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JOURNAL OF AGEICULTURE.
Vol. VII. JANUARY, 1859. No. 4.
AGRICULTURAL EXHIBITIONS OF 1859.
[The following' sketch of the Exhibitions of 1859, has been compiled from the original
or published accounts sent by Secretaries, and from such other sources as were accessible.
Had there been a more general compliance with the requests for information, in the
April, July, and October numbers of the Journal^ this account would have been fuller
and more accurate. The best use has been made of what facts could be obtained.]
ALABAMA.
The State Agricultural Society, — organized January 10, 1855,
and chartered February 14, 1856, — held its fifth annual exhibition
at its grounds near Montgomeiy. These grounds are about thirty
acres in extent, and cost, with the buildings and fixtures, nearly
$17,000, of which $2,100 was for the land. They are situated on
the bank of the Alabama river, and the Society offered a premium
of $50 for the best steamboat exhibited. Premiums of $50 for the
best cotton-gin and of $30 for the best Alabama made gin were
awarded after careful tests, for which there is a gin-house, with
fixtures for pressing and baling cotton. The highest premium for
horses, which were exhibited in a spacious amphitheatre, was $30 —
for cattle, $20. Almost every article grown, produced, or manu-
factured in the State, appeared in the premium list, and the accom-
plished Secretary', Dr. N. B. Cloud, paid especial attention to the
Ladies' Departments.
The exhibition is described as having been a glorious display of
the progress and the position of the stock-raisers, the horticulturists,
the mechanics, and the industrious fair-ones of Alabama. Nothing
attracted more attention than a herd of camels, which it is thought
will be preferable to mules for plantation work, being a procreating
animal, of more power and greater longevity, and subsisting on
cheaper food. Several were sold at prices ranging from $200 to
$400. Other stock was sold at auction, bringing good prices.
LOCAL EXHIBITIONS IN ALABAMA.
The North Alabama Agricultural and Mechanical Association
held its exhibition October 19-22, at its fine grounds near Decatur,
where there was a large display of fine stock, superb fruit, and valu-
able agricultural products. Tennessee valley society at Tuseumbia,
36
286 Secretary's Report on the
October 26-29. West Alabama Agricultural society at Demopolis,
JSTovember 1-4, embracing the products of the fertile countries on
the Tombigbee and Warrior rivers.
ARKAl^SAS.
There are as yet no State and but few county societies in Arkansas.
The Clark county society held its annual exhibition ; that of the
Washington county society was at Fayetteville in October.
CALIFORNIA.
The State Agricultural Society, — organized and chartered in May,
1854, — held its sixth annual exhibition at Sacramento, September
13-23. A large and permanent pavilion was erected in the city,
and not very far distant were the grounds, with an amphitheatre
and every convenience for exhibitors. The State makes an annual
appropriation of $5,000 to be paid out in premiums. The largest
premiums oiFered were : $200 for the best grain farm, over 1,000
acres ; $75 for horses ; $50 for short-horned bulls ; $20 for bucks.
Many of the premiums were plate and medals, with flags and swords
for the best drilled companies, and trumpets for firemen. Exhibitors
of implements and machines had to put on their labels their names,
and the prices which they asked for each article.
The display of horses, cattle, sheep, and jacks was good, and
showed the efiect produced by the introduction of blooded stock,
some of which was on the ground. The young cattle were nearly
twice the size of animals of the same age in the Atlantic States,
and as animals can live out of doors without being fed all the year
round, subsisting on the wild grasses, California cannot fail to
become a great stock-raising country. The fruits, vegetables, and
cereals were of marvellous size and beauty — there were stalks of
corn twenty feet high, with full ears sixteen inches long; a cabbage
weighing fifty-three pounds, and a beet (two years old) weighing
one hundred and fifteen pounds. Of dairy products, the most re-
markable were two cheeses, weighing seven hundred and seven
hundred and fifty pounds — the larger the product of one dairy in
two days. Probably the most valuable article on exhibition peculiar
to California, was a gold bar, weighing 150 lbs. avoirdupois, and
valued at a little over $41,000. It was only to be seen during the
first week, as it went out to the States on the last steamer. The
shape and size of this bar was about that of a common brick, except
perhaps that it was somewhat thicker.
Agricultural Exhibitions of 1859. 287
The large yield of 2,00G bushels of wheat was obtained from thirty
acres this year, by R. F. Peckham, of the Pajaro Valley, Monterey
county.
LOCAL EXHIBITIONS IN CALIFORNIA.
The Northern District Society held its first exhibition at Marys-
ville, August 30-September 3. Alameda county society, first ex-
hibition at its own grounds in Oakland, October 4-14. Contra
Costa society at Martinez, October 12. Santa Clara valley society,
third annual exhibition, at San Jose, September 18-21, a premium
of |500 was oflered for the best trotter, and another of $200 for
the best trotting stallion. Sonoma county society, first annual
exhibition, at Healdsburg.
CONNECTICUT.
The State Agricultural Society, — organized and chartered in June,
1852, — held its sixth annual exhibition at Brewster Park, near New
Haven, October 11-14. Owing to inclement weather, the two pre-
vious exhibitions of the Societ}^ had proved unremunerative, and
the Legislature had (through a mistaken economy) reduced the
annual appropriation for the present year to $1,600, but by the
exertions of its efficient officers, the debt of the Society had been
paid, and an attractive premium list was offered. The largest pre-
miums were : for the best cultivated farm, not less than one hun-
dred acres, $50 ; do., not less than forty acres, $35 ; for the best
horses and bulls, $20 ; for the best bucks, $8. The executive com-
mittee was sub-divided into committees, having in charge the dif-
ferent classes, with authority to fill vacancies in the boards of judges.
The Park had just been fitted up by a company, at a cost of $25,000,
and was admirably calculated for the exhibition. There were 272
entries of horses and 325 of cattle ; of sheep, swine, and poultry,
210 ; agricultural implements, 161 ; dairy produce, vegetables, &c.,
503 ; household manufactures, 148 ; textile fabrics, 320 ; horticul-
tural, 458 : in all 2,397. Secretary Dyer was of course highly com-
plimented for his unwearied exertions and his excellent business
arrangements.
The displays of horses were very fine, and the trotting matches
elicited loud applause. The cattle, sheep, and swine, of different
breeds were generally worth}^ of commendation ; there was a large
exhibition of poultry, and the implements and domestic manufac-
tures, farm and garden products, and floral displays, were all excellent.
In the evenings there were meetings for the discussion of agri-
288 Secretary's Report on the
cultural topics, at one of which the project of a course of lectures at
ISTew Haven was proposed, and determined upon.
On Friday the President of the society', Hon. Alvan P. Hyde,
delivered the address, which we publish entire, as embodying the
present position of agriculture, — not only in Connecticut, — but
throughout Kew England :
PRESIDENT Hyde's address.
Mr. President and Gentlemen of the Societtj : — The present con-
dition and future prospects of Connecticut Agriculture, is a subject
which has long demanded, and for tlie past lew years has to a con-
siderable extent engaged the serious attention of thinking men in
all parts of our State. To unite and concentrate the eflbrts of the
friends of agricultural improvement, was the main object which led
to the formation of the Society. It was hoped that a central or-
ganization, acting in harmon}' with the auxiliary local societies, by
bringing together men of kindred minds from the different counties,
who were earnestly engaged in the same enterprise — thus forming
an opportunity for interchange of opinions and facts, and a com-
parison of results — would tend to produce uniformity in our efforts ;
would stimulate and encourage those already interested, while it
would awaken a spirit of emulation and inquiry among our citizens
generally. That these hopes were not in vain, that the time and
money which have been devoted to this object have not been mis-
spent— the Exhibition of this year fully proves. When we remem-
ber that this is but the sixth exhibition of our Society — that it has
received little encouragement in the wa}'^ of pecuniary assistance
at the hands of our State Legislature, and that whatever has been
done, has been accomplished solely by the energy and public spirit
of the officers and members of the Society — well may we be proud
of the success that has crowned our efforts.
But the evidence of the good effects which have resulted from
the organization of agricultural societies amongst us, is not confined
to the quality and variety of the articles exhibited on these grounds.
It is to be found in almost every section of our State, in the evident
improvement of farms, farm-buildings and fences, in increased crops,
in the character and quality of the stock that is raised, as well as in
the productions of the garden and orchard. Within the last few
years, there has been a visible change for the better in Connecticut
husbandry, and this is due in a great measure to the increased
interest which has been awakened in the minds of our citizens
through the operations of these Societies. I trust that this first step
which our State has taken, is to be followed by a rapid progress in
the same direction.
There is no State in our Union whose agricultural interests re-
quire to be fostered aud encouraged more than our own, for in none
have they been more sadly neglected. Tliat the system of cultiva-
tion pursued by our fathers in New England was vicious — I mean
by reason of its efl'ects upon the present generation — is universally
Agricultural Exhibitions of 1859. 289
aclmitted. Yet they adopted it, not from any want of intelligence,
or because they did not understand their own immediate interest,
and they persisted in it not from any lack of enterprise. The results
they accomplished in other fields of labor, forbid that we should
accuse them of either ignorance or folly. Its adoption was the
natural consequence of the situation iu which they were placed.
They found here a vast territory, made rich and fertile by nature,
ready for their occupation. To produce plentiful crops it needed no
fertilizing; all that was required was to plough the ground, sow the
grain, and reap the harvest. To accomplish this, there was little de-
mand for energy or enterprise, and it required but little labor or
skill, and but a slight investment of capital to produce food suffi-
cient for their wants. They found it more profitable to remove to
other lands, than to attempt to renew the fertility of their old fields,
when their strength had once been exhausted by crops. To them,
land w^as the cheapest of all property, as it is to-day, in some
portions of our country, so cheap that its fertility scarce adds to its
marketable value.
While agriculture thus naturally became in the estimation of our
fathers a matter of secondary importance, all the other wants of the
inhabitants of this country, the necessaries, the comforts, the lux-
uries which civilized society requires, were either to be supplied
here by their enterprise and skill, or transported from distant
countries. In these departments of industry there was an imme-
diate urgent, pressing demand for the exercise of all their intelli-
gence, energies, and capital, and that too with the promise that
their success should be most liberally rewarded. Hence it is that
iu New England, especially, manufactures and commerce have ever
been the favorite pursuits of our people, and have also been the
most remunerative. In these, New England fortunes have been
made, and in these chiefly, New England capital has been employed.
With her innumerable streams of pure and never-failing water,
less affected by freshets or drought than in any other portion of our
country, furnishing a cheap and constant motive power for mills,
and manufactories in almost every valley, and Avith her extensive
sea-board containing numerous and safe harbors, easy of access
both by sea and land. New England possesses natural facilities for
engaging in manufacturing and commercial pursuits unequalled in
any part of the globe ; and if we bear in mind the fact that the
investment of capital and the application of labor are always con-
trolled by the prospect of a profitable return, we can hardly be sur-
prised that our fathers devoted their constant and increasing efforts
to the development and improvement of these natural and peculiar
advantages to the neglect of their agricultural interests.
Under these circumstances the system of cultivation they adopted
was that of depletion, impoverishment, and abandonment.
Connecticut is one of our oldest States, and like most of the old
States was early subjected to this exhausting process. A large pro-
portion of the surface of our State has been thus treated. And often-
times the fathers and more frequently their sons, who have chosen
290 Secretary's Report on the
to follow the occupation of their fathers, have left the old worn-out
fields, turned their backs on the old homestead, and emigrated to
other States, where the land was richer and had not been cursed
by a vicious system of cultivation. Those sons of Connecticut are
now scattered through every State, from our western border to
Minnesota. While the causes which produced this state of things
continued to prevail until a very recent period, it would have been
idle for us to anticipate that capital could be diverted to any con-
siderable extent from the channels in which it was employed to be
applied to the improvement of our land; and until within a few
years past, no serious effort was made to stop this growing evil, for
no absolute necessity required it. The decrease in our own produc-
tion, as well as the increased demand occasioned by our increase of
population, were readily supplied from other States, and at reason-
able cost. So long as sufficient food could be furnished us at a
moderate expense, there was no necessity that other branches of
industry should languish or their progress be materially retarded.
