared and the flock selected, the farmer
should see that they have proper care and food ; that unhealthy
fowls are restored or removed ; that those hens which incline to
sit are provided with eggs ; and that the chickens when hatched
are taken proper care of. Fowls in confinement require an
abundance of pure water, ashes, to dust themselves in, and
nourishing food. Of grain, equal parts each, of Indian corn and
oats is very acceptable ; at least three times a week, scraps of
meat should be thrown in to them, and a supply of crushed
oyster shells or clam shells should be accessible at all times.
Green sods also thrown frequently into the fowl-yard will be of
great advantage. These few attentions are all that are necessary
with laying hens.
With fitting fowls, care should be taken that they are really
in sitting heat. They often manifest a desire to sit, remain on
the nest two or three days, and then abandon it altogether.
This can be avoided by allowing them to sit several days, to test
their constancy ; if they prove really in heat, ■ select fresh laid
eggs of a sufficient number to be well covered — an odd number
136 MASSACHUSETTS AGRICULTURE.
is best, because the eggs will pack most regularly. In selecting
these eggs, some persons believe that when the long, slim ones
are taken, the chickens will be invariably males, and the thick,
nearly round ones, females. This is a very uncertain plan to
adopt in the choice of eggs, and ought never to be relied upon.
The surest method seems to be, to select those eggs, if pullets
are wanted, which when they are held between the eye and a
lamp, discover the cavity at the great end of each egg to be at
one side of the centre of it. If it is at the centre, the chick
will be a male.
The sitting hen should have her nest where she cannot be
troubled by other fowls. Give her a retired, quiet place, and
she will seldom want to leave her nest ; but if she is in the
bustle of the poultry-house, she will be nervous and restless,
and, oftentimes, will abandon her nest. There should be con-
venient to her sitting place a box or pile of ashes, where she
can dust and wash herself, plenty of food, and pure water.
These are the only attentions she requires. The period of
incubation is twenty-one days ; during this time the hen should
be left to her own inclinations, and the eggs should not be
touched or moved ; she carefully turns them that they may
receive a uniform warmth, and any interference with her man-
agement only irritates her, sometimes causing her to break the
eggs, or leave them entirely. At the end of the twenty-first
day, all the chickens should be hatched ; some, however, in
consequence of great thickness and toughness of the shell, are
unable to break it ; these may be assisted by carefully, with
the point of a penknife, chipping away the shell where the little
punctures are made by the chick. Great care, however, is
necessary in doing this ; and, as a general thing, it should be
avoided. The chickens require no food for twenty-four hours
after being hatched. They may then be fed on a dough made of
Indian meal and water ; this should not be too thin, as it is liable
in that state to induce diarrhoea. If the weather is pleasant,
the chickens may be put out in coops the second day after
hatching. Those coops are most conveniently made in the
following manner : take pieces of boards four feet in length,
and make a platform three feet in width ; to the two sides of
this platform nail other pieces of boards, which will meet
together as a roof, over the middle of the bottom ; at the ends
POULTRY. 137
nail laths, sufficiently wide apart to permit the chickens to pass
through comfortably. This gives a dry, comfortable house,
which, with care, may be made to last a number of years.
These coops should not be placed very near each other, as
the chickens are apt to wander into other houses than their
own, when the hen will often injure them seriously for the
intrusion. To place a number of these coops of chickens in the
kitchen garden is one of the best methods of reducing those
pests, the striped cucumber beetle, cut worm, and potato beetle.
Before closing this paper, it is but proper that some men-
tion should be made of the diseases of poultry. The most
common are the pip, roup, diarrha3a, and gapes. The pip
is mostly confined to young fowls. The symptoms are " a
thickening of the membrane of the tongTie, especially towards
the tip ; " this soon becomes sufficiently great to obstruct the
breathing of the fowl so far as to cause gasping, and the beak is
held open to assist breathing ; the chicken then soon pines
away in solitude. This disease is caused by feeding upon hot
food, and drinking impure water. Generally, if the end of the
tongue is cut off, and a supply of pure water is kept by the
fowl, a cure will be effected ; in obstinate cases the bird had
better be killed. The symptoms of the roup are similar to the
glanders in horses ; " constant gaping, dimness of sight, lividity
of the eye-lids, and the total loss of sight, a discharge from the
nostrils, that gradually becomes purulent and fetid." For
treatment, place the fowl in a warm apartment and bathe the
mouth, eyes and nostrils with a weak solution of chloride of
lime and acetate of lead. The diarrhoea is caused by dampness
and improper food. In the treatment of this disease, the food
should be placed in a warm room, and some chalk and cayenne
pepper be given in its food. The treatment for the gapes is sim-
ilar to that for the pip, and the symptoms are nearly the same ;
it is caused by the presence of numerous parasitic worms in
the windpipe. These may be removed with a stiff feather.
MIDDLESEX SOUTH.
Statement of I. K. Fetch.
In presenting my blood stock of Golden Pencilled Hamburgs
for premium, I would respectfully submit the following state-
18
138 MASSACHUSETTS AGRICULTURE.
ment, and in addition would say, I have sold eight dozen of their
eggs for eight dollars, which will make the profits of the fall as
follows : ■
472 eggs at 331 cts. per doz., the average store price, $13 11
Dr. for keeping, 3 74
Net profit, as common fund, . . . . . $9 35
Difference of eggs sold for $1 per doz., . . . 4 66
114 01
The hen in pen No. 2, we believe, has laid 150 eggs in the
six months. In pen No. 3, 1 present for premium a pair of pure
breed from my stock, which are the property of Charles Land-
burn, the same being entered for him. Tliis pair of fowls has
been enclosed in a coop twelve feet long and six feet wide, all
of the time. The hen commenced to lay, on January 31st, and
laid from that time to the 7th day of July, 119 eggs. The
remainder of the six months she did not lay, but as you see,
she laid her whole number in five months and eight days. She
commenced to lay again, August 8th. Her keeping has been
varied, but she has had the best of care, and I don't hesitate to
say that 200 eggs a year can be had from each hen of this
breed, if they have their health through the year.
In my opinion, the above fowls are the best breed for eggs
that has yet been presented to the public, and in giving the
merits of the breed to the public, I submit the following state-
ment of my four hens and a cock for six months : from March
10th to September 10th, 1864. The above fowls have been for
most of the time enclosed in a yard, three rods long and one
rod wide, and their food has been nothing but corn, with fresh
water and oyster shells, at an expense of three dollars and
seventy-five cents for the five fowls for the six months. The
four hens have laid in the six months, 472 eggs, and one of the
hens has been sick ten weeks of the time, being an average of
118 eggs to each hen ; but to give each hen her just merits, we
should consider the hen that has been sick to lay about one-half
as many eggs as each of the others, as she would not naturally
lay as frequently, when layhig, as the others. Allowing her to
lay 60 eggs, would leave 412 eggs to be laid by the three other
POULTRY. 139
I
hens — being 137 to each healthy hen. One of the three hens
has laid, in our judgment, 150 eggs within the six months.
From observation, we know that she has laid constantly, and
more eggs than either of the others, therefore, I feel confident
of the above. Their flesh is of a lighter shade than the Black
Spanish, but as to its juiciness and flavor, I cannot say ; for I
imported them in the spring of 1863 and have not as yet killed
one, so I can#ot judge as yet of their merits for poultry. They
seldom sit until three years old, my hens being now two years
old, have not as yet shown any disposition to brood. Their
color is of dark green and black ground, with feathers pencilled
with golden reddish color, with rose combs and long sickle
feathers, resembling the English Red Cap fowl.
In submitting my blood stock of Brahma fowls for your con-
sideration, I can only call your attention to my collection, as I
have not this year taken the pains to ascertain the amount of
eggs or chickens they have produced. I exhibit the original cock
(stuffed) with three trio of progeny, being son, father, grand-
father, and great-grandfather, which by comparison you can tell
if the stock holds its own. For reports of the merits of the
breeds you can consult previous reports of the society. I would
call your attention to a brood of chickens exhibited by Isaac
Felch, twelve weeks old to-day, (September 20th,) which have
been allowed to get most of their living themselves, being put
out in a lot away from the house and fed as inclination or cir-
cumstances dictated. In my opinion, with Brahma and Chitta-
gong fowls for poultry, and the Golden Pencilled Hamburg and
the Leghorn fowls for eggs, no man need to look further for
fowls which will be both profitable and a pleasure to keep.