Isov have they done so ; from 1840 to 1850 our population in-
creased about 20 per cent, though our agricultural productions ma-
terially decreased during the same period. Our next census will
doubtless show that our increase in population during the past ten
years has been equal to that of the ten years immediately preced-
ing, though I trust it will also show that we have to some extent at
least increased our means of supporting them. Connecticut is
rich and prosperous to-day compared with our sister States. The
attention of our citizens has been directed to other pursuits to the
neglect of this the most important of all, and their energy and en-
terprise have made us rich and prosperous as we are in spite of this
neglect. But it must be evident to all, that our progress would
have been much more rapid and satisfactory to ourselves had the
money which has been sent abroad for the purchase of food for our
own use, been paid out to the farmers of our own State, and by
them been expended in improving their farms. I believe that
during the last twenty-five years, money enough has been paid to
other States by citizens of Connecticut, for this purpose alone,
which, if it had been expended in the improvement of our own land,
not only would have enabled us at the present time to produce
enough for the support of all our inhabitants, but also leave a large
surplus for exportation ; and j^et the soil of our State is so poorly
cultivated, notwithstanding the improvements that have been made
during the past few years, that if we were to be deprived of the
supplies of food we are constantly receiving from other States, a
famine would prevail throughout our borders.
For several years it has been apparent that we could not always
depend upon these new States, and that we must increase the pro-
duction of food at home, or cease to grow in wealth and population.
Every year the sources of our supplies are being removed farther
and farther from us. To the original cost paid to the producer, wc
are obliged to add the expense of transportation to our doors.
Already the price of certain articles of daily consumption has been
Agricultural Uxhibitions of 1859. 291
seriously enhanced ; and I can see no good reason why all others
must not soon follow in their wake. Heretofore the western
farmer has been able to obtain his land for a nominal sum, and of
such extraordinary fertility that large crops could be raised with
little outlay of capital or labor. New inventions in agricultural
implements and machinery facilitating the planting, reaping and
threshing of grain, have enabled one man to perform the work
which before required the labor of many. Under these circum-
stances, he could afford to sell his products so low that the eastern
farmer could not hope to compete with him. Having no home
market, he has been ready to sell at whatever price he could get.
Competing lines of railroads, steamboats and canals, established by
eastern capital, have been willing to transport his products to an
eastern market at rates ruinous to themselves. These causes com-
bined have supplied us with our grain at such moderate prices that
we seemed to forget that there was any necessity of our attempting
to raise our own, or any danger that it would not always last. But
it cannot last. The limits of this fertile territory have alreadj'been
reached, and it is being rapidly filled by the ceaseless tide of emi-
grants, from the east and the old world, who are there establishing
their homes. The barren hills and plains beyond the Mississippi
dam up this tide and turn it back upon itself. ISTot only are our
eastern cities, towns and villages rapidly growing — thus increasing
the demand by the increased consumption — but manufacturing
villages, large towns and populous cities are daily springing up
through our western States, which will soon furnish them with a
market at their own doors. In addition to this, the same system
of farming that our fathers practiced here is now being employed
in the west on a gigantic scale. If the present system is continued,
their steam plows, reaping and threshing machines, must exhaust
their soil with a rapidity that will speedily reduce it to a level with
that of many of our oldest States; and it doubtless will be continued
till the western farmer shall be able to sell his produce at a price that
will remunerate him for the additional expense he must incur in
restoring to his fields that fertility of which he is now annually
depriving them. With their lands advancing in ]3rice, though
decreasing in intrinsic value, coupled with the necessity of enriching
them with fertilizers, a bushel of grain in Illinois must soon repre-
sent a larger outlay, both of capital and labor, than it has heretofore
done. With a diminishing production and an increased home
demand, it will command a price proportionate to the cost of its
production. The day must soon come when, if we continue to
rely as now upon the west for our supplies, the prices of provisions
will be enhanced to such an extent as will be ruinous to our manu-
factures as well as to all other branches of business in which we are
now engao-ed.
Upon whom then can we rely for our future supplies ? I answer,
upon you, the farmers of Connecticut, and upon you alone. If
Connecticut is to maintain her present position of prosperity, it is
absolutely necessary that the work of agricultural improvement
292 Secretary s Report on the
which has been commenced, shall be pressed forward until Con-
necticut agriculturists shall stand as high as Connecticut manufac-
turers now stand. Our capitalists, merchants and manufacturers —
all classes of society — are immediately and directly interested in
this result, and are bound, as they value their own personal pros-
perit}^ to furnish all the aid in their power and to countenance and
encourage every measure which will tend to hasten our progress in
this direction.
Aside from the fact that it will eventually become a matter of
necessity that our State shall raise a sufficient quantity of those
products congenial to our soil and climate to supply the wants of
our own inhabitants, there are other considerations whieh render
it important that as a State we should offer every encouragement
to this branch of industry. It is far better for us as a community
that our population should be scattered over our whole territory,
and a reasonable proportion be engaged in tilling the soil, than
that they should be congregated in cities and large villages, and our
country towns be comparatively deserted. Although man is asocial
being, it by no means follows that the crowded workshop or the
thronged street is best calculated for his mental, moral, or physical
development. Complete physical development is oftenest found in
the green fields and pure air of the country. When deprived of
these, men physically degenerate. The mental and physical char-
acter of the inhabitants of our cities would rapidly deteriorate were
it not that they are strengthened and invigorated by the constant
recruits they are drawing from the country. There is ever flowing
from the country to the city a stead}' stream of young men, who,
dazzled by visions of future wealth and honor, forsake the honest
callings of their fathers for the trials, struggles, and temptations of
a city life. There is also a counter current flowing back again,
though less in extent, and consisting in a good measure of men
who, enfeebled by confinement or overtaken by a premature old
age, seek in the quiet seclusion and pure atmosphere of the country
that health and happiness thej' have failed to find in the city.
So, too, men degenerate morally when congregated in large
bodies, for th'en vice and crime find countenance and encouragement.
Human infirmity, like many kinds of disease, is exceedingly conta-
gious. The seeds of moral disease planted in us by Nature need
but a polluted moral atmosphere to cause them to spring into active
life. The gambling saloons, brothels, and other dens of infamy
with which our cities and large villages abound, are the running
sores where this festering depravity breaks out, contaminating and
polluting all who approach them. It is true that bad men are to
be found in the country as well as in the citj- ; but isolated as they
are, without the encouragement or protection of those who sympa-
thize with them, and with the finger of scorn pointed at them in
the community in which they live, their example seems rather as a
warning than a temptation to others.
Mr. President: The work in which you and the other friends of
this Society are engaged — the attempt to raise Connecticut hus-
Agricultural Exhibitions of 1859. 293
bandiy to its proper level, and to fully develop the capacity of our
soil to reward labor — is one wliicli it will require much time and
efibrt to accomplish. The seed you have sown has butjust begun to
sprout, and must be cherished and nourished with exceediug care
if we wonld reap a harvest of success in the future. Farmers are
proverbially slow to change, and arc peculiarly jealous of all attempts
at innovation. They are too apt to look upon their occupation as
a mere art, handed down to them from their fathers in its perfec-
tion, and in which there is nothing to be learned except the mere
manual skill to perform its labor.
What we are most in need of is a better agricultural education —
an education which shall enable us not merely to understand
mechanical rules and established practices, but the reasons upon
which those rules and practices are founded.
Labor is the chief source of national and individual wealth ; and
the more intelligence we can infuse into it, the greater will be the
returns it will make. Science has contributed greatly to the
improvement of every art and branch of industry which administers
to the wants of man ; and there is no art which for its prosperity
and success is more indebted to science than that of agriculture,
and none which more earnestly demands its assistance in the future.
Farming must be reduced to a regular system, so that, like law,
medicine and mechanics, it may be studied by those who would
engage in it, both practicallj" and theoretically. It must be inter-
woven with our system of education, and taught as a distinct branch
of study in our schools. No good reason can be given wdiy the
same course should not be pursued by one who desires to excel as
a farmer as is pursued by the lawyer, physician, or mechanic. Why,
before he undertakes the management of a farm, with its compli-
cated duties and interests, should he not become thoroughly
acquainted with the principles of his profession, and with those
natural laws upo^ whose operations his success wholly depends ?
I by no means intend to disparage the importance of practical
knowledge and personal experience in an art so practical as this.
Without these, the knowledge acquired in schools would be of
little use. Yet a knowledge of the constituent parts of the soils he
wishes to cultivate, of their combinations, and the elements of fer-
tility they may lack, of the chemical composition of the plants he
wishes to raise, of their habits and the food they require, with the
same personal experience, must give its possessor a great advantage
over those less informed — not only in guarding agaftist failure in
the ordinary operations of the farm, but especially in enabling him
to devise and adopt new and improved modes of culture. That
knowledge is power, is as true here as it is everywhere.
Nor is it in schools alone that the education requisite to success
can be acquired. Our country abounds in agricultural treatises and
periodicals, placing within the reach of every farmer the means of
acquainting himself with everything which science has discovered
or experience has taught. So, too, the operations of a society like
this ai'e of the highest importance as a means of disseminating valu-
37
294 Secretary's Report on the
able inforiuatiorijby exhibiting the practical results of difFereut
systems of cultivation, new varieties of seeds and plants, and the
various kinds of stocks and horses that are daily being introduced.
This is eminently a practical age as well as an age of progress.
The duty which men of learning and science owe to society to
reduce their knowledge to practical rules, so that they may be
grasped and used by their fellow-men, is fully felt and acknowledged.
It is now a conceded fact that there is no law of nature which, when
once discovered and understood, cannot be made of practical use to
mankind. Men of science may pursue their investigation in the
seclusion of their own laboratories while searching out some new
and hidden law of nature, but they receive little credit till they
also show how it may be made available in promoting the welfare
of their fellow-men. When this is done, we pronounce them bene-
factors of our race. And to-day that curious provision of nature
which causes the seed to sprout and the plant to grow — the laws
that govern the growth and nourishment of plants and animals —
the wants and fitness of difl'erent kinds of grain, and the composition
and relative value of different kinds of manure, are receiving the
constant and, I might almost say, the immediate attention of some
of our most learned and skillful chemists. As they publish their
discoveries to the world, the value of their suggestions are being
tested by practical farmers who have exhibited to us the results of
their experiments, so that all may see and know their value, and
follow such as are worth following.
I know it is sometimes claimed that book-farming, as it is called,
does not always pay ; that those who adopt it and attempt to con-
duct their farming upon scientific principles have a propensity to
try new experiments, and oftentimes with serious loss to themselves.
That this is frequently so, I do not doubt, nor would I have it
otherwise. Most of the improvements that have been introduced
in the useful arts during the last century, have been the result of
experiments ; and if no experiment was ever tried till we were sure
of a favorable result, our progress would be slow indeed. It seems
to be a law established by our Creator, that all human progress shall
be gained at the expense of individual sacrifices. It has long been
truly said, that " the blood of the Martyrs is the seed of the church,"
and we know that in all ages the tree of liberty has been most
bountifully watered by the blood of patriots. This same law holds
true in relation to our progress in the peaceful arts and sciences.
The history oMhe past is replete with instances where the promul-
gation of the discovery of some new law of nature has brought its
author to poverty and disgrace, and sometimes even has subjected
him to personal danger and imprisonment; when inventors have
died in poverty and neglect, while their inventions have added
greatly to the wealth and prosperity of those who have succeeded
them. But agricultural experiments generally require little outlay
of capital and seldom entail a serious loss. They are more easily
and readily made than any other art, and even when they are a
failure, our labor is not wholly lost.
Agricultural Exhibitions of 1859. 295
Human knowledge is the result of the lesson taught by human
experience, and oftentimes the lessons taught by our failures are of
more value than those to be learned from our successes. Those
men possessed of wealth and education, who are devoting their
money, time and energies to this work, merit all honor and praise
at our hands. They are attempting to elevate and improve that
art which is the mother of all other callings and professions; the
one upon which they all rest and depend for existence 4 the one
which, as it is the oldest of all human employments, is the most
honorable of them all. One of the highest auguries of our future
success is to be found in the fact, that the jealousies of our farmers
are gradually falling away before the light of science. They are
beginning to appreciate the value of the information to be acquired
in our scientific schools that are being established among us ; tbey
are awakening to a sense of the dignity and importance of their
calling, and are more ready to receive and act upon any suggestion
that promises to improve their condition, or to render their business
more profitable or more honorable.