Statement of Samuel B. Bird.
The fowls which I offer for premium are a mixture of the-
White Leghorn and Common Native fowl, with the exception of
five which are pure White Leghorns. I think a cross of the
White Leghorn with our Native,' the most profitable fowl a
farmer can keep. They are good layers, good size ; will weigh at
five months old, six pounds a pair, are hardy and easily kept.
Since January 1st, I have kept, on an average, fifteen fowls, all
of them one year old last June. They have been allowed to
run at large on the farm, and have been fed with corn, barley,
140 MASSACHUSETTS AGRICULTURE.
oats, and meat ; the chickens are fed on coarse meal, moistened,
"until five or six weeks old ; then on corn and barley. I have set
three hens on forty-one eggs, and raised thirty-three chickens ;
they were hatched the first of June and are now three and a
half months old. I have kept an exact account of the eggs sold
and used in family, since January 1st, and also the cost of
keeping. I reckon the eggs used the same as those sold at the
same time. The sales have been of eggs : %
171 dozen, amounting to ... .
33 chickens, ......
Whole income, ......
The cost of keeping for the same has been :
' 4 bushels corn at $1.50, ....
4 bushels barley at 11.50,
Oats, meal, meat, &c., ...'..
Whole cost, .......
Leaving a balance of $38.66 in my favor, or about $2.58 for
each fowl.
$45 26
9 90
155 16
$16 50
$6 00
6 00
4 50
FRUITS.
MIDDLESEX.
From the Report of the Committee on Class I.
The increased value of land in the immediate vicinity of
Boston, has caused and is yearly causing much of the orcharding
to be cut down and give place for more profitable crops. This
fact, however, will not lessen the value of those orchards more
distant, and on land of less value.
Apples. — That the apple crop will continue in most parts of
the county to be profitable, there can be little doubt. Those
farmers who follow the market have found the early and fall
fruits to be the best paying, such as the Red Astrachan, Porter,
Gravenstcin, William, and the like. These cannot, however, be
recommended to those who do not frequent the market ; as
FRUITS. 141
they do not ripen their fruits simultaneously, the crop cannot
be gathered in large quantities.
The common caterpillar was much more destructive
the last season than for many years. On small trees,
and perhaps on large trees, the best method to get rid
of them is, to take the nests of eggs, as shown in the
annexed cut, off either late in the fall or winter. This
can be done after the fall of the leaves ; by looking
carefully over the trees nearly all can be removed,
and in much less time and much more surely than
after the worms have hatched out. Besides, it can be
done in a season of more leisure.
J. CuMMiNGS, Jr., for the Committee.
From the Report of the Committee in Class -11.
Contrary to the expectations of many, the show of apples at
our last annual fair proved, upon ocular demonstration, quite
creditable to the society. Long continued east wind, while the
trees were in blossom, caused much blight in some varieties at
least.
Later in the season, and when the remaining specimens which
had escaped the blight were advancing in growth, we were
visited by a severe and pinching drought, and a consequent, in
part at least, visitation and almost Avholesale ravage of insects.
From the period when the parents of the core-worms emerged
from their cells, or cocoons, until their progeny had all found
their way into the fruits on which eggs had been previously
deposited, no rain fell to interfere with the mothers' operations
by washing off eggs, or by drenching and beating to the ground
the parents of the troublesome pest. The weather being quite
warm at the time, the work of destruction was carried on with
vigor, so that we had looked forward with the expectation of
finding a large percentage of our apples wormy, and were not
disappointed. 1\\ many instances, where a medium or large
crop was expected early in the season, the harvest realized was
rendered light and meagre by want of moisture in the soil to
sustain it ; as a consequence, much ^ruit fell from the trees
which was not punctured by worms.
Notwithstanding the drawbacks upon the apple crop which
have been named, the contributors to the show were out in as
142 MASSACHUSETTS AGRICULTURE.
large numbers as ever before, except, perhaps, in one or two
instances, and the "specimens have not often been excelled. I
think the lot of twenty varieties, presented by E. H. Warren, of
Chelmsford, was fully equal to any previous exhibition made by
him within my recollection. The same is true of an Acton
gentleman's, whose name has slipped my mind. Some of the
single dishes did not contain so large and fine specimens as has
been witnessed of the same varieties before. For instance, the
Williams and Porters were inferior to former displays ; while
the Foundling, Lyscom, Hubbardston and others were remark-
ably large and fine. From observations in my own orchard,
prior to the day of exhibition at Concord, I had arrived at this
conclusion, viz. : that some varieties of apples are more affected
by drought than others.
The past, season, while the Lyscom, Hubbardston and others,
grew large, in no respect to any perceptible degree pinched by a
lack of moisture, — the same being true of the Russet Sweet, the
trees of which variety were quite full of 'large and fair speci-
mens,— the Williams, Porter, and Roxbury Russet were far
below, in point of size, what we have before witnessed. There
are exceptional cases no doubt. That apples and pears or
grapes and apples should be affected unlike, or in different
degrees by drought, does not surprise me, while the difference
in the same family does puzzle me a little. I trust there are
persons who may be able to explain the phenomenon, but I am
not.
Another, and it may be, a more important question arises
in the minds of fruit cultivators, which is this : how shall we, or
how can we prevent the ravages of the core-worm and other
pests which annoy us ? In my experience I have found it more
easy to ask questions than to answer them. The practice of
picking up apples and other fruits which fall prematurely from
the trees, and feeding the same to swine or other animals, or
treating in any way which shall destroy the worms therein con-
tained has been, I think, wisely recommended as a means of
■diminishing the number ; yet, where the experiment has been
tried, the results have not proved satisfactory to a degree that
has stimulated the experimenters to renewed and persistent
trials. Whole neighborhoods should take hold of the matter
right earnestly, in order to arrive at favorable results.
FRUITS. 143
Among the insect tribe, many are known to be night-flyers,
bent on mischief. Moths will pitch pell-mell into a light, when
presented to them in the blackness of night. The parent of the
core-worm being a little grizzly moth, I move, therefore, that
orchardists, next June or early in July, immediately after the
above named night-flyers make their appearance, do make, or
cause to be made, bonfires giving much light but little heat, at
different points in their several orchards, on some dark, lowery
evenings, keeping an eye to the same in order to ascertain
results, and report the same at a subsequent time. I have tried
the plan indicated, on a small scale, and seen the " varmints "
go in.
Asa Clement, for the Committee.
MIDDLESEX SOUTH.
From the Report of the Committee.
Peaes. — The cultivation of the pear, until recently, was
confined mainly to* those who did not cultivate it with any
expectation of receiving a profitable return. Farmers who
have covered many acres with apple-trees, have been satisfied
with having one or two pear-trees on the farm, and have not
even taken proper care of those, and if they did not bear good
fruit have said there was no profit in raising pears. I,t has been
thought that pear-trees would only grow and bear well near the
sea-coast, but within a few years it has been shown that while
they may do somewhat better near the sea than they do in the
interior, they will do well anywhere in the State, if set in good,
soil and taken care of, and they are nearly as hardy as apple-
trees, and from the greater number of trees which can be set
upon an acre of land, and from the greater price of fruit, that
it is certainly as profitable for farmers to raise pears as apples.
The dwarf has become a great favorite, and when set in a
deep rich soil, it is sure to produce a good crop. There are
some varieties of the pear which do much better and produce
larger fruit upon the dwarf than upon standard trees. Those
persons who have only a small garden can raise their own pears
and have a variety by setting out dwarf trees.
Standard trees will grow upon more gravelly soil than dwarf,
144 MASSA.CHUSETTS AGRICULTURE.
but, of course, will do much better upon good soil. The dis-
tance at which the trees should be set, is variously estimated.
Ten by ten feet seems to be a good distance to set dwarf
trees, which would give about four hundred and thirty trees to
an acre. An orchard of five years' growth, ought, at least, to
produce a peck of pears to a tree, and at ten years a half bushel
to a tree, which, marketed at a fair rate, would yield a much
greater profit than an acre set out with apple-trees, or planted
with vegetables, and the expense of cultivation and marketing
would be no greater. Standard trees should be set out, at least,
fifteen by fifteen feet, and while it takes more time for them to
grow to a bearing condition, when they do bear, the quantity of
fruit obtained is greater than from dwarf trees.
If a farmer desires to set out a pear orchard, a good way to
do is to set standard trees twenty by twenty feet, and then set
a dwarf tree between each ; the dwarfs will produce fruit almost
immediately, and by the time the standard trees get to bearing,
the dwarf trees will have died. Good quality of pears is of
very great importance, which can be obtained by good variety
and cultivation ; the trees should be set iif good soil, and the
soil should be enriched every year ; the trees should be well
trimmed, the ends of the branches should be cut back every
year, and the trees should not be overloaded with fruit ; this is
the most important of all, as nothing so much injures the flavor
qf the pear as overbearing. Instead of propping up the tree
and tying up the branches to stakes, thin out the fruit until
the tree holds up its own branches, and the fruit that remains
will be much larger, better flavored, and will bring a greater
.price, and the trees will not be jnjured.
Complaint is often made that a pear-tree, after having borne
very full a few times, ceases to bear, and no doubt the reason
was that it was overloaded with fruit, and the tree was injured.
To obtain good crops of pears, enrich the soil, cut back the
branches every year, and thin out the fruit. The show of pears
at our exhibition this year was excellent, and it shows that the
farmers and others of our society, are giving attention to the
subject of pear culture. Your committee recommend that more
premiums should be offered in this department, as the com-
mittee found the sum of money at their disposal too small to
recognize the claims of many exhibitors whose excellent speci-
FRUITS. 145
mens were really entitled to notice. Your committee would
also recommend that contributors of pears at our shows, who
obtain premiums, should be required to ma^e a written state-
ment of their manner of cultivation. This will increase the
interest in this department of our exhibitions.
Peaches. — There were several varieties of peaches on exhibi-
tion this year, and your committee suggest that an effort be
made to raise peaches, as we believe that the time is coming
again when peaches will be raised in this State, and will be as
healthy and profitable as formerly, as there are indications that
the disease which has been so fatal to the trees has ceased to
affect them, and if so, this fruit should receive the same degree
of attention as in former years.
Grapes. — The exhibition of grapes was very good, perhaps
better than at any former show, but it was not so large, and
there were not so many exhibitors as there should have been.
Farmers are giving more attention to grape culture than
formerly, and there is no reason why every one who owns land
should not raise grapes, for the hardy varieties of native grapes,
the Concord, Delaware and Hartford Prolific, will grow upon
any land fit for cultivation, and the Concord, with very little
care, will produce a good crop of fruit every year. Among the
grapes exhibited was the St. Catherine, a native seedling, raised
by Mr, James W. Clark, of Framingham, and which l^ids fair
to be a great favorite. Your committee would recommend that
the exhibitors of grapes who obtain premiums shall be required
to make a written statement of their manner of cultivation, in
order to furnish information to others as to the best method to
pursue to obtain the largest yield.
George L. Sawin, for the Committee.
NORFOLK.
A Prize Essay on Open Air Grape Culture.
BT WILLIAM E. RICE, M. D.
There is no fruit which will so richly repay the care and
expense of its cultivation as the grape. By a judicious selection
of varieties, it can be raised with profit in all parts of this State.
By care to supply it with a favorable soil and exposure, and a
19
146 MASSACHUSETTS AGRICULTURE.
moderate expense for suitable manures, it will yield a large crop
of delicious and noble fruit. If, on account of distance from
market, or other reasons, it does not find a ready sale, it can be
made into wine, with but little more care than is required to
make good cider. In this State, there are thovisands of gravelly
hill-sides inclining to the south south-west and west, which are
now given up to shrubs and dwarf trees ; they might be
reclaimed and made to yield an income of from $300 to |1,200
per acre, every year. Good, ripe grapes can be sold in Boston,
in large quantities, at from eight to fifteen cents per pound.
A cultivator of the vine, who has had large experience, told
me, that with land worth fifty dollars per acre, it cost him five
cents per pound (all expenses included) to raise Concord grapes.
This was in the vicinity of Lowell. In three years from the
time of planting, the vines commence to yi^ld ; if spur pruned,
at that age, they will average four or five pounds to the vine.
In the fourth year they will ripen ten or twelve pounds ; and
after that, with good treatment, from fifteen to twenty pounds
every year, for at least from thirty to fifty years.
In Europe there are many vineyards that have been in culti-
vation for more than a century. The fruit of the vine is con-
sidered so healthy, that, in many parts of Europe, " grape
cures " are established, where the sick are treated with a regu-
lated diet, consisting, mainly of ripe and juicy grapes, and in
many cases we are told, with the best results. The man who
stands in a European vineyard looks upon the result of twenty
centuries of culture and improvement ; for the original stock of
the European wine grape (Vitis Vinifera) was a small, hard,
and sour grape, brought from Syria.
In the botanical garden of the city of Dijon, in France, there
are six hundred varieties of grape-vine. It is unfortunate for
the present generation, that the highly improved and saccharine
grapes of Europe cannot be naturalized in this country and
grown in the open air. All experiments in this direction, have
failed, unless protection has been given either by means of glass
or high walls. The foliage is thin and tender, and cannot resist
the rapid and extreme changes of temperature incident to this
climate. The vine becomes sickly, and at once falls a prey to
mildew. We must follow the example of Europe, and grow our
own vines from strong and hardy stocks to be found in our
FRUITS. 147
woods. In them are the parents of a long line of noble descen-
dants destined to ornament our hill-sides with purple and golden
clusters, and to rival the luscious sweetness and rich perfume of
European grapes. The intelligent skill of man has produced
from bitter, sour, and worthless originals, all the noble and
improved varieties of fruit which we have through seedlings.
The same law has been, and must be, applied to the grape.
Some thirty years ago, the only grapes generally known and
sold from our nurseries, were the Catawba and Isabella. These
are good where they will ripen thoroughly, which they rarely
do in this State, our season not being long enough to ripen
either wood or fruit. The Isabella originated in the South, and
was introduced by Mrs. Isabella Gibbs. The Catawba was intro-
duced by Major John Adlum, of Georgetown, D. C, and was
adopted, and used in vineyard culture, by Nicholas Longworth,
Esq., of Cincinnati, Ohio. Next came the Diana ; a seedling of
the Catawba,, raised by. Mrs. Diana Crehore, of Milton, Mass.
This grape ripens a week earlier than the above-named varieties.
. Then came the Delaware, said to have originated in New Jer-
sey, and introduced by A. Thompson, of Ohio. ' But to the
intelligence and enterprise of a citizen of our own State we are
indebted for the most valuable hardy grape for general culture
yet introduced. I refer to the Concord grape, produced by the
Hon. E. W. Bull, of Concord, Mass. Not only has the Concord
been a direct benefit to us, but its success has stimulated others
to work in the same direction, and new and improved varieties
are rapidly succeeding each other. We have positive evidence
that all parts of this country are adapted to the cultivation of
the vine, in the numerous varieties of the wild grape, which
overrun the States, from Maine to Florida. I think it may be
safely assumed, that we shall succeed in obtaining varieties best
adapted to each part of the Union, by improving upon the wild
type of adjoining woods ; i. e., by planting seeds of the earliest,
sweetest and best wild grape, in highly enriched and mellow
soil. When the vines fruit, select the seeds of those which have
improved most, and plant theni ; and so on, to any extent. In
this way was the Concord produced in two generations from the
wild Vitis Labrusca of the woods. Seedlings have since been
produced from the Concord superior to the parent. Soil and
situation modify all young seedlings, and great variations in
148 MASSACHUSETTS AGRICULTURE.
color, flavor, and period of ripening, are produced. This is an
extension of the theory which Van Mons applied to the pear.