It is only by directing all our enterprise and intelligence actively
and earnestly to this work, with the advantage of all the helps
which science and experience can furnish us, that we can renovate
the agincultural interests of our State. Our hills are steep, and
rough, and rocky, and much of the best of their soil has been washed
into the valleys, and the riches of which they have been robbed,
for the most part, there lie unused and unproductive in the swales,
and swamps, and marshes, with which our State abounds. We
must restore to our hillsides the elements of fertility of which they
have been deprived, while these swales, and swamps, and marshes
are to be reclaimed, and made the best of all lands by thorough
underdraining and careful tillage. In this way, these waste places
may be made to produce abundant crops of the best of English
grasses, and the rocks upon our hills will be fringed with rich pas-
turage and surrounded by luxuriant fields of grain.
It is true this will require us to invest capital liberally upon our
land in addition to the first cost of the land itself; but does not
every other kind of business demand our whole time and attention,
and the continual investment of capital to make it profitable ? The
manufacturer is daily expending his income in replenishing his stock
of raw material, in supplying the place of his worn-out machinery
with new, and in adding to his establishment every new invention
and improvement calculated to increase the quantity or improve
the quality of his productions; otherwise his career would soon end
in bankruptcy and ruin. The capital of a farmer invested in his
farm is of two kinds — his land and its fertility. Fertility is his
floating working capital, and bears the same relation to his land as
the goods of the merchant do to the store that contains them, or
the machinery of the manufacturer to his mill. The manufacturer
who should refuse to repair or replace his machinery, as it becomes
old and worn-out, would soon find his mill would not pay for run-
ning ; and the merchant who should neglect to replenish his stock
298 Secretary 8 Rej^ort on the
of goods, would soon find his store with its empty shelves not worth
the tending: and a man who would so conduct himself would be
regarded as one who needed the care and supervision of a conserva-
tor. Yet there are many men, even now, who yearly and system-
atically convert everything they can spare from their farms into
money, and return no part of it in the shape of fertilizers. Such
men are robbing their business of its active working-capital, and
their land soon becomes like the mill with its machiner}' worn out,
or like tne store with its empty shelves ; the bushes encroach on
the fields ; the fences fall to decay ; the buildings are suftered to
get out of repair; and the sons and daughters are but too glad to
turn their backs on so unpromising a spot.
I verily believe that if our farmers would as freely invest capital
in improving their farms and would direct as much care and atten-
tion to their management as is done by our other citizens in the
management of their business, they would, taking one year with
another, receive better interest on their investments than is obtained
by either our merchants or manufacturers; that the man who has an
hundred acres of land from which he can now glean but a bare sus-
tenance, woukl get a far better return for his capital and his labor
if he would sell one-half and carefully invest the proceeds in enrich-
ing and improving the remainder.
Let us clear up, new-fence, and fertilize the old fields; introduce
stock of which we may be proud for their beauty as well as their
value; repair the buildings, and surround them with shade trees;
fill the garden and orchard with fruit, and the yard with flowers;
make the farm more attractive as well as productive; in a word,
make the old homestead what it ought to be — a home in fact ; a
place around which the aflections of the family will cluster; a place
to be admired and not to be despised, and we will hear less of emi-
grating to other States, and there will be fewer vacant seats around
the family board at our Thanksgiving gatherings. The man who
pursues this course, not only has his capital invested in his business,
but he' is beyond the reach of all commercial convulsions, and has
no need to fear a financial crisis. lie has his money invested in a
bank which will honor all his drafts ; if he properly presents them
at seed-time they will be duly accepted, and at the harvest fully
paid. He is acquiring an inheritance for his children far better
than any money or any stocks he can leave them.
Though we are now compelled to struggle with a hard and re-
luctant soil, our location is not without its advantages. "We are
blessed with pure air, pure water, and a healthy clinuite. Along
the streams in our valleys are clustered manufacturing villages
which furnish us with the best of a home market at our very doors.
It is through our manufacturers alone that we are able to draw
wealth from other States to our own, for there is scarce anything
else than their productions which we send about to sell. They are
causing a constant golden stream to flow in upon us, which is com-
pelled almost as constantly to flow out again to purchase the food
they need. If our agriculturists will do what they ought and most
Agricultural Exliihitions of 1859, 297
easily can do, and what I hope tliey soon will do — raise from onr
own soil enough to fully supply this home demand — then the out-
ward drain will immediately cease, aud this golden current will be
turned into the pockets of our own citizens, adding rapidly to the
wealth and prosperity of our State.
As a means calculated to exert a powerful influence in excitiug
an interest upon this subject in the minds of our people, and in
liastening the accomplishment of this desirable result, this Society
deserves the active and earnest co-operation, not merely of our
farmers, but of all classes of society. I trust the time will soon
arrive when the annual meetings of this Society shall be looked
upon by every citizen as the great holiday of our State — as a time,
once in every year, when the inhabitants of all our towns shall lay
aside the implements of their daily labor, and leaving behind as un-
worthy of the place and the occasion all sectarian feeling, all party
spirit and all local jealousies, here assemble on common ground to
celebrate the triumphs of our citizens in the peaceful arts — the vic-
tories Connecticut skill and energy have achieved on Connecticut
soil — to celebrate the agricultural independence of our State.
Go\''. Buckingham afterwards addressed the audience, expressing
the pleasure with which he had listened to the address of Mr. Hyde,
especially that portion which urged the importance of an agricul-
tural education for young men.
The Hartford Homestead said that "the State Exhibition passed off
to the great satisfaction of the vast majority connected with it as
managers, exhibitors or visitors. We were blessed with uninter-
rupted fair weather ; and the throngs which visited the fair were
orderly and sober, intelligently observing, and inquiring to an unu-
sual degree. The blank greenness which was so painfully notice-
able both in Hartford and ISTew Haven at the early fairs of the
society is fast giving place to an intelligence which is not the result
of simply being the second or third time at a State fair, but which
is produced by thought upon the topics which a State fair suggests —
thought, too, which has led to reading and conversation, and
resulted in a greatly advanced state of knowledge. This was grati-
fyingly evident to any one who stood to listen to the remarks of
those who passed any class of stock, agricultural implements or
products. In this respect the benefits resulting from these great
exliibitions have been overlooked in a measure. The strife between
stock-breeders and other classes of exhibitors to develop the best
qualities and increase the excellence of their flocks, herds, etc., is a
great benefit, but the use of the exhibition to the masses of the
people, few of whom would otherwise ever raise their ideas above
the common stock of our rural districts, is exceedingly important.
298 Secretary's Report on the
We have never met so orderly and intelligent a class of visitors."
The receipts were stated as over $12,000, leaving a clear profit to
the society of not less than $5,000.
LOCAL EXHIBITIONS IN CONNECTICUT.
There was a Harvest Home Festival at North Canaan on the 9th
of September, at which Rev. Mr. Eldridge delivered an address; a
similar gathering is to take place next year, at which the past, in
its customs, costumes, implements and manners, is to be reproduced,
and Rev. Mr. Eddy is to deliver an historical address. The Union
society held its first exhibition at Fall's Village, September 13-15 ;
Mr. Holley, orator. "Windham county society, seventh annual
exhibition at Brooklyn, September 21-22 ; remarks by Gov. Buck-
ingham. Litchfield county society, at Litchfield, September 21-22.
Fairfield county society, nineteenth annual exhibition, at ISTorwalk,
September 27-30 ; P. T. Barnum, orator. New London county
society, fifth annual exhibition, at Williams' Park, Norwich, Sep-
tember 27-29. Hartford county society, at grounds used in 1858
by State Society, at Hartford, September 20-30; Professor Johnson,
orator. New Britain farmers' club, at New Britain, October b-Q.
Woodbridge and Bethany society, at Woodbridge, October 5. Mid-
dlesex county, (organized in 1840,) at Middletown, October 5-6.
New Milford association, at New Milford, October 5-6. Tolland
county society, sixth annual exhibition, at their grounds near Rock-
ville, October 5-6; Hon. DwightLoomis, orator. Cheshire society,
October 19. West Suflield society, October 20th, and adjourned
until the 21st. Union society, at Hitchcockville, October 26.
DELAWARE.
There is no State Society in Delaware. Exhibitions were held
by the Newcastle county society, organized in 1836, and by the
Kent county society.
GEORGIA.
The Southern Central Agricultural Society — organized in 1846, and
chartered in 1849 — is in fact a State society, owning spacious grounds
at Atlanta, where the annual exhibition was held, October 24-29.
There were five hundred and fifty-eight entries, of which one hun-
dred and fifteen were horses, for which the highest premium was
one of $20 ; the other first premiums, $10 ; sixty-four cattle, for
which the highest premium was $10 ; and six sheep, for which the
highest premium was $10.
The Southern Field and Fireside, (of which Dr. Lee is the agricul-
tural editor,) says: "All of the stalls were filled with a goodly number
Agricultural Exhibitions of 1859. 299
ofDurhamSjDevons and Brahmins, in the cattle line, and with horses,
Morgan, hlooded, and of all work. In the former class was a bull
of antideluvian proportions and of 2,700 pounds. He must have
been fully as large as the brazen animal of the same species in
whose stomach Phallaris confined his prisoners. The most magnifi-
cent stallion on the ground was Sligo, who took the premium, and
who belongs to Mr. McGhee, of Troup. There was much disap-
pointment felt at not hearing the anticipated speech of Hon. Eob't
Toombs. The audience was, however, consoled by the address of
Rev. C. W. Howard, of Cass county, on Friday morning, who,
besides lending his eloquence, contributed some of the finest stock
that was made, to the fair. In the afternoon of the same day there
was an exciting trotting match on the small track within the
enclosure of the fair ground. A small black horse gained ; the
owner we did not learn.
"In the number of visitors and of articles entered there is a large
increase on former years. Our State fairs are still far behind those
of almost every other State ; and until more assistance is given and
interest taken in this exhibition, they are likely to remain so for
some time to come."
LOCAL EXHIBITIONS IN GEORGIA.
The Clark county society — organized in 1859 — held an attractive
exhibition at its grounds near Athens, October 18. Addresses
were delivered by Col. Billups, Rev. C. W. Howard, and Henry
Hull, jr., Esq., the last named gentleman taking the following
practical, business-like view of the necessity for a reform in the
agriculture of the older Southern States :
ADDRESS OF HENRY HULL, JR., ESQ.
How can we use our heritage of exhausted acres in the best and
most profitable manner? Can they be made to sustain a large and
increasing population in prosperity, and is there any practicable
way of restoring these wasted lands to fertility? These are ques-
tions of vital importance to us all, and worthy of our most serious
consideration.
In discussing them, I propose to leave out of view all modes of
applying stimulating manures to growing crops, as necessarily
limited to small quantities of lands, and as not reaching the real
seat of the disease under which our agriculture sufiers. I take it
for granted that every sensible man will save and use all that he
can, in that -way which his own experience and observation, aided
by the experience of others, may prove to be best. But this, at
last, is like giving invigorating cordials in small doses to a man
whose condition absolutely requires a total change of climate and
300 Secretary' s Report on the
habit. It is absolutely necessary to change our whole sj^stem of
culture. I hold that we can no longer aiibrd to make cotton our
sole source of revenue ; and the higher cotton gets, the less we in
Middle Georgia can aiibrd to make it. Paradoxical as this may
seem, it is certainly true, and for this simple reason, that it is a
staple in the production of which the annual value of the land used
is very small, and the value of the labor employed is enormously large,
ISTow observe, that if our slaves were fixtures upon the soil, the
whole question would exhibit different results ; but when the slave
of Clarke county can, in three days time, and at ten dollars cost,
be set to work upon the bottom lands of the Mississippi, where he
can make ten bales of cotton in one year, we can no longer afford
to work the same time and make three hales. The Red river planter
can obviously afford to pay three times as much for that slave as
we can, and the higher cotton gets, the greater is the difference in
profits there and here.