Mr. Bull advises us not to go back to the wild type, but to plant
the seed of the best varieties now in cultivation. This will save
time, though the seedlings frequently sport and return to the
rankest of wild forms.
Soil, Situation, and Aspect. — The best soil for the grape is
one that is light, warm, and moderately rich, also sufficiently
porous to let air, heat, and water pass freely through it. Rich
soils, loaded with manure, encourage the growth of wood at the
expense of fruit. In this State, the best soil for the vine is
sandy loam, from ten to fifteen inches deep, with an open or
well-drained subsoil. The best soils are those which are com-
posed of crumbling limestone, granite, or volcanic rocks. Some
of the finest vineyards in Europe are planted in soil composed
mostly of carbonate and sulphate of lime, (chalk and gypsum.)
But the most successful vineyards, both- in Europe and Cali-
fornia, are planted in a red, sandy clay, and in such soils vine-
yards are commonly planted. Most writers on the grape advise
deep trenching, and the preparation of a soil from eighteen
inches to three feet in depth. There is no doubt that ihis tends
to prolong the vigor and life of the vine in a warm climate, but
as the ripening of the wood and fruit depend a great deal upon
the heat applied to the roots, they should be kept near the sur-
face in all northern countries, where the season is too short to
heat the earth to the depth of two or three feet. To prevent
damage from drouth, the ground may be mulched, with any
cheap material, in hot and dry summers. Even the most
unpromising, gravelly or sandy land can, by a judicious mixture
of either muck, pond mud, or leaf mould, with clay and man-
ure, be rendered extremely fertile. These materials may be
carted on to the land in the mild days of winter, and worked in
the next spring. In Europe they sow lupines, (a kind of bean,)
or clover, and plough them in when in flower ; and the next
year, they plant the vines. Grapes will grow in almost any
kind of soil, from nearly pure clay to nearly pure sand ; but a
mixture of the two with a little vegetable mould will be the
most successful. Put clay upon sandy land, and sand upon
clayey land. The vine cannot bear stagnant water about the
roots, but loves to ramble in dry, open soil. If the soil is not
FRUITS. 149
dry, build stone drains. Level ground will answer ; but the
sweetest grapes and finest wines are always grown on the hill-
sides. The heat that is absorlied and radiated from the ground
does more to ripen grapes than the direct rays of the sun ; and,
on the hill-sides, the fruit has the advantage of this heat. The
best exposure is south south-west, and west and south-east, in
the order given. Least favorable, east north-east and north.
The vine should not be shaded directly, either by trees or Ijuild-
ings ; though it is a great advantage to have protection against
north and north-east winds. In a small vineyard, this may be
given by a ten-foot fence ; in a large oije, by a double belt of
evergreen trees, planted in a semi-circle. Whatever soil is used,
it should be well ploughed to the depth of one foot before
planting the vines.
Manures. — The requirements of the vine are few and simple.
Stimulating manures, applied to the vines, produce a rampant
growth of leaves and wood, but no fruit. It is the same with
the strawberry. Use, in moderate quantities only, mineral
manures, and old, well-rotted compost. The best compost
is made by mixing and heaping up grass-sods, fresh manure,
muck or leaves, with a little ashes and gypsum, adding bones,
when they are to be had. Turn the heap over occasionally,
and when it is reduced to a uniform rich mould, it is in a fit
state to nourish the vine. Cow manure will improve a sandy
soil, and horse manure a strong clay soil. In France and
Germany, manure mixed with fresh earth is annually carried
on the backs of laborers and placed around the vines ; the old
soil having been previously removed to the depth of six inches.
They also dig in the prunings of the vine, — a rational and
most excellent practice. Their soil has been exhausted by
centuries of the same cultivation, while ours is virgin to the
vine, and does not require such treatment. Mr. Bull recom-
mends " ploughing the land to the depth of nine inches, and
the first year apply thirty or forty loads of compost to the acre,
to promote the formation of roots. After that, twenty bushels
of bone-dust, twenty of wood-ashes and five of gypsum arc a
sufficient dressing for an acre, for three years."
Planting. — The best time, in this State, is spring, just before
the buds begin to push, except in very dry and warm soils.
Here it is better to plant in the fall, as soon as the leaves drop ;
150 MASSACHUSETTS AGRICULTURE.
then new roots shoot forth during warm days, and the vine
makes a stronger growth in the ensuing year. Strong growing
varieties, like Concord, Hartford Prolific and Diana, ought to
be planted six feet apart in the rows, and the rows eight feet
apart. The short-jointed varieties, like Delaware, six feet by
six. Let the rows run north and south. The best plants, in my
opinion, are well-rooted vines, one year old, raised from single
eyes, and well supplied with fibrous roots. They are not so
liable to be injured in taking them up ; they will make nearly
or quite as good a growth the first season, and will come into
bearing as soon as olc^r vines. In quantities, they cost much
less. Mr. Bull prefers vines two years old, grown from cuttings
in the open air. Either will make good vines. Dig a hole
wide enough to allow the roots to spread out to their full length,
and six or eight inches deep ; then make a conical heap of soil
in the centre of the hole, sloping from four inches from the level
surface of the ground to the full depth of the hole ; let the stem
rest on the centre of this little mound, and spread out the roots
in all directions, seeing that, none of them touch each other.
Then fill in with mellow earth, shaking the vine gently to settle
the earth among the roots. Then fill up the hole and press the
earth down gently with the foot. It is a good plan to water the
vines well, after planting, if the soil is dry. Keep the vineyard
free from grass and weeds, and the soil open and loose. Nothing-
should be allowed to grow in a vineyard except vines.
Peuning and Teaining. — There are several modes of pruning ;
but the principle at the foundation of them all is, to cut off the
excess of the last year's wood, so that they will not overbear, and
yet leave enough to secure the healthy expansion of the vine.
Grapes are always produced on the young shoots of the current
year. When set to poles, by the spur system, take stout bean-
poles, (spruce or cedar are best,) char the lower ends, or paint
them with coal-tar, and set them at least eighteen inches deep,
one to each vine, leaving six feet out of the ground. Young-
vines usually have three buds or eyes ; when they have gfown
ten or twelve inches, tie up the strongest shoot to the pole, with
l)ass-bark or straw, and pinch out the others at two leaves.
Train the young shoot up perfectly straight, tying it to the pole
every week. Laterals will grow from the axils of the leaves ;
and when they have made three leaves, pinch them off at two-
FRUITS. 151
In the first year thrifty vines will grow from six to ten feet. If
they run up weakly and slender, pinch off the end of the main
shoot occasionally, to check the flow of the sap and make the vine
stouter. The object is to get ripe and strong wood, no matter
how long it takes ; and, if possible, to get a brown, hard stem as
high as the top of the stake at the end of the first year. In
November, after the fall of the leaf, cut off all the laterals close
to the main cane ; and, if that is slender or unripe, cut that
back to three buds, and grow a single cane again the next year.
If the cane is strong and ripe, cut it off at the top of the pole.
Cut off all green wood at the fall pruning, as it will winter-kill
if you do not. In the winter, or late fall, cut the vines loose
from the stakes and let them lie upon the ground, so that they
can move with the wind and shake off rain and ice. In the
spring, tie them up again, and rub out every other eye on the
cane ; or, in other words, leave buds enough to get shoots alter-
nately, right and left, about nine inches apart, the lowest one
fifteen to eighteen inches from the ground, the highest close to
the top of the vine. These are spurs for the next year's crop.