What, then, can we do? The only answer a sane man can give
is, to employ our labor in making cotton only on those lands whose
fertility may justify it, and in making other products on all lands
which will not justify the production of cotton. If you ask what
other things, I answer, all useful products which require in raising
them, less of labor which is so dear, and more of land which is so
cheap. The whole essence of agricultural philosophy for middle
Georgia, is in that one idea.
Bear it in mind, and observe its application, Notice the fact,
that only the land upon which a vast amount of very costly labor is
expended, brings us in one dollar of cash return. All our old fields,
all our woodland, now so scarce and valuable, costs us annually the
taxes for support of the State and county, and yields not one cent
of income.
How we can use these lands profitably, is the real question of
interest.
Cato, the elder, being asked one day what was the best use that
could be made of land, answered : '-^ Good grazing.'' "And what
next?" said the seeker after knowledge. '• Tolerable grazing." "And
what next ?" " Bad grazing.'' " And what next ?" " Tillage," was
the reply. This reply of the renowned Roman Censor, a farmer,
may seem to have more point than wisdom ; but the experience of
all countries where the want of an enormous population makes the
heaviest demands upon the productive power of the soil, fully proves
the truth of the position, that good grazing is, indeed, the most
profitable use of land.
In Scotland and Ireland, where agriculture is brought to great
perfection, out of about eight millions acres of land under cultiva-
tion, four millions were in grass in 1857, (as shown by the reports
of Parliament,) the other four millions divided among the various
grain and root crops. In England, Belgium, and other hinds, where
population is dense, the proportion is as great.
llence, we hastily conclude that a dense population and local
markets are necessary to justify the seeding of good lands to grass.
Agricultural Exhibitions of 1859. 301
But let lis at least open our cj-es to existing facts. The grass of
IS'ew York and the valley of the Connecticut is brought in the con-
centrated form of thousands of pounds of cheese, butter and beef,
and sold to Georgians at remunerating prices.
The grass of Kentucky and Oliio is brought in the shape of thous-
ands of mules and hogs, and millions of our money goes to enrich
the grass-producers there ; and worse than that, even the grass
itself, unconcentrated, in all its natural bulk and weight, raised
upon land worth $200 per acre, is brought by steamboat a thousand
miles, and by the more costly railroad transportation, three hun-
dred miles more up into the hills of Clarke county, where land is
not worth more than $10 per acre, and sold in the streets of Athens
at |30 per ton.
Now, compare the profits of an acre of our best land, (alluvial
creek or branch bottoms,) seeded to grass and planted in cotton,
both in the best way. The acre in grass may be safely estimated
at two tons, (four tons is not unusual in grass countries.) The labor
employed in producing it, was the seeding in the fall, and the
mowing in the summer. The value at prices of this season, $G0.
The acre in cotton might be estimated at 1,000 pounds seed-cotton,
worth at present prices, $30, The labor (that costly element) was
unceasing toil from January to December. The acre in grass is
greatly increased in value. The acre in cotton somewhat diminished!
Now for the second year : On the grass half the labor is not
needed, the yield largely increased, the profit greater. On the cotton,
the same toil for long months is gone through, the yield sensibly
smaller, the profit sensibly less, the land somewhat poorer. But
leaving the subject of " good grazing," or even " tolerable grazing,"
as requiring little argument to establish their claim to high rank in
agricultural investments, let us consider the third head of Cato :
" bad grazing," of which we certainly have enough for the greater
part of the year. For nature, ever kind, ever beneficent, looking
with pitying eye upon the barren wastes left by our destroying pro-
genitors, first casts a mantle of broomsedge and other grasses over
the land, as if to hide its nakedness from the gaze of others, till a
second growth should begin the slow work of restoration.
Of these old fields, we have enough, and they furnish abundant
grazing in spring and summer. We all have and must of necessity
keep some land in original forest. These virgin acres should yield
winter grazing. But, says the unbeliever, there is no grass in the
woods, no matter how rich the soil. I appeal to the older men to
know if, fifty years ago, the woodlands of this country were not cov-
ered with luxuriant native grasses, which fed and fattened the cattle
upon a thousand hills. Do you suppose that the essential elements
of those soils are changed ? Are the rains of Heaven less refresh-
ing? Is the the air less pure, or the sunshine less genial than then ?
Not at all. -What condition of the soil then is changed ? Simply
that when annual burnings kept out the thick undergrowth, and let
in the sun and air, the grasses took possession. Keep out the under-
growth now, and let in the sun and air again, and the woods will
38
302 Secretary's Report on the
again be covered with native grasses, or if seeded properly with
richer and better perennial grasses, green in winter.
Reason and experience in many places in middle Georgia go to
establish the fact, that these grasses can be successfully grown upon
our original forest land and on our best open land, and if so, horses
and mules, and hogs, cattle, and sheep, with all their valuable pro-
ducts, can be profitably reared in Georgia.
The prices of horses and mules have steadily and rapidly risen,
till we can hardly realize the fact, that a pair of horses which could
be bought a few years ago at $300, would bring to-day $800. We
complain loudly ; but it is all right, for it takes just such astonish-
ing developments and just such enormous burdens to make men
forsake the old and beaten jJaths of error^ though leading directly to
'poverty.
But, says the "croaker," if this system of husbandry be adopted
generally, there is danger that there would be no demand for hay,
and butter, and beef, and mutton, and horses and mules, as every
body would raise their own, (a consummation most devoutly to be
wished,) while for cotton there is an unlimited demand, and local
markets, and if the price does not suit at one time, you can hold
till it does, without injury or cost; while if horses and mules are
not sold, they will " eat oif their own heads," and breadstuffs, if not
consumed, perish on our own hands.
These are, indeed, most admirable and valuable conditions which
have always made cotton a favorite staple. But there is another
product which, equally with cotton, possesses all these with one
immense advantage over cotton, that it can be raised on poor land
with little labor ; that staple is wool, worth in all markets about
three times as much per lb. as cotton. There is good reason to be-
lieve, that in this region it can be raised with much larger profit.
Sheep possess in a most remarkable degree all the requisites for
profitable husbandry. They are very prolific, of early maturity,
and transport themselves even to distant markets at little cost, and
best quality of all, they will live where other domestic animals
would starve.
It is a fact not generally known, that all over Georgia many varie-
ties of herbs grow, on which sheep feed, which no other animals
touch. They are browsing as well as grazing animals.' In our old
fields, wherever a few tufts of broomsedge grow, or a patch of briers,
or even that badge of sterility, a thicket of sassafras bushes, there
sheep will exist.
You cannot find anywhere a hundred acres of land which will
not sustain a hundred sheep in the spring and summer, and with
winter grazing on our forest lands, all the year. If this be true,
our old exhausted lands can be made to pay an annual profit, which
would make the usurer open his eyes in wonder.
These lands (extensive old fields with small quantities of original
forest and strips of branch bottoms) can be bought readily at three
or four dollars per acre, or even less. Throw together a thousand
acres of such land, put 1000 sheep upon it, obtain 3 lbs. of wool
Agricultural Exhibitions of 1859. 303
from each, worth one dollar, and a lamb worth one dollar and a
quarter, and you may pay a shepherd to protect them from dogs,
and realize a clear profit of 30 or 40 per cent.
Then, how rapidly these wasted lauds might be enriched, by
hurdling a thousand sheep upon them at night, instead of paying
enormous prices for manures brought from the distant islands of
ocean ; for it is a fact, established by careful experiment, that a
given weight of food fed to sheej), will produce greatly more enrich-
ing manure than when fed to any other domestic animals.
Let us then, like sensible people, use the lands we have in raising
such staples as they are adapted to, and soon we can change the
tons of broomsedge and other forage found in abundance into
pounds of meal and wool, for the food and raiment of men.
ILLmOIS.
The State Agricultural Society — organized and chartered in 1853 —
held its seventh annual exhibition at Freeport, September 5-9.
The grounds (which includes those of the county society) were
about forty acres in extent, with a fine grove, and a level space for
the trial of steam plows. There were premiums oflered of three
thousand dollars and of two thousand dollars for the first and second
best steam-engines, suitable for plowing and other farm work; and
the Illinois Central Railroad Company ofi:ered an additional pre-
mium of fifteen hundred dollars for the best engine for plowing ;
but the Society did not award its premiums, although the examin-
ing committee unanimously recommended that the highest one be
paid to Mr. Fawkes. The gate receipts amounted to ten thousand
six hundred dollars, adding to the proof that the United States So-
ciety's exhibition at Chicago, the next week, added to the attend-
ance and the interest of the State Society's exhibition.
The display of cattle was excellent, showing the good effected by
the Illinois Stock Growers' Society, which imported a large portion
of the animals, or their parents, constituting the fine herds of J. N.
Brown, J. Smith, J. C. Boone, and Dunlap & Pollock. There was
a fair display of horses, good sheep, excellent swine, especially John
"Wentworth's Suftblks, and a large amount of implements and ma-
chinery. The specimens of grain, vegetables, and fruit from south-
ern Illinois exhibited an agricultural and pomological progress de-
serving high praise. Drought and early frosts had seriously inter-
fered with the farming and gardening operations in the northern
counties, but they nevertheless made a creditable display.
LOCAL EXHIBITIONS IN ILLINOIS.
The Cass county society held its annual exhibition at Virginia,
August 30. Macoupin county society, September 13-17. Henry
304 Secretary's Report on the
county societ}', (organized in 1852,) on its fine grounds at Cam-
bridge, September 14-16. St. Clair county, at Belleville, Septem-
ber 14-16, the best exhibition ever held in the county. Coles county
society, at Charleston, September 14-17. Grundy county society,
at Morris, September 20-22, on grounds recently put in fine order.
Vermillion county society, at Catlin, September 20-23. Macon
county society, at Decatur, September 20-23 ; the members of this
society pay admission fees; one of them is annually chosen orator.
Peoria county society, at Peoria, September 20-23, on the spacious
grounds v^^here it had been proposed to hold the exhibition of the
United States Society. Madison count}' society, at Edwardsville,
September 20-23. Mattoou Union society, at Mattoon, September
21-25. Carroll county society, at Mount Carroll, September 21-23.
Warren county society, September 21-23. Rock Island county
society, at Rock Island, September 21-23. La Salle county society,
(organized 1852,) at Ottawa, September 27-29. Mason county soci-
ety, at Havanna, September 26-28. Livingston county society, at
Pontiac, September 27-28. Lake county society, at Libertyville,
September 27-29. Tazewell county society, at Fremont, Septem-
ber 28-29. Hancock county society, (organized in 1852,) at Car-
thage, September 28-30. McLean count}' society, at Bioomington,
September 28-30. "Whiteside county society, at Morrison. Septem-
ber 28-30. Schuyler county society, at Rushville, September 28-
30. Van Buren county society, at Paw Paw, September 29-30.
Stark county societ}', at Toulon, September 29 — October 1. Ogle
county society, at Oregon, October 4-6. Buel Institute, at Henne-
pin, Putnam county, October 4-6. Bureau county society, at Prince-
ton, October 4-7. Champaign county society, at Urbana, October
4-7. Lee county society, at Amboy, October 4-7. Sangamon
county society, (organized in 1852 and admirably managed,) at
Springfield, October 4-7. Knox county society, (originally organ-
ized in 1840,) October 4-7. Fulton county society, at Lewiston,
October 5-6. Orland society, October b-Q. Scott county society,
at Winchester, October 5-7. Randolph county society, at Sparta,
October 5-7. Kanakee county society, at Soldier creek grove, Oc-
tober 5-7. Clay county society, at Xenia, October 6-7, on the soci-
ety's grounds. Lee county society, at Dixon, October 10-15. Shelby
county society, at Shelbyville, October 11-14. Farmers' Institute,
at Danville, October 11-14. Adam county society, (organized in
1853, and now having 800 members,) at Quincy, October 12-14,
open to competition from every section. Brown county society, at
Agricultural ExliihitionB of 1859. 305
Mount Stirling, October 12-14. McHenry county society, at Wood-
stock, October 12-14, described as an excellent and well managed
exhibition, with evening discussion by Central Union Farmers'
Club. Christian county society, at Taylorsville, October 19-21.
Exhibitions were also probably held by the societies organized in
the counties of Clinton, Cumberland, Fayette, Fulton, Green, Iro-
quois, Jasper, Logan, McDonough, Menard, Montgomery, Morgan,
Moultrie, Pike, Wayne, and Woodford.