Keep them pinched in, so that they will not make over two feet
each of ripe wood in the season, and cut off any fruit that may
set, at once. Let the top shoot grow, without pinching, until
September, when it may be broken off at the end. In Novem-
ber, of the second year, cut every other spur back to one bud,
and the intervening ones to three buds ; these will fruit the
third year, and the single buds will make spurs for next year's
bearing. In the month of November, of the third year, cut the
spurs which have fruited back to a single bud, and prune the
others to three buds, for next year's bearing. The vines are
now established, and must be pruned in the same way during
their life. Always let the top spur grow as long as it will ; this
will prevent the pushing of the next year's fruit-buds duruig the
current season, — an accident which is liable to occur from close
summer pruning. Do not overlop the vines while they are
young, a practice which has injured many fine vineyards.
When the grapes have set, go through the vineyard and cut out
bravely one-half of the bunches, or even two-thirds, leaving
only the largest and finest clusters. The crop will ripen earlier,
weigh more, and be much finer, if treated in this way.
152 MASSACHUSETTS AGRICULTURE.
The renewal system, with horizontal arms, for training
against fences and buildings and trellises. First year. Train
the same as in the spur system. In November, cut back to
eighteen inches, or to the point where you wish to take the
arms. Second year. Let all the buds push, and train the two
upper shoots to a pole, or to the trellis, pinching them occasion-
ally to make them stout. Pinch all the other shoots, at two
leaves, and keep them so. This will promote the growth of the
main cane, by arresting some of the sap, and thus prevent the
vine from getting hide-bound. At the fall pruning, cut back
the two canes to three or four feet each, according to the
strength of the vine ; leaving the same length and the same
number of buds to each. Then bend them down, one to the
right and the other to the left, and tie them to the lower bar or
wire of the trellis, so that the vine will be T shaped. Third
year. Train up three or four shoots from each arm to the top
of the trellis, at equal distances from each other. If some
grow stronger than others, pinch in the strong ones till the
weak overtake them. In other matters, treat the same as
before. In November, cut back every other cane to one bud,
and the intervening ones to three or four feet, for bearing the
next year. Fourth year. In November, cut back the canes
that have fruited to one bud, and the others to four feet. The
spur system is the best for vineyards, and the renewal for
houses and walls. In both systems, laterals must be pinched
out at two leaves, and all suckers and shoots from dormailt eyes
on the old wood, must be rubbed off. Trellises can be made of
cedar posts, set eight or ten feet apart, and telegraph-wire or
wooden slats run across, twelve or fifteen inches apart.
Propagation. — Cuttings are the cheapest means of extending
.an established vineyard. At the November pruning, save cut-
tings of well-ripened wood, of the current year, twelve or
.fifteen inches long; bury them in dry soil, or in sand, during
the winter, and, in the spring, plant two of them in the place
where you want a vine. Set them about two inches apart. In
the spring of the second year, pull, or dig up tlie weakest vine,
and set vines, one year old, in the places where the cuttings
failed to grow. The upper buds of the cuttings may be cov-
ered, one-third of an inch deep, after they are planted in a
slanting position. If preferred, they can be set in nursery beds.
FRUITS. 153
and transplanted, when one or two years old. If grown from
cuttings in the vineyard, the roots are never disturbed, and, in
dry soil, or stony hill-sides, they strike down deeper, and make
stronger plants. The earth should be mulched with cheap
litter of some kind, and the soil kept loose around the young
vines. Train them to a pole till they are strong enough to be
pruned according to a system. Layers can be obtained by
bending down shoots that grow near the ground, and covering
them with three or four inches of earth. Put them down in
July or August, and cut the cane half through near the parent
vine. By November, they will be well rooted, and can be
transplanted. The most rapid way of supplying the loss of an
old vine is to take a long and strong shoot from the nearest
vine, and layer il;, in the place of the old one. It will bear the
first year, and may be cut clear of its parent, in one or two
years, according to its strength. The vines that produce the
famous Burgundy wine of France, are renewed by layering
every ten years. There are other modes of propagation, more
expensive and difficult to manage. For those who desire to
learn them, and, also, the principles of grape culture, I would
recommend the " Grape Culturist," by Andrew S. Fuller,
Brooklyn, New York, 1864, and " Grape Culture and Wine
Making," by John Phin, New York, 1862. Either of these
books can be ordered of any bookseller, at a moderate price.
Grafting. — Grafting is done in the fall, to the best advantage.
Cut off the old stock squarely, six inches under ground ; split
it, for an inch or two, with a sharp knife ; cut a scion long,
wedge-shaped, with two buds, and fit the inner bark of the scion
and stock together ; tie with bass and fill the earth up to the
level of the upper bud. Then invert a flower-pot over it, and
bank up the earth, on the outside, to the level of the bottom of
the pot ; then cover that with six inches of straw, and bank
earth over the whole. In this way the scion is protected from
frost, and can be uncovered in spring, without disturbing its
union with the stock. This is Fuller's method. The scion
starts early in spring and makes a strong growth ; frequently
setting some fruit the first year. Grafts set in the spring often
fail.
Varieties. — While there are some twenty or thirty varieties
before the public, there are only three or four that have proved
20
154 MASSACHUSETTS AGRICULTURE.
successful enough to warrant the recommendation of them for
general vineyard culture, in this State. There are few grapes
that combine the hardiness to resist our severe winters, the pro-
lific fruitfulness to reward the cultivator, and the sweetness,
richness, and high flavor which command the admiration of all
lovers of good grapes. The Concord is a fine, large, black
grape, with a beautiful blue bloom, and shouldered bunches
often weighing a pound. Skin thin ; flesh moderately juicy,
buttery, and sweet. Flavor good ; in my opinion, equal to the
Isabella. It is the most hardy and strong-growing vine culti-
vated in this State. It is the most profitable grape to grow for
the market; for the public taste demands something large,
black, and handsome, as well as sweet. The Hartford Prolific,
originated in the garden of Mr. Steele, in Hartford, Conn. It
is smaller than the Concord, and about as good. It ripens a
week or two earlier, but is apt to fall from the bunch as soon as
ripe. Market-men will not buy it on that account. The Crevel-
ing originated in Pennsylvania. It is much like the Hartford,
but does not fall from the bunches. None of these grapes have
a spicy flavor or very delicate perfume ; those qualities do not
belong to the Vitis Labrusca, in an eminent degree. The Diana
is a lilac-colored grape, having a thick skin and somewhat tough
pulp, with a delicious juice and musky perfume. It is apt to
rot in rainy weather. In this State, it ripens unevenly ; part of
the bunches remaining hard and green until frost cuts them off.
It is a little too late for vineyard culture here, but will give
satisfaction, if trained to the south side of a house or fence.
The Delaware is a beautiful, amber grape, with a tinge of rose
color. It is sweet, juicy, and melting, with a delicate flavor.
The vine is hardy, and when fully established, prolific ; though
there are many vines which produce more wood and fruit. In
quality, it is not surpassed by any native. The medium or
small size of its fruit is its only fault. It requires a riclier soil
and more generous feeding than any other grape. When
trained low and well ripened, it has made wine in all respects
superior to Catawba, grown in the same locality the same year ;
both grapes being perfectly ripe. Grapes for the garden and
south walls, to be grown only where they can have winter pro-
tection, are Allen's Hybrid, Rebecca, Union Village, Isabella,
Diana ; new ones, on trial, Adirondac, lona, Israella, Rogers'
BREAD. 155
Hybrids, Framingham Seedling, "Winchester. The Clinton is
said to make good red wine, (claret,) but its growth is so
rampant that it cannot be managed with profit in a vineyard.
Diseases. — Mildew and rot are apt to attack vines when hot
weather succeeds that which is cold and moist. Sudden and
extreme changes of temperature seem to be the exciting cause.
"Wet and clay soils are more subject to these diseases than such
as are dry, sandy, and well drained. Mildew is a fungoid
growth, which appears, first, on the under surface of the leaf,
and rapidly creeps over it. It also attacks the berries, which
then fail to ripen. The best remedy is sulphur, sprinkled on
the leaves and earth among the vines. The rot attacks the
berries in July ; they turn black or red in spots, and fall off.
No remedy has been discovered for it.
Final Advice. — Plant the Concord to sell as a market fruit.
If you wish to raise only one variety, take that ; for it will
flourish in poorer soil than any other. If you desire several
varieties, plant Creveling and Hartford Prolific in small pro-
portion ; though their ability to endure our hard winters has
not been so well proved as that of the Concord and Delaware.