INDIANA.
The Indiana State Board of Agriculture held its eighth annual
exhibition on the grounds of the Floyd county association, about
two miles from ISTew Albany, September 26-October 1. These
grounds contain about sixty acres, well arranged, and fitted up at a
cost of nearly $20,000. Around the interior of the enclosure there
is a broad track for trials of speed, one mile in length, within which
are the various halls and tents, with an amphitheatre 275 feet in
diameter. There are commodious buildings for the officers, stalls
for cattle and horses, pens for sheep and swine, eating saloons, and
every other necessary accommodation for the comfort of visitors
and exhibitors. The people of New Albany were enthusiastic in
their efl:brts to furnish rooms for strangers, and to render the exhi-
bition successful and agreeable.
There were 2.373 entries, of which 322 were horses, 48 jacks and
mules, 100 cattle, 83 hogs, and 85 sheep. The highest regular
premiums for horses and for cattle were $30, but Governor Willard
had divided the $500 placed at his disposition by the State law,
into two " sweepstake " premiums of $250 each, for the best stallion
and for the best bull. A premium of $100 was offered for the best
farm of one hundred and forty acres, an entrance fee of $10 being
required from each competitor ; and a premium of $125 was offered
for the best stationary engine. The receipts were nearly $10,000,
some $2,000 under the expenditures, but unfavorable weather and
other exhibitions materially diminished the attendance.
The show of stock (said i\iQ Indiana Farmer) was good, "but not
half what it should have been, at a point accessible alike to Indiana
and Kentucky. Kentuckians reasoned thus : We have sent our
very best horse and our sweepstakes bull to St. Louis, and of course
Indiana will beat us, and we will go and see, but leave our stock
at home. On the other hand, Indiana said : Kentucky, of course,
has her best stock at her own fair; they will be removed over the
river to our fair, and rather than be outdone by Kentucky, we will
306 Secretary's Report on the
leave our stock at home. At the fair they expressed mental aston-
ishment at the non-appearance of the other's stock."
The display of farm implements and machinery was larger and
better than at any previous State exhibition. The show of fruit
and of flowers was good ; the halls for table comforts and farm
products were poorly filled as to number and variety, but the articles
on exhibition were of superior merit. In the fine arts hall, the
ladies of Kentucky and Indiana met in the most spirited rivalry,
and much to the credit of both. Coverlets, quilts, counterpanes,
tidies, mats, and ladies' clothing lay six ply deep on an average,
and often it seemed impossible to say which was the best.
High praise is awarded to John B. Dillon, Esq., the Secretary of
the Board, and to Mr. Bradley, the Superintendent. A general
hope was expressed that the people of Indianapolis will imitate
what has been so successfully done at IN'ew Albany, and fit up
grounds in a style suitable for a State exhibition.
LOCAL EXHIBITIONS IN INDIANA.
Butnara county society, at Greencastle, September 5-9. Law-
rence county society, (organized 1851,) at Bedford, September 5-8.
Putnam county society, at Greencastle, September 5-9. Fayette
county society, at Counorsville, September 6-9. Rush, Henr}', and
Hancock counties Union exhibition, at Knightstown, September
6-9. "Washington county society, at Salem, September 13-16.
Fountain and Warren counties society, at Attica, September 13-16;
R. B. Fulgrove, Esq., orator. Parke and Vermillion counties soci-
ety, at Montezuma, September 13-16. Hendricks county society,
at Danville, September 13-16 ; a volunteer premium of $25 was
offered for the best trotting bull in harness. Rush county society,
at Rushville, September 13-16. Johnson county society, at Frank-
lin, September 14-17. Henry county society, at ISTewcastle, Sep-
tember 1-1-16. Sullivan county society, at Carlisle, September 14-
16. Owen count}^ society, (organized 1854.) at its fairgrounds near
Spencer, September 14-16. Sullivan, Vigo, and Clay counties
Union ^exhibition, at Centreville, September 16; Hon. C. L. Dun-
'ham, orator. Marion county society, at Indianapolis, September
19-24. Decatur county society, at Greensburg, September 20-23.
Spencer county society, at Rockport, September 20-22 ; the new
grounds were not finished, but the exhibition was successful. Dear-
born county society, (organized 1852,) at Lawrenceburg, September
20-23. Tippecanoe county society, at Lafayette, September 20-23.
Hancock county society, at Greenfield, September 21-23 ; Hon. R.
Agricultural Exhibitions of 1859. 307
A. Eiley, orator. St. Joseph's county society, at its commodious
grounds near South Bend, September 21-23. Clark county society,
at Charlestown, September 21-23. Morgan county society, at Cea-
treton, September 26-29. Lake county society, (organized 1851.)
at its grounds near Crown Point, September 27-29. Warren county
society, at Williamsport, September 28-30 ; CoL James E. M. Bry-
ant, orator. Miami county, at Peru, September 28 ; this society
receives all the license money paid to the county for shows, which
in 1858 amounted to $240. Huntiiigton county society, at Hunt-
ington, September 28-30 ; the highest award was the society's dip-
loma, and the other awards were agricultural works and periodi-
cals, no cash premiums having been offered. Hamilton county
society, at Noblesville, September 29 — October 1. Southwestern
Indiana exhibition, at Evansville, October 3-7. Wells county soci-
ety, at Bluffton, October 4-5. Franklin county society, eighth
annual exhibition, at Brookville, October 4-6. Porter county soci-
ety, at Valparaiso. October 4-5. Warrick county society, at Boon-
ville, October 4-8; a successful exhibition, 1,001 entries, receipts
$1,700; expenditures and 350 premiums, $1,300. Laporte county
society, eighth annual exhibition, at Laporte, October 4-7. Clay
county society, at Centre Point, October 5-7. Wabash county soci-
ety, at Wabash, October 5-7. Bartholomew county society, at Co-
lumbus, October 5-8. Gibson county society, near Princeton, Oc-
tober 11-14, when it was resolved to enlarge the grounds iive acres.
Marshall county society, at Plymouth, October 12-14. Boone county
society, at Lebanon, October 13-15. Whitney county society, at
Columbia city, October 14-15. Fulton county society, at Eoches-
ter, October 14-15. Wayne county societ}^, October 17-21 ; one of
the largest and best exhibitions ever held in the White Water val-
ley, the grounds having been put in fine order, and a new two-story
hall built for machinery. De Kalb county society, at Auburn, Oc-
tober 17-19. Pulaski county society, at Winimac, October 25-26.
Posey county society, at ISTew Harmony, October 25-27; the receipts
were $1,500, which paid expenses and liberal premiums, and left
a surplus for improvement of the grounds. Accounts of eighteen
other agricultural exhibitions held during the year 1859 in Indiana
have been received, but it has been impossible to properly locate
them. From several able addresses forwarded, the following one
has been selected. It was delivered by that able geologist, Dr.
Eichard Owen, who is now engaged in a reconnoissance of each
308 Secretary's Report on the
county in Indiana, for the geological survey now being made under
the direction of his brother, David Dale Owen, State Geologist :
ADDRESS BY RICHARD OWEN, M. D.
Availing ourselves of the characteristics with which our Omnipo-
tent Creator has endowed man, the last and greatest of his glorious
works, recognizing the social impulse which prompts the human
heart to sympathize with its fellow mortal, in joy and in sorrow, we
have convened, at this period, for the purpose of comparing our in-
dividual progress, and of interchanging mutually our views regard-
ing the details of management in agriculture, the most ancient, as
well as the most important of all arts ever devised or practiced by
human ingenuity.
One of the usages latterly connected with these social conven-
tions, is to assign to some individual the duty of condensing into a
brief discourse a rapid survey of the progress, future prospect, and
continued importance of improvement in this delightful department
of physical and intellectual labor.
That task has, by your kindness, been committed to my charge,
and although no one can feel more deeply than I do the responsi-
bility of the undertaking, many, I am well aware, could bring more
experience to bear, in commenting on the advantages of agricul-
tural art. If, however, warm interest in the cause can compensate
for that deficiency, the want shall be, at least partially, atoned for
by the zeal of the laborer.
No one can deny to agriculture the rank of highest antiquity
among the arts. No sooner did the intelligence with which man
was gifted by his Creator, detect the precarious support which was
afforded by fruits, that summer and autumn showered bountifully
within his reach, but which were no longer found in winter and
spring, (during which period only such wild animals as proved less
swift of foot, or less cunning than their human master, satisfied the
cravings of hunger ;) no sooner, I repeat, did these facts become
evident to his perceptive and reasoning powers, while at the same
time he observed the autumn seeds that had dropped on the ground,
swelling and budding in the spring, than he began to imitate nature,
and scattered the seeds of such fruits or grain as pleased his palate
on freshly prepared soil, from which he had eradicated all other
growth.
Such, we may imagine, was probably somewhat the humble be-
ginning of that noble art, which now furnishes sustenance to about
one thousand millions of human beings, on a planet comprising
about fifty millions of square miles of land, tilled or barren, that is,
in the ratio of about twenty inhabitants to every square mile, or 640
acres. Suppose only one-third of this land susceptible of cultiva-
tion, we have still considerably over ten acres for every inhabitant.
Belgium requires only about two acress to sustain each individual
of her population: and England, it has been asserted, can "main-
tain her man on every rood of ground," or quarter of an acre. Let
us, however, take even an acre as the amount necessary to main-
Agricultural Exldhitions of 1850. 309
tain comfortably one individual, and we shall find from the above
data, that by judicious cultivation, the earth is capable of sustain-
ing- at least ten times as many inhabitants as at present exist.
ISuch being the antiquity and value of this great branch of human
industry, nine-tenths of all our fixed capital, and two hundred mil-
lions of men being besides, (according to Johnston, the celebrated
agricultural chemist,) employed in developing its resources, we are
certainly justified in re-asserting that agriculture is the most ancient
and the most important of all arts ever devised or practiced by human
ingenuity.
But it did not attain its present eminence until within a few j^ears :
our forefathers were content, as some nations are at this day, to
scratch the surface of the soil with a crooked stick, drawn by one
or two oxen, and to rub out the grain with their hands. Even in
merry old England, as late as the eighteenth century, there were
no winnowing machines, (wheat fans, as we here term them,) the
chafl" being blown away by the wind, while the grain was throwm
by the laborer high in the air. The objection which the ignorant
often offer to improvements, is humorously depicted by Sir Walter
Scott, in this connection, in "Old Mortality." "The pious Maude
is shocked at the wickedness of those who created an artificial cur-
rent of air by means of a machine, for the purpose of cleaning grain,
instead of waiting patiently, as their forefathers had done, for the
variable breezes of heaven."
In some counties in England which are removed one or two hun-
dred miles from the great thoroughfares, a few years since there
were no wagons, and only one or tw^o carts; nearly everything was
transported on pack-horses.
But the progress of civilization is working great changes. Stimu-
lated by a premium of $2,500, offered b}^ some English agricultural
society, several steam-plows have recently been made, and work
successfully, and one is described as having ploughed for the al-
lotted two hours at the rate of nearly eight acres per d2ij. Eapid
progress has been made in our own country, as evinced by the nu-
merous agricultural associations, by the admirable mowers and
reapers, which surpass those of all other countries ; also, by the
improvement of worn-out lands in some of the older States, and by
the encouragement of surveys calculated to develop the mineral
and agricultural resources of the country. Our State geologists
collect and submit to the department of the analytical chemist the
various soils that have disintegrated from the rocks spread over our
highly diversified country. The ingredients of several fertile soils
are compared, as well as those of many sterile fields ; the essential
ingredients are ascertained ; the deficiencies are pointed out. In
this manner, in the Kentucky survey, already over two hundred
soils have been analyzed, by the celebrated chemist. Dr. Peter, of
Lexington; and my brother, Dr. D. D. Owen, in his report, has
embodied many useful deductions regarding the best mode of im-
proving the lands of Kentucky. Such geological explorations and
analysis are greatly wanted in Indiana ; but, until we have a State
39
310 Secretary's Report on the
survey, we may avail ourselves of much general advice embodied
in the Kentucky report, which applies to us also. One soil is found
by analysis deficient in calcareous niatter, and the judicious agri-
culturist will try at first on a small scale the efiects of air, slacked
lime, or of a marl, found perhaps abundantly in his fields. This he
hauls, whenever his teams are not otherwise engaged, and if the
experiment succeeds, he extends his improvements through a series
of years, and is finally amply repaid.
Another field is found wanting in the alkaline and earthy phos-
phates, so essential to the filling out of cereals. The owner should
scrupulously save and collect, which he can do at small expense,
the liones of all the animals that die around and are often left as a
public nuisance, calcine them by heat, or yet better, grind them in
a mill, and apply a small quantity of ashes until he observes the
result.
By other analysis, as Dr. Peter frequently proves, the subsoil is
shown to contain the earthy ingredients which are deficient in the
surface-soil; and subsoil plowing, taking every year only a few
inches, may be resorted to with benefit.
On some well-worn farm, perhaps near rocky regions, where these
earthy ingredients are abundant, the chemist points out a deficiency
of humus, or decayed vegetable matter, to give rapid growth and
succulence to the stalk or straw. In such case, the prudent farmer
diminishes for a time his grain crops, or at least consumes them on
his farm, trusting to the sale of stock for his profits. He, besides,
either raises green crops only to plow them in again, or at all events,
husbands the manure of his stables and barn yards, in every shape
and form ; preventing its waste, by receiving it in tanks and on
compost heaps, and the muck from ponds, scraping from streets,
decaj^ed leaves, &e. Our merchant-men, encouraged by the demand
for fertilizers, bring cargoes of guano, plaster, &c., to our coasts ;
and the thousand conveying railways, like so many dark veins,
pointing their anastomosis towards the central organs, convey these
materials to our great internal valleys and plains, to be elaborated
in the heart of our country, for the production of that varied nourish-
ment, which afterwards radiates on the same iron-bound road, like
the life-diflusing arterial blood, to the extremities of our favored
land, scattering wealth and prosperity broadcast over our Union.
But, like the great and complicated human machines, to which
we have compared our agricultural system and national prosperity,
unless we observe certain great fixed laws, unless we use our best
judgment, the whole structure is liable to fearful reaction and disorder.
The exhausting of the soil is like over stimulating the sj^stem,
and draining it daily by excesses, which must finally sap its energy
to the foundation. Nor should we flatter ourselves that the stalwart
son can bear these excesses any better than his father ; in fact, they
are sometimes more injurious in early youth. So it is, too, with
the rich soils of the giant West ; they seem inexhaustible, but some
of the apparently worn-out soils of the eastern States having, from
the disintegration of roots, all the necessary inorganic or earthy
Agricultural Exhibitions of 1859. 311
elements, are soon reclaimed by a jndicious system of husbandry;
whereas, some of our soils, from which we have cut and carried
awa}' all the best timber, and perhaps even the ashes of the con-
sumed reraaindei', and lastly, after we have raised corn in the same
field for twenty-five or thirty years, are so worn out, that especially,
if both surface and subsoil are light, friable, and sandy, they not
only produce very inferior crops, but the soil cannot even well
retain the ingredients with which we endeavor to nourish them.
To the mind of the merchant, perhaps another comparison might
be more striking: Our system of exhaustion is too much like living
on our principal, instead of husbanding that capital and adding to
it, until we finally draw an annual interest sufficient for all our
wants. It is in fact as Norton, in his Agricultural Chemistry, remarks,
little better than the conduct of the countryman in ^sop's Fable,
whose goose daily laid golden eggs, but who, in his anxiety to be
suddenly rich, killed her, and lost all. We are so anxious to be
wealthy, that we sacrifice the only true source of real wealth and
prosperity, the fertility of our lands.
This, then, if I am permitted by your kindness to assume the
ofiice of censor, I would denounce as the evil most to be avoided
among farmers. But what, it may be asked, is the remedy ? Know-
ledge.^ I answer, unhesitatingly, if anything on earth will remedy
or prevent this evil, as well as nearl}' all others, it is knowledge.
If any man finds himself sick, dyspeptic, gouty, his life perhaps
a burden to him, what is his wisest course ? To inform himself
regarding the laws of hygiene, and to call in those who have made
these subjects a lifetime study, so as to have their advice. While
in ordinary health, he may content himself by obeying those laws
which he has learnt are necessary for its preservation, such as tem-
perance and exercise, not living to eat, but supplying only the
waste of nature. When, however, he becomes ill, when some func-
tions are permanently disturbed, he should consult those who have
made such subjects a special study, and give their advice a fair trial.
Thus it is with the agriculturist : He should not take from his
soil a crop, without returning to it nearly the same in some shape
or other. And if he finds any portion less productive than another,
let him submit it to the chemist, and in accordance with his advice
suppl}^ the deficiency, organic or inorganic, carefully and cautiously,
until he is satisfied that the theoretical inference is correct. Let
him not fear to appeal to chemistry, on which my brother, in his
second volume of his Kentucky report, passes the following beau-
tiful aud just eulogium : "That science which has extracted from
tlie fixed alkalies, metals lighter than water, that burst into flame
tlie instant they come in contact with that fluid ; which has re-
duced from clay a metal bright as silver, yet light as marble, that
resists corrosion, that forms with copper an alloy having the color
and brilliancy of gold; which distils from bones a body of the con-
sistency of wax, so combustible that summer heat almost sufiices
to inflame it ; that prepares from kelp a body whose vapors of the
richest hues will render a silver plate so sensitive to light, that a
312 Secretary's Report on the
few seconds suffice for impinging rays to paint their image on its
surface ; which compounds principles so subtle, that a grain or two
will impregnate the whole atmosphere of an apartment with the
most deadly fumes, while the compound itself hardly loses any per-
ceptible weight ; which unites together the same substances, so as to
form at one time the most active poison, at another, by varying
only slightly their proportions, a substance already inert. A science,
I say, which has accomplished wonders like these, is surely capable
of disclosing the mysteries of the chemistry of agriculture."
Consulting, then, the facts developed by the science thus justly
eulogized, as found in the works of Liebig, Johnston, ISTorton, the
reports of the State Geologist, &c., we meet with many such as the
following, which I have selected chiefly as a stimulus to further
examination :
That plants derive their nourishment partly from the air, by means
chiefly of their leaves, and partly from the earth, by means of the
spongioles in the roots. Thus the leaves may be compared to the
lungs of the higher animals, the roots to their stomach. And as in
animals it is necessary that the food should be of a kind and in a
form suitable for the action of the digestive organs, so in plants it
is essential that the ingredients should be of a soluble form. Thus
silex, so essential for some plants, is, in its solid form, insoluble in
water, and therefore cannot be assimilated, until acted upon by alka-
lies, which must, therefore, be furnished when necessary, or rend-
ered free by the admixture of lime; thus, also, stitii" insoluble clay-
soil, burned and top-dressed with lime, yield to water fertilizing
ingredients. Again, as the health of the animal economy requires, at
various times, more than one article of diet to supply the diflerent
constituents of the system, so also does the plant require various
nourishment from the soil ; and when some one ingredient is defi-
cient, the soil is incapable of raising certain plants, until art has
replaced the consumed material. As repletion may follow excesses,
in the case of animals, so plants too may be over supplied with some
materials, as salts, &c. We are further told, that rotation in crops
is not alone sufficient to remedy all the evils of exhausted soils.
Even pasture lands may require bone ashes; also, that liming and
marling may supply some important ingredients, besides calcareous
matter. Chemists tell us further, that a soil is not fertile in pro-
portion alone to the humus it contains; that where there is a defl-
ciency of alkaline or earthy phosphates in a soil, it will not raise
cereals — or, in other words, a grain the most valuable food we
have — nor peas and beans, until we supply the defect ; that phos-
phates, to renovate the soil, are found in guano, in coprolites, and
in disintegrating fossiliferous rocks ; hence the richness of blue lime-
stone, and some .Divonian regions; hence, too, the propriety of sub-
soiling, when the upper light earth contains the humus, and the
subsoil the important inorganic elements of fertility. The}' teach
us that large cities might add greatly to the health and wealth of
the inhabitants as well as to their own corporate resources, by
having suitable arrangements, manufactories, &c., for the conversion
Agrieultural Exhibitions 0/ 1859. 313
of all decaying vegetable and animal residues, liquid and solid,
many of which otherwise render the air pestilential — into highly
fertilizing composts and poudretts. In London alone, half a million
of pounds sterling (nearly two and a half millions of dollars,) is
stated' to be annually lost for want of suitable sanitary arrange-
ments within her corporate limits, besides the resulting contamina-
tion of the Thames river, at present so much complained of. Thus,
by a proper course, the resolved elements of decay and death might
be made to furnish those of new life and growth.
Chemistry further informs us, that in employing these elements,
we should be aware how some plants, as turnips, potatoes, Indian
corn, require potash; that the culture of these should be followed
b}^ that of a plant requiring silica, as wheat, barley, &c.; and these,
again, by lime plants, such as peas and clover; in other words, that
grain crops, root crops, and grass crops should alternate. It gives
the information that the hygrometic power of a soil is vastly
increased by its pulverization, and that the thorough working of
land is, consequently, extremely important in a dry season. All
these and many more facts are taught by science as truths, which
can readily be tested, at first on a scale, by the intelligent and pru-
dent farmer, who should adhere to no customs in opposition to his
reason, merely because they are old; and reject no suggestions,
when approved by his judgment, only because they are new. Thus
theory and cautious practice should go hand in hand. Each is
inadequate without the other to produce the best results ; both taken
together are irresistible.
As an additional means of improving our experience, we should
know the size of every field on our farm, and keep a regular account
with each crop, as well as with the orchard, dairy, poultry yard, &e.,
so as not to guess, but actually to know, which department is most
productive. Here, perhaps, some of you may remark, "we would
like to do those things, but are not very well versed in surveying
and book-keeping." Then let your sons be so. Let them go where
they can learn, practically at least, enough of surveying to measure
and plot off the whole farm ; enough of book-keeping to render, by
double entry, a separate account with each department ; enough of
geology to understand the outlines regarding the existence on the
earth's crust of diflerent rocks, and the soils resulting from their
disintegration ; enough of chemistry to perform the analysis of
those soils, and to learn the chief components of the different fer-
tilizers ; or, at least, to understand and appreciate the analysis made
by competent chemists.
Practical agricultural colleges, at which young men could learn
these sciences, (somewhat in the manner adopted at Hoheniem, in
Germany, as ably described in a recent letter from Gov. Wright,
published in the Indiana Farmer, in the Tribune, and in the New
Harmony Advertiser,) ought to be scattered throughout the length
and breadth of our land ; and I sincerely hope will be by the passage,
in a modified form if necessary, of a bill introduced into the last
314 Secretary' s Heport on the
Congress by Mr. Morrill, of Yermont, and to be voted on in the
United States Senate next session.
"But," perhaps some one remarks, "my son does not design
becoming a farmer; he wishes to be a preacher, a lawyer, a doctor,
or a politician ; he thinks they make more money, and are more
looked up to than farmers." Probably that is so; but it should
not be so, and would not if the same preparatory schooling, the
same talent, energy, and capital were brought to bear in this as in
otlier professions.
Let young men find that, by receiving a thorough agricultural
education, and by having enough to put good farms under complete
fence; stocked with the requisite amount of well-blooded animals,
their farms will prove as remunerative as practice in a profession ;
let them see that they have ample scope for their mental energies,
by cultivating scientifically, and breeding stock according to physi-
ological principles, and they -will not be so desirous to swell the
ranks of the learned professions, or to rush into political life, before
the}' have experience and matured judgment sufficient to aid in
guiding the ship of State. When, by some years of industry and
judicious management, they have placed their farms in a condition
to be superintended by others, without much risk, then, if they feel
disposed, they may yield to their country's call, and serve her in
the field or the forum, to repel the foreign invader, if such necessity
should occur, or to eradicate, by judicious counsels, the internal
seeds of discord, and legislate, not merely with a view to secure
their own re-election, not for the sake of a lucrative sinecure, but
patriotically, for the good of the whole nation, and then retire again,
like the father of his people, into the quiet of domestic life, the
citizen and the farmer. Can any one denj that there is a dignity
in agricultural occupations, when such men as Washington, Jeffer-
son, Webster, Clay, and others, pursued them during a considerable
portion of their lives.