If you wish to make wine, take a rich soil on the south or south-
west side of a hill, and plant the Delaware. Excellent wine has
also been made from the Concord. Late in the fall, cut the
vines clear of the stakes and let them lie upon the ground, or
cover them with earth. The increased certainty of a crop will
pay for the expense.
BREAD.
ESSEX.
From the Report of the Committee.
From the specimens before us, we infer that there is a
laudable ambition among the ladies of our county to excel in
making bread; and this certainly is zeal in the right direction,
for we consider poor bread one of the most unhealthy articles
that can be put into the human stomach. We have seen bread
on the table, hard, heavy, dark, waxy, and tough, colored green
156 MASSACHUSETTS AGRICULTURE.
throughout with saleratus. We never see persons making a
feed (it cannot be a meal,) on such indigestible stuff but
visions of dyspepsia, nightmare, and work for the dentist come
up before us ; for it is now admitted by all that nothing
destroys the enamel of teeth like saleratus taken into the
stomach. Yet we have heard people who daily eat bread
made green by saleratus, cursing the doctor, who, in a case
of sickness years ago, gave them a dose of calomel, and
destroyed their teeth.
We once heard a lady, who took pride in her cooking, assert
that to have good bread it must rise till it was thoroughly
sour, then add saleratus till it was sweet ; that would make
nice bread. It was suggested that it could be soured with
cream of tartar. Ah ! no ; she knew better ; she wanted the
natural sour. We could never imagine why people who use
cream of tartar to sour their dough, do not buy sour flour as
a matter of economy ; it can be bought less, and would save
buying cream of tartar. We do not see why the same result
could not be obtained. We wish every family in this country,
(rebels included,) could have, daily, as good bread as the
poorest specimen offered for our inspection, although we sup-
pose, some persons, who have been used to eating bread of the
brickbat sort, would not relish decent bread, because the taste
gets so depraved they could not recognize good bread when
they eat it. This ought not to be so ; for of all the various'
kinds of ailment to which civilized man has had recourse
during our historical period, none have been so universally
employed as bread.
Like most arts of primary importance, the invention' of
bread undoubtedly long preceded its history, which is involved
in the usual obscurity of early times. The Greeks ascribe the
introduction of agriculture to Ceres, and the invention of
bread to Pan ; but we know that the Chaldeans and Egyptians
were acquainted with these arts at an earlier period. " And
Abraham hastened into the tent to Sarah, and said, make ready
quickly three measures of fine meal, knead it, and make cakes
upon the hearth." There is reason to think, from some of the
ancient writers, that the art of fermenting bread with yeast
was known eighteen hundred years ago. Yet it was not
common in Europe till within two hundred years. In 1688,
BREAD. 157
the French government prohibited tlie use of yeast in making
bread, under a severe penalty, in consequence of tlie repre-
sentation of a college of physicians, who declared it to be
injurious to health. But the superiority of yeast bread' soon
became apparent; the decisions of the medical faculty were
forgotten ; the laws were allowed to sink into oblivion, and
the new mode of making bread soon found its way to other'
countries. The primitive mode of making bread is still pre-
served among the Arabs of the desert, who, as Niebuhr informs
us, " lay cakes of dough in the coals, covering them with
ashes till they are done, when they eat them warm." In the
northern counties of England, in Scotland, and in Wales,
unfermented bread is mostly used among the poorer classes.
In Scotland it is baked in thin cakes, dried hard on racks,
and kept for months. Not having been used to saleratus in
their bread, the people there are able to operate on these cakes
with their teeth, which the inhabitants of some localities we
know would not be able to do.
Unfermented bread may be flakey, but it is never porous or
spongy. As a general rule, it is not so wholesome, not being so
digestible as fermented bread ; but we believe, notwithstanding
this, it would be better than the tough, clammy, sour, alkaline
stuff which some people call fermented bread — and it is certainly
time that every female, in our country at least, should know
how to make good fermented bread ; and we know no easier
way to impart this knowledge and scatter it broadcast among
the people, than for our society to offer premiums, require a
statement, have them published ; then those that run may read,
and those that read may know how to make good bread. Then
again, our society may become popular by these same exhibitions
of bread.
Some of the loaves offered for our inspection were very
beautiful, and were made by an unmarried lady. Before we
had finished our examination a young gentleman praised the
bread very much, and said he would certainly visit the lady
before he went home. Now, if this visit should result in mar-
riage, or if any exhibition of bread hereafter should have such
results, and nothing can be more probable, we may feel that
where a man gets a good wife, or vice versa, they would be
decided friends of the society.
Edmund Smith, Cliairvian.
158 MASSACHUSETTS AGRICULTURE.
MIDDLESEX.
From the Report of the Committee.
The grains which we use for bread consist mostly of starch,
gluten and sugar. The object of forming them into bread, is
to effect such a change in them as shall render theni palatable
and more easily digested. The grain i^ first pulverized and
then sifted, to separate the different qualities of the meal. The
external, or woody portion of the grain, is the bran. The inner
part is the flour. The gluten is tougher and more difficult to
grind. The finest and whitest portion, obtained by repeated
sifting, consists of a larger proportion of starch. The darker
colored part is richer in gluten, and as the nutritive properties
are in proportion to the gluten, this portion makes the most
nutritious bread.
When flour is mixed with water, kneaded into dough and
baked, it will be tough and clammy. If spread out into a thin
sheet, it will be hard and horny. In neither case will it be
palatable or easily digested. To avoid these results, and to
form a light, spongy dough, different methods are adopted. If
a paste of flour and water be permitted to stand some days in a
warm place, it commences to putrify, and grows sour. If a
small portion of this be incorporated into fresh dough, the
decomposing gluten acts upon the sugar of the flour, and
excites what is called the vinous fermentation, changing tlie
sugar into alcohol and carbonic acid.
The carbonic acid is set free in the form of minute bubbles of
gas throughout the whole substance of the dough, and bein'g
retained by the adhesive gluten, it causes the whole mass to
swell or rise. These bubbles form the pores or small cavities
which, in well-made bread, are small and uniform, but if the
dough is too watery, or not well kneaded, or if. the flour is too
fine, are sometimes large, irregular cavities or holes in the
bread. If the fermentation is carried too far, the vinous
fermentation passes into the acetous fermentation, and the
alcoliol is changed into vinegar, and the dough becomes sour.
This may be corrected by the addition of carbonate of soda or
magnesia, whicli neutralizes the acid, forming an acetate of soda
or magnesia, which gives no disagreeable taste, and acts as a
gentle laxative, and is wholly unobjectionable. By fermentation
BREAD. 159
the bread is made light at the expense of the sugar in the flour,
which, as has been said, is changed into alcohol and carbonic
acid, both of which are expelled by the process of baking. Any
method by which a gas is set free throughout the whole mass,
answers the purpose.
If carbonate of soda is mixed with the flour, and muriatic
acid, largely diluted,'be added, the acid and soda unite, forming
common salt, and the carbonic acid previously combined with
the soda, is set free, rapidly forming a very light sponge. This
must be kneaded immediately, and forms a very palatable
bread, containing nothing injurious. Carbonate of ammonia is
often used in making cake. The carbonic acid and the ammonia
are both driven off in the process of baking.
The heat, in baking, causes the gluten and starch to form a
chemical compound which cannot be separated by washing with
water, as could be done when they were in the state of flour ;
in consequence of this change, and of its light, spongy form,
bread becomes easily soluble in the stomach. The water added
to the flour, forms about a third of the weight of the bread.
That which is not evaporated becomes converted into a solid,
and forms a chemical union with the bread.
Having thus spoken of the general principles of bread-making,
we will close with a few remarks upon the bread which came
under our notice.
The examination of a large number of loaves on exhibition,
satisfied your committee that genius achieves success in its own
way. There were scarcely two specimens made in precisely the
same way, and scarcely two that had precisely the same taste,
and yet nearly every sample could be pronounced good bread ;
indeed, we suppose that every loaf was considered superior by
its maker, or it would not have been presented for a premium.