Perhaps, however, one of the most powerful motives for adopting
these pursuits consists in a knowledge of the advantages which such
a life affords for rearing a family in health and virtue. Who has
not observed that, as a general rule, the youth of both sexes
who have been reared during their earlier years in the countrj'-, are
more healthy and more robust than those of the cit}', as well as less
likely to fall into the excesses of luxury ? Yet, in the end, when
they have received the advantages of education, they may often be
n Limbered among the greatest men and women. And here permit
me to remark, that if there is any error into which we are falling,
more likely to prove our bane than any other, it is that of denying
to our daughters the necessary physical training to fit them for their
duties in life, to render them the healthy mothers of vigorous chil-
dren, capable, also, of undertaking the earliest and most important
education of youthful minds, destined at a future period to control
the fate of our republic. If sound minds and bodies are not trans-
mitted to children by their mothers, can we expect, in adult age,
powerful intellects, sustained by vigorous bodies ? That the men
Agricultural Exhibitions of 1859. 315
of the nation should have sound minds in sound bodies, it is essen-
tial that their mothers should have these qualities; while, at the
same time, the mothers would find their own happiness much
increased by such healthfulness. Who does not regret to see the
increased number of delicate constitutions, evinced b}' tlie frequent
cases of hysteria, neuralgia, and other nervous diseases, as well as
dire consumption ? In pointing out a remedy for these evils, permit
me to quote from the chapter on physical improvement, in a work
on geology lately offered by me to the public :
" Can we wonder that the girl who confines herself closely to the
house, or who is prevented by parents or boarding-school teachers,
ignorant of hygienic principles, from taking the necessary exercises,
especially in early youth, should become pale and sickly, or even
fall a victim to the injudicious treatment of those who bitterly bewail
their loss?
"Who, on the other hand, has not felt his own life-blood throb
with healthfully-quickened pulsation when he has vaulted on to the
back of a thorough-bred horse, the noblest of the brute creation,
and dashed off over turf or heath, amid the joyous companionship
of intelligent friends?
" What sight can be more beautiful than to see a graceful maiden,
M'hose form is well setoif by the neatly-fitting riding habit, curbing
her well-trained palfrey with a bit, sufficiently powerful to render
his playfulness safe, yet mild enough not to check too suddenly the
' free bound ? '
"What young man of sense, gazing on the bright glow and ani-
mated expression called forth by such healthful action, would not
rather select for his lifetime companion, and for the mother of his
children, the possessor of such requisites to happiness as might rea-
sonably be expected to be secured, if such rational exercise is con-
tinued, and accompanied by equal good sense in other things, than
to trust his domestic happiness to the hot-house frailty of over-
stimulated nutrition, and the mental evanescence of frivolous, novel-
engendered precocity?
"Perhaps there is one sight even more beautiful than the above
picture, which we have sought to paint in no over-wrought colors,
but only in its true Claude-Loraine tints of glowing nature. It is
that of sportive infancy, with the rounded features which Raphael
has so beautifully represented in his various pictures of ' The Infant
with the Madonna.' It is the sight of innocence engaged in infan-
tile sports, enjoying the fresh air which heaven exhales, exercising
the limbs which nature has given for the enjoyment resulting from
unrestrained movement, and evincing towards each other, in their
conduct, the early power to restrain passions, beneficial when con-
trolled, but highly injurious when permitted to exercise a mastery.
" Why not, then, let this innocence, this exercise, this immunity
from serious cares and sorrows, be prolonged through their due
period ? Why hasten prematurely into the turmoils and decay of
life?
"Among the inferior animals, naturalists have observed that the
316 Secretary' s Report on the
period of life is usually five times that of growth ; and the same
probabl}^ applies to man. Thus the horse has a 'full mouth,' and
has commonly attained his height at five; consequently, lives often
in a natural state, until he has reached twenty-five or thirty years of
age. Man usually acquires his stature, if not precociously forced,
about his twentieth year, and would live, if he were rational — una-
voidable accidents excepted — until he attained his four-score years
and ten, or even his five score. But, unfortunately, particularly in
the United States, whose Anglo-Teutonic inhabitants are derived
often originally from the most energetic and enlightened of the
European stock, there is a nathral desire, but one against which we
must bring our best judgment to bear, rapidly to mature — too rap-
idl}', alas ! for soundness — pecuniarily, physically, and mentally.
Young America, take warning ! Let the period of innocent enjoy-
ment, of invigorating amusement, of freedom from care, be pro-
longed ; lay the foundation of health and strength, of innocence
and virtue, before all other requisites. With these and a good
education, the rest will follow and endure : longevity, wealth, dis-
tinction, family enjoyment, and a tranquil old age of prolonged
usefulness and of extended virtues. If such is to be our portion,
individually and nationally, let us begin in time, let us regard
health-giving exercises as a cardinal virtue."
One great cause of the diminution in healthful exercise, to be
found in the anxieties regarding expensive and fashionable dress,
alluded to in the same work, at page 183, thus :
" Let not the great struggle be, who can amass the most wealth,
who can outshine his or her neighbor in displaying the costly prod-
ucts, manufactured often from the toil of over-worked, exhausted
human beings, produced sometimes from the very life-blood of our
overtasked fellow-men. Little does the high-born lady think, when
she heedlessly rends the frail fabric of her Brussels, Valenciennes,
or Honiton lace, worn at a ball — the price of which might feed ten
thousand famished mouths for lengthened days — how many bitter
tears it cost a sister-being to form those delicate meshes, and how
those drops of anguish, exhaled into heaven's ethereal vault, may
waft just accusations of selfishness even to the throne of an oftended
Deity."
These evils do not exist among the agricultural portions of our
community to so great an extent as in crowded cities, still they are
gradually insinuating themselves, and must be guarded against.
If, then, rural life, properly directed, is well adapted for the health
and morals of our sons and daughters, how shall we retain them at
home, and prevent their wandering off to taste the dangerous allure-
ments rendered attractive by the high-sounding title oi fashion?
The answer is readily found. We must render home attractive by
selecting, as soon as circumstances will permit, a "Homestead," a
blessing which any industrious youth, in this country, may secure
in early life ; we must endeavor to bring to that home a healthy,
sensible wife, selected because she was a good daughter, a refined,
truthful, modest, virtuous maiden, fond of keeping her mother's
Agricultural Exhibitions of 1859. 317
house neat, and willing to take her share in the duties of life.
These qualifications, too, must be judged of, not in a ball-room or
party, but by fre([ucntly seeing her at home, sometimes unexpect-
edly. We should then surround that home by all the comforts and
attractions which a farmer's income will permit, making it more
agreeable for the children to frequent their home and associate with
their parents, with each other, and with their educated neighbors,
than to lounge at places of frivolous amusement, acquiring vicious
habits among dissolute companions.
But to insure these home attractions, to render home pleasanter
than any other place, the entire time must not be given to labor ;
there must be scope given to the intellect in improving the farm
and the stock, there must be a field for prudent enterprise, if the
tastes lead in that direction, by uniting the purchase and sale of
farming produce, to that raised on the homestead ; and lastly, there
must he abundance of rational amusement and social intercourse.
By early rising and methodical arrangement of time, there might
be opportunities for all that is here recommended, without undue
interference with the duties on the farm. Not to dwell too much
on detail, I would suggest that there be frequent rural parties — such
as pic-nics, riding excursions to visit any objects of interest, evening
meetings for music, &c.; also, that, as soon as practicable, consid-
erable attention should be given to laying out the grounds in the
proximity of the house with neatness and elegance; that pains be
taken in the cultivation of a garden, which should be both useful
and ornamental, with, perhaps, a small green-house and hot-house
attached.
Amid these scenes, which speak of home comforts, of quiet inno-
cence, of nature's bountiful and beautiful gifts, sons and daughters
might occasionally mingle their labors, and cultivate, at the same
time, their tastes and their fraternal aflections. To such abodes,
too, might be taken, most appropriately, the youthful visitors who
enliven their country- life; and amid such scenes might be permitted
to expand those feelings of youthful esteem and love, based on a
correct knowledge of each other's character, which should be not
only permitted but encouraged ; for if anything, besides virtuous
precepts, will prevent dissolute habits in a young man, it is an hon-
orable attachment to a worthy young maiden ; and if any man can
alibrd to marry, so soon as he has a home and can find a good wife,
that man is the farmer. Indeed, without such a companion, where
would be his household, his dairy, his poultry-yard ; where his
home comforts, enlivened by a group of happy children?
But, independent of these arguments, I hold, in opposition to the
doctrines of the Shakers, that marriage is conducive to mortality.
Much the larger number of criminals, inmates of insane asylums,
and paupers, is to be found represented by the unmarried. And
although much misery arises from ill-assorted marriages, still expe-
rience "dictates, I clearly think, that all healthy persons should marry
at a suitable age, provided they meet such chances of alliance as
their reason recommends. To guard against unsuitable unions, let
40
318 Secretary s Report on the
not parents, when they disapprove, bring anger and violent opposi-
tion to bear. Let them watch over the formation of incipient
acquaintance, and point out the character before the affections have
become enlisted. Let them early teach sons and daughters the most
important lesson in life, that of self-control. ISTot the crushing of
feeling, but the placing of it under the control of the judgment,
so that, however much the feelings prompt, they may not act, except
under the sanction of cool, delil3erative reason. Should, unfortu-
nately, the affections of a son or daughter be misplaced, let the
parents, by making a friend of that son or daughter, endeavor to
convince that the well-being of that child is the object; let them
request, at least, an extension of time, to prove the character of the
passion and the character of the person then so devotedly loved. If
any system will succeed under the unfortunate circumstances, this
is assuredly the most likeh\ But, above all, let parents take warn-
ing by the wrecked happiness of too many couples, fashionably
married, not to urge a union for the sake of wealth, position, influ-
ence, where there is no atfection ; or, worse yet, where the aji'ections
are placed on another individual. Which of the two is more to
blame, if miser}^ and crime are the consequences of such sordid
selfishness, the parent or the child? Reply is unnecessar3^
Perhaps these observations are not peculiarly applicable in an
agricultural address; but having touched on the subject at a time
when celibacy is upheld on one side, by shakers and cynics, and
when polygamy, or a worse doctrine, is advocated on the other, by
Mormons and free-love votaries, my sense of duty, as an educator and
physiologist, would not permit me to refrain from giving such force
and extension as one individual may add to the generally expressed
opinion on the subject — an opinion which I desire to see indelibly
engraven on the minds of the youth of our land — how immeasurably
superior to selfish loneliness, how yet more infinitely superior to
lawless indulgence, is the beautiful monogamic relationship, the
union of two individuals, calculated, in their main characteristics,
to harmonize ; the pure sympathy of soul, which desires to promote
its partner's happiness through life ; the warm geniality of heart,
which desires to rear for its country, as the ofi:spring of that blessed
union, virtuous and useful children.
Having thus endeavored to show that devotion to agricultural
life, as it ought to be pursued, is highly conducive to virtue and
happiness, I propose to close these somewhat discursive remarks by
briefly summing up, in recapitulation, the course to be followed,
the errors to be avoided, and the advantages which are likely to be
secured by the intelligent cultivator of the soil :
Let him select for his operations, if practicable, a farm that is not
already impoverished.
Let him preserve the fertility of the soil, by restoring to his fields,
in some shape, as much as he takes from them.
To efiect this object, let him carefully alternate his crops, husband
all vegetable and animal exuviae, and plow in all residues.
Agricultural Exhibitions of 1859. 319
Let him cultivate no more acres than he can work in the most
thoroui^h and improved manner.
Let him employ the cleanest and best seed when he raises grain ;
and, by never losing time unnecessarily, be always ready to sow it
at the most favorable season.
Let him select for his staple article of culture such products as
are best adapted to his soil, latitude, and facilities for transportation
to market.
But let him not cultivate his whole farm on that one crop ; because
he cannot thus work a limited number of hands to the best advan-
tage, and because he runs too great a risk in case of circumstances
arising disastrous to that one growth.
Let him plant out fruit trees of a good quality, and cultivate at
least a small garden.
Let him keep no more stock than he can keep well, and let it be
of a good quality.
Let him, in improving his stock, cross with animals similar in
their good qualities, but wholly unrelated by blood.