It is truly surprising that so high a standard of excellence
should have been reached, when we consider the difference in
the quality of the flour and meal, the difference in the quality
and quantity of the yeast, the difference in the quality and
quantity of the milk, and even in the quantity and quality of
the water used in the mixing ; for we believe the quality of the
water may sensibly affect the character of the bread ; the dif-
ference in the amount of the sugar, molasses, salt, and other
ingredients used ; the difference in the degrees of heat to which
160 MASSACHUSETTS AGRICULTURE.
it was subjected, and the difference in the time occupied by
baking.
With all these differences, so much good judgment was
employed, that the end aimed at, good bread, was in nearly
every instance attained. The principal defects noticed by the
committee, (and here the experience and nice discernment of
the lady members were brought into requisition,) were the use
of too much yeast, and in one or two instances, the use of too
strong an infusion of hops in making the yeast, too much salt,
baking the bread too quickly, or in an oven too hot, by which
the surface was overdone while the interior was slack baked.
In one or more loaves mixed chiefly with milk, the dough
was left in a warm place to rise, and the milk became changed
before the loaf was sufficiently light, giving to the bread the
smell and taste of sour milk. This was the case with one loaf
which presented to the eye a very beautiful appearance. Milk
more than twelve hours old should not be used in mixing
bread, unless soda or magnesia is used with it ; new milk is
decidedly better. But the most common defect was the want of
sufficient working or kneading of the dough. In the best sam-
ples, the dough ivas subjected to a thorough working, both before
and after rising.
J. Reynolds, Chairman.
DISTRIBUTION OF CATTLE. 161
DISTRIBUTION OF NEAT CATTLE IN THE UNITED
STATES.
WORCESTER SOUTH-EAST.
From the remarks of the Secretary.
The Census Reports for 1840, 1850, and 1860, furnish the
data from whence certain " facts " have been eUminated. The
first great law established is, that the ratio between the number
of the people and the number of the neat cattle must always be
the same, whether the population be ten millions or twenty mil-
lions. This will be seen, when we consider that neat cattle
are kept principally to supply the demand for beef, butter,
cheese and milk. These articles being consumed wholly by the
people, the demand becomes a constant quantity, and therefore,
if supplied, the ratio must be constant. By the census of 1840,
it was found that there were 87 neat cattle for every 100 inhab-
itants ; by the census of 1850 there were 79 neat cattle for
every 100 inhabitants ; and by the census of 1860, there were
81 neat cattle for every 100 inhabitants. Assuming that there
should be 80 neat cattle for every 100 inhabitants, as being a
near approximation to the truth, from the same statistics we
learn that of these there must be 8 working oxen, 28 milch
cows, and 44 other cattle. But without the discovery of another
law these facts would be of small practical benefit ; we should
not know where the demand for neat cattle existed, or from
whence the demand could be supplied.
The deficiencies or excesses only generally and vaguely
known to exist somewhere, led to no practical solution of the
difficulty. It was agreed that Massachusetts, to supply the
demand for home consumption, had to purchase and transport
for long distances, from beyond her borders, large quantities of
beef, butter and cheese ; but just how much it required to
satisfy the demands of her people, beyond home production, or
from where the constant diminution of home supply was to be
complemented in future, were problems which remained to be
solved. The census of 1840, showed that Massachusetts had 38
21
162 MASSACHUSETTS AGRICULTURE.
neat cattle to every 100 inhabitants ; that of 1850, that she had
26 ; and that of 1860, that the number had diminished to 22,
for every 100 inhabitants, instead of 80, which would be the
number just sufficient for home consumption.
The other great law established is, that cattle are moved to the
eastward and capital to the ivestward, to supply the increasing
demands of the deficient sections.
The distribution of cattle in the United States, in 1840, divided
into three classes, was as follows, viz. : — in that section of the
United States east of Chesapeake Bay, the Potomac River, and
the western boundary of Pennsylvania, there were less than 80
neat cattle to every 100 inhabitants. Tliis may be called the
minmmm district.
In the district composed of the States of Ohio, North Carolina,
Virginia, Michigan, Iowa, Indiana, South Carolina, Wisconsin,
and New Hampshire, there are from 80 to 100 neat cattle to
every hundred inhabitants. This may be called the medium
district.
In the district including the remaining States there are more
than 100 cattle to every 100 inhabitants. This may be called
the maximum district.
The general law of distribution is thus plainly shown, in 1840.
Beginning on the eastern limit, cattle are found in small num-
bers and go on constantly increasing, until we find the West has
three times as many cattle as the East, the smallest ratio being
in Rhode Island and Massachusetts, and the largest, nearly six
times as great, being in Florida and Arkansas.
During the next decade, ending in 1850, we find the bounda-
ries of our three classes much changed. The western limit of
the minimum class has moved far westward. Instead of the
terminus of the Potomac and the Monongahela, its western
boundary has been carried forward, so as to include North Car-
olina, Virginia, Ohio, Michigan, Wisconsin, Iowa, Minnesota,
Indiana, Kentucky, and Tennessee. In ten years the line of
minimum production has made a westward advance of at least
500 miles.
Alabama and New Hampshire now alone constitute the
medium class.
The maximum class, with the loss of Alabama, occupy the
same area as in 1840, but those States east of the Mississippi
DISTRIBUTION OF CATTLE. 163
have depreciated from an average of 145 per cent, in 1840, to
115 per cent, in 1850 ; while tliose west of that river have
increased their ratio from 131 per cent, in 1840, to 159 per
cent, in 1850. Texas stands at the head of the list, having 438
cattle to every 100 oi its inhabitants.
During the decade, ending in 1860, the minimum class remains
nearly the same. South Carolina, which had risen to the max-
imum class in 1850, is included in this class, while Indiana has
risen to the medium class, furnishing 87 per cent.
The medium class now contains many States which in 1850,
were allocated with the maximum class. Alabama, Georgia,
Illinois, Indiana, Kansas, Mississippi, Missouri, and New Hamp-
shire, now contain from 80 to 100 per cent. During this decade,
of all these States, Indiana alone has made an increase, rising
from 72 to 87 per cent.
The maximum class now numbers but two States east of the
Mississippi — Florida and Vermont. The States of Texas, Ore-
gon, California, Arkansas, and Kansas, Washington, Nebraska,
and the other territories now compose this class.
Thus we see the supply of cattle in the South-West is much
larger than in the middle or eastern portion of tlie country ;
and although the southern States are better supplied than the
northern, still their future and main reliance must be on Texas.
This accounts for the tenacity with which the rebels have held
on to that State. From the facts above stated, the two general
laws, are, we think, plainly shown.
1. That, taking all the States into the account, every 100
inhabitants require 80 neat cattle ; of which 8 must be working,
oxen, 28 milch cows, and 44 other cattle. The fact that this
ratio has not varied one per cent, for 30 years, settles the fact of
its very close approximation to the truth.
2. That cattle are moving eastward, and capital ivestward^
But all general laws of this kind are subject to modifications by
disturbing forces. In the present instance the cattle on the
Pacific slope, as well as most of the cattle in Texas, should be
excluded, in considering the question of demand and supply of
individual States, for the reasons that the cattle west of the
Rocky Mountains are isolated from the United States proper,
and most of those in Texas are not sufficiently domesticated to
be driven east in any great numbers. In discussing the ques-
164
MASSACHUSETTS AGRICULTURE.
tion of demand and supply, or the movement of neat cattle,
Texas, and the section west of the Rocky Mountains, should be
omitted.
This done, we find the ratio between neat cattle and the pop-
ulation as 68 to 100 ; that is, there will*be 68 cattle, to every
100 inhabitants. All those States, therefore, which have more
than 68 cattle to every 100 inhabitants, have a surplus for
export, while those having less than 68, have a deficiency to be
provided for.
The following tables are computed on the basis of 68 per cent,
for local use, and will show where the excesses and deficiencies
exist, and whence the movement of cattle must be to satisfy the
demand.
Table I.
Showing the nuniber of cattle to each one hundred people in those States
where there was an excess over the requisite number, sixty-eight, required
for home consimiption and use, in the years 1840, 1850 and 1860 ;
also the total number for exportation in each State.
Number of cattle more than
Total No. of
required for liome use.
cattle for ex-
STATES.
1
portation in
1S4^0. 1850.
1S60.
1860.
iFlorida,
149
231
206
289,275
Arkansas,
126
71
58
252,561
Vermont, .
67
44
47
148,096
l^ebraska,
—
—
32
9,228
Utah,
-
43
32
12,887
Missouri, .
. 45
48
30
354,603
Georgia, .
59
53
27
285,467
Mississippi,
98
53
22
174,087
Indiana, .
22
4
19
256,581
Illinois,
72
39
19
325,270
Alabama, .
45
26
13
125,346
New Hampshire,
29
16
13
42,389
Kansas, .
-
-
13
13,936
Iowa,
20
3
11
74,234
Louisiana,
40
43
5
35,400
Kentucky,
33
9
4
46,227
South Carolina,
28
48
4
28,148
Michigan,
19
1
3
22,473
Ohio,
12
1
2
46,790
North Carolina,
14
12
1
9,926
Total excess,
»
•
-
-
-
2,552,934
DISTRIBUTION OF Cx\.TTLE.
165
Table II.
Showing the number of cattle on hand and the deficiencies to each one
hundred people in the several States, and also the total deficiency in
each of the several States, in 18 GO.
No. of cattle
Additional
STATES.
on hand.
No. required.
Total deficiency.
Minnesota,
68
_
_
Tennessee,
68
—
—
Wisconsin, .
66
2
15,517
Virginia, .
65
3
47,889
Maine,
59
9
56,545
Delaware, .
51
17
19,676
New York,
50
18
698,032
Connecticut,
48
20
92,029
Pennsylvania,
48
20
581,223
Dakotah, .
38
30
772
Maryland, .
37
31
212,985
New Jersey,
24
44
265,695
Rhode Island,
22
46
80,325
Massachusetts,
22
46
566,262
District of Columbia,
1
. 67
50,303
Total defi
cienc_
y^
•
-
-
2,687,153
From these tables it will be seen, that, in New England, there
is a deficiency, falling short of the use and consumption of its
inhabitants, of 594,676 neat cattle, to be furnished from other
quarters. In Massachusetts, 566,362 ; being more than in one-
fifth of the total deficiency. In the Middle States, there is a
deficiency of 1,564,526 ; in Maryland, 212,985, and which, added
to the deficiency in New England, gives a total net deficit of
2,372,187 neat cattle in the States east of Ohio.
From the tivo great facts — 1st, that the number of neat cattle,
required for every 100 of the population, has not varied a single
per cent, for the last thirty years ; and 2d — that the movement
of cattle has constantly been ivestward, and that the deficit,
east of Ohio, has been as constantly increasing, it is plainly to
be seen that Massachusetts, with a deficit of over half a millibn,
has a deep and vital interest in the practical questions involved
in these astounding revelations.
In peace as in war, the farther we are from our base of sup-
plies the more they will cost. As the supply of neat cattle
travels westward, the cost will be increased by the increased
166 MASSACHUSETTS AGRICULTURE.
charges of transportation and the extra profits paid to middle
men. The prime cost, for some years to come, at least, will also
be largely increased by the short supply consequent upon the
ravages of war, and the interruj)tion of agricultural operations
in the rebel States. At the opening of the rebellion the south-
western States were overstocked, but, at the present time, we
cannot doubt that those States now fall far below the average
number required for every 100 of its inhabitants, and, conse-
quently, were there no interruption to transportation, would
have none to export. For years to come, beef, butter, cheese
and milk will command high prices, and especially in those
sections where there is the greatest deficiency of these products.
What will the farmers of Massachusetts do ? They must
make up their minds to do one of two things. Either to sit
down under the high prices that will rule for an indefinite
period, or, by increasing their stock, enter into competition with
the western stock raiser for the hoine market. No one, we
think, can doubt that, while our State lacks 46 neat cattle to'
supply the wants of every 100 of her inhabitants, it can be
otherwise than profitable to enter into the business of cattle
raising. It will be a long time, we fear, before beef and the
products of the dairy will come down to the quotations of the
prices current of three years ago.
There is breadth enough of unclaimed swamps and abused
pasture in Massachusetts, we believe, to support, and without
detriment to its broad acres of tillage and grass land, all the
cattle necessary to supply the wants of all its inhabitants. To
accomplish this desirable, and, without any manner of doubt,
profitable result, there must be more labor and more manure.
With the great and increasing influx of a vigorous and hardy
immigration, the farmer can supply himself with all the labor
he needs, and by renewed and intelligent husbandry, increase
the quantity and quality of his fertilizers to the full measure of
his wants.
We have little doubt that the discovery and verification of the
two laws governing the " distribution and movement of cattle
in the United States," will lead to a greatly improved condition
of agriculture, especially in New England.
INDEX
TO THE ABSTEACT.
Page.
Agriculture and Art, address on, 1, 8, 17
Agriculture, the interests of, 20
Apples, reports on, 140, 141
Application of manures, 76
Ayrshires, qualities of, 96, 98, 99, 103, 109
Beets, 91
Bird, S. B., statement on poultry, 139
Boutwell, George S., remarks on sheep, 117
Bread, reports on, 155, 158
Cattle, training of, 39, 41
Cattle, breeding of, 95,97,102,110
Cattle, distribution of, 161, 164, 166
Corn, 57, 89
Cows, reports on, 92, 95, 98
Cranberries, 56, 57
Crops, table of, 01, 64
Dairy, 92,94
Davis, A. B., address by, 38
Derby farm, experiment of the, 45, 47
Diseases of poultry, 137
Dogs or Sheep, 124
Distribution of cattle in the United States, 161, 164, 166
Draining, 31
Education of the ox, 38, 39
Farms, reports on, 45, 47, 51, 55
Felch, I. K., statement on poultry, 137
Fisher, Dr. J., report on vineyards, 82, 87
Fruits, report on, 140, 141, 143
Goodwin, John A., address by, 20, 26, 28
Grain crops 88, 90
Grape, culture of the, 78, 82, 84
Grape, the Concord, 82, 86, 87
Horses, report on, 48, 113, 115
Insects, methods of destroying certain, 137, 141, 143
Industrial arts, 1
168 INDEX.
Page.
Jerseys, herds of, . . . . ' 104, 106, 109
Leonard, Spencer, Jr., statement of, . . ' 76
Manuring, means of, 22, 23, 59, 65
Manures, management of, 35, 48, 58, 65, 68, 76
Manures, experiments with, 59, 61, 65, 67, 09, 71, 77
Massachusetts Society's report, 58, 60
Milch cows, 92,95,98,104,105,106,108
" Natives," origin of the, 96
Ox, education of the, 38
Oxford Downs, introduction of, . . . . . . . . • . 119, 121
Pasture lands, renovation of, 125, 126
Pears, report on, 143
Plymouth, experiments on manures, 68, 71
Poultry, essay on, ■ . 128
Poultry house, 134
Poultry, statement of I. K. Felch, 137
Poultry, statement of S. B. Bird, 139
Roots and vegetables, 90
Roup in fowls, 137
Rye, 89
Samuels, E. A., essay on poultry, . 128
Seed beds, how formed, '49
Sewerage of towns, utilizing the, 16,17
Soil of New England, essay on, 29, 31
Sowing seed, time of, 49
Stock, improvement of, 96, 124
Stock, feeding of, 98, 99, 101, 103
Sheep husbandry, 117
Sheep, cost of keeping, 122, 123
Tobacco, culture of, 56
Thurston, C, report on vineyards, 78, 81
Vineyards, planting of, 78, 81, 82, 84
Vegetables, 90
•
Ware, B. P., statement of, 65, 67
Ware, Darwin E., address by, 1
Wheat, winter, 88
Whip, best for use, 43
Works, George F., essay by, 29