Let him carefully keep separate accounts with each department
of grain, grass, stock, or other farming product, so as to know
certainly which is the most profitable.
Let him, as a matter equally of comfort, economy and harmony
with his neighbors, keep his fences, gates, &c., always under good
repair.
Let him never lose one moment unnecessarily, but yet have
frequent short intervals of recreation.
Let him not so entirely fatigue the body as to deprive himself of
all desire and profit in mental occupation ; but let some leisure
hours be devoted to mental exercise connected with his profession,
such as examining with the microscope, and otherwise investigating
the habits of the numerous insects injurious to agriculture.
Let him be a member of some agricultural association, and take
one or two journals.
Let him send his sons to schools and colleges, where, besides
acquiring a knowledge of the ordinary branches, they will learn,
practically, book-keeping, surveying, chemistry, geology, and
mineralogy.
Let him send his daughters to schools and colleges, where, besides
the ordinary accomplishments, ihej will learn house-keeping, plain
needle-work, and the cutting out of ordinary female garments.
Let him, when those sons and daughters return, emulate his
beloved partner in making the parental home attractive : let him
inculcate wisdom and virtue, truthfulness, affection, integrity,
industry and economy.
Let him carefully avoid going in debt, and strenuously discoun-
tenance, except under extraordinary circumstances, the use of the
credit system.
Let him, by precept and example, proclaim the dignity and honor
of useful labor; the justice of each performing his share in the
duties of life. And, finally, let him impress on the minds of his
320 Secretary' 8 Rejyort on the
cbildren, as on his own, the true principles of republican govern-
ment ; let him decide, according to the best of his ability, what
appears to him to be the true policy, and not neglect his right, as a
freeman, to support, by his vote, not the mere party politician, but
the enlightened statesman and patriot, who seems to legislate for
the good of the whole, for the preservation of the Union.
In this connection, permit me to close in nearly the same words
which I emploj'ed in an address delivered for the benefit of the
Mount Vernon Association, when, after depicting the horrors of
civil war and domestic strife, I exclaim:
" Sooner, far sooner than that such should be our fate, let the
earth yawn and engulf us : sooner let a consuming meteor, a sun of
fire, in its erratic course, parch our share of this earth to a blackened
cinder ; far sooner may the flood-gates of heaven again be opened,
and an overwhelming deluge bury our portion of Korth America,
while she is yet ' The Land of the Free and the Home of the Brave,'
beneath the deep waters of the commingling Atlantic and Pacific,
never to rise again ! Swept, while yet innocent, forever from exist-
ence, she will leave at least no record of domestic strife, of national
gangrene, of fratricides and parracides ; the boundless ocean archives
will alone remain token of her utter annihilation.
" Forbid it, heaven ! Forbid it that the calamities we have
depicted should ever visit this thrice-glorious country ! Omniscient
God, in Thy eternal wisdom, avert the threatened scourge ! Our
prayers, if sincere, will be heard. God, in his infinite mercy, will
fill our hearts with a touch of his attributes — Justice, Truth, and
Love. His favored land w^ill be saved — saved through him by the
intelligence and virtue of its people."
IOWA.
The State Agricultural Society — organized in 1854 — held its sixth
annual exhibition at Oskaloosa, on the grounds of the Mahaska
county society, September 27-30. The grounds were those used in
1858, containing about twenty acres, and well provided with build-
ings, tents, and fixtures. The number of entries was about 1,200,
being some 200 over those of the previous exhibition, and the at-
tendance was good, although the heavy rains of the preceding week,
which had made many of the roads almost impassable, doubtless
kept hundreds at home who would otherwise have been there.
High praise is awarded to J. H. AVallace, Esq., Secretary of the
Society, for the order and dispatch with which business was trans-
acted, also to the Chief Marshal, Gen. Bridgeman.
There was a fair display of Durhams, one herd of Devons, and
some fine grade of native cattle ; a good show of horses, hogs, and
sheep; and a creditable display of implements, though not so large
as had been anticipated. Defenbaugh's underground ditching ma-
chine was tested, and " was made ta^perate finely and satisfactorily."
Agricultural Exhibitions of 1859. 321
The exhibition was closed by a procession " of all the animals which
had taken premiums, amounting to 109 head — 48 horses, 44 cattle,
and 17 jacks, jennets, and mules. They made a fine show and at-
tracted a great deal of attention. The attempt to sell animals was
almost a failure, but few bringing anything like a fair price."
LOCAL EXHIBITIONS IN IOWA.
The Scott county society — organized in 1853 — held a successful
exhibition at its grounds near Davenport, September 13-15. There
were seven hundred entries, and the Secretary says, " that the Direc-
tors paid the larger portion of the premiums awarded, in silver
medals and plate. About $400 worth of silverware was distributed,
which cost the Society that sum, less 5 per cent. only. Nearly' all
the recipients were delighted with their prizes, and no dissatisfac-
tion worthy of notice was manifested. The distribution of silver
medals and plate was an experiment here, never before tried, and I
am glad to say it was a perfect success. We did not furnish medals
enough; these seemed to be in great demand." "Webster county
society, at Fort Dodge, September 14-15. ISIahaska county society,
at Oskaloosa, September 14-16. Polk county society, September
14-16, on its fine grounds at Des Moines, which cost $3,550, and
are within the corporate limits. Morgan county, at Jacksonville,
September 20-23. Hardin county society, at Eldorado, September
21-22. Tama county society, first exhibition, at Toledo, Septem-
ber 21-22. Poweshiek county society, at Montezuma, September
22-23. Boone county society, at Boonesboro, September 24-25.
Bremer county society, at Waverly, September 28-29. Butler
county society, at Clarksville, September 28-29. Delaware county
society, at Delhi, October 4-5. Humboldt county society, at Dakota
city, October 4-5. Floyd county society, at St. Charles city, Oc-
tober 5-6. Apanoose county society, at Centreville, October 6-7.
Cedar valley society, Black Hawk county, at Butler's, October 6-7.
Iowa county society, at Dodgeville, October 6-7. Marshall county
reform association, at Albion, October 6-7. Warren county society,
at Indianola, October 6-7. Cerro Gordo county societ}^, at Mason
city, October 10-11. Lucas county society, at Chariton, October
12-13. Shelby county society-, at Shelbyville, October 27-28.
KANSAS.
A mass meeting of the friends of Agricultural progress in Kansas,
was held at Topeka, on the 16th of July, 1857, at which the fol-
lowing committee was appointed to draft a constitution for a State
Agricultural Society: C. C. Hutchinson, of Lawrence; W. F. M.
322 Secretary's Report on the
Arny, of Hyatt; John Grabel, of Walthena; Henry Harvey, of
Council city ; Dr. Hunting, of Manhattan ; Moses C. Grimes, of
IsTeosho city ; Wm. Pennick, of Leavenworth ; Martin Cave, of
Riclimond ; M. L. Gaylord, of Topeka ; Chs. Robinson, of Quin-
daro ; and W. Y. Eoberts, of Wyandotte. On the 9th of Septem-
ber, a meeting was held at Lawrence. The committee reported a
constitution, which was adopted, and a State Agricultural Society
organized, but no fair or agricultural exhibition lias yet been held
by this Society.
LOCAL EXHIBITIONS IN KANSAS.
The Douglas county society held its lirst annual exhibition on
the grounds near Lawrence, the first week in October. The display
of horses, cattle, and hogs, was very good ; the mechanical depart-
ment was creditable for a new country ; and the vegetable and hor-
ticultural departments gave evidence of the productiveness of the
rich soil of the new territory. The annual address was delivered
by T. Dwight Thatcher, Esq., who eloquently demonstrated the
adaptation of the country to agricultural and mechanical pursuits.
KENTUCKY.
The State Agricultural Society held its fourth annual exhibition
at the grounds of the Kentucky Agricultural and Mechanical As-
sociation, in Lexington, September 13-17. The first cattle show
held west of the Alleghany mountains, was held near Lexington,
under the auspices of Col. Lewis Sanders, in 1816, and from that
may be dated the superiority of the cattle of that "blue-grass"
region, and the consequent excellence of the exhibitions. The
present grounds, fifty-two acres in extent, are shaded by noble
forest trees, and there are spacious buildings, including a large
amphitheatre.
The display of cattle was, of course, excellent — the Durhams
being most numerous, although there were good Devons and
Ayrshires, and some fine Alderneys. Many useful machines and
implements were exhibited, and — judging from the brief account
furnished — the exhibition was a successful one. The great charm
of a Kentucky exhibition, is the genuine hospitality exhibited.
Each family brings baskets of provisions, with which pic-nic enter-
tainments are improvised, and strangers are cordially invited to
partake of the good cheer.
LOCAL EXHIBITIONS IN KENTUCKY.
North Kentucky exhibition, at Florence, August 30-September
4. Central Kentucky exhibition, at Danville, September 6-9. Bour-
Agricultural Exhibitions of 1859. 323
bon county society, at Paris, September 6-9. l^elson county so-
ciety, at Bardstown, September 12-16. North Kentucky exhibi-
tion, at Maj'sville, September 13-16. Union county society, at
Eminence, September 20-23. Harrison county society, at Cynthiana,
September 20-23. Southwestern exhibition, (on grounds where
National exhibition was held in 1857,) near Louisville, September
20-25. South Kentucky exhibition, at Glasgow, September 27-30.
Mercer county society, at Salvisa, September 27-30. Mason &
Brachen counties society, at Germantown, September 27-30. Kenton
county society, at Independence, September 27-October 1. Warren
county society, at Bowling Green, October 4-6. Davies county so-
ciety, at Owensboro', October 11-14. Springfield exhibition, Oc-
tober 11-14. Logan county society, at Russell ville, October 11-14.
Henderson & Hopkins counties society, at Henderson, October 18-21.
At the Gibson county exhibition, there was a display of a yeoman's
family, not easily to be equalled. About three o'clock, Mr. Stephen
Meade and his wife entered the amphitheatre, followed by their twelve
sons and two daughters, each on a line gray steed, and in the order
of their ages. They proceeded around the ring, while the band
struck up Hail Columbia, and drew up in f^ont of the Executive,
when the President made some very appropriate remarks, after
which the mammoth family was vociferously cheered from one side
of the grounds to the other. The old gentleman was born in 1793,
and went to Kentucky in 1819. Mrs. Meade was born in 1803.
The two were married in 1821. The eldest son is 36 years old,
and the youngest 14. The older daughter is 19, and the younger
17. Eleven are married, and have 22 children. The fourteen chil-
dren of Mr. Meade were all born in Gibson county, and all now
live there but one, and are the best of citizens. None of the fam-
ily have died, and all now look hale and hearty.
LOUISIANA.
The Bienville Parish Society — organized in 1857 — held its second
annual exhibition at Mount Lebanon, October 25. The grounds
had been put in order for the reception of stock, and a track con-
structed for the display of horses. The premium list w^as a liberal
one. Only the produce, stock, and manufactures of Louisiana were
admitted, except a few articles marked in the list as " open to the
world."
MAINE.
The State Agricultural Society held its fifth annual exhibition at
Augusta, the capital of the State, October 20-23. The grounds were
324 Secretary's Report on the
those used in 1858, witli more extensive arrangements for the ac-
commodation of stock, and are about thirty acres in extent, almost
between the State House and the river. The State House was used
for the displays of fruit, dairy and garden products, and domestic
manufactures, while in a temporary building near by were the im-
plements and machines. The premium list was about $10,000, com-
prising premiums of — $200 for best trotting horse ; $100 for best
trotting horse always owned in the State ; $40 each for best Dur-
ham and Hereford bulls ; $40 for best ten yokes of oxen from one
county; $10 for best boar, &c. There were over 700 entries.
The weather was very unfavorable, and is thus humorously de-
scribed by the editor of the New England Farmer : "The exhibi-
tion was to have been continued through four days, but the threat-
ening aspect of the weather on Tuesday resolved itself into a deci-
ded storm on Wednesda}', and arrested its further progress. There
was no ' make-believe ' about it, for the rains descended, the winds
blew, and the Hoods came, and every living thing ' caught the dumps '
at once. The cattle would not low, the cocks would not crow,
nor the horses go — it was an efiectual damper all round. The auc-
tioneers grew hoarse -^hile the icy rain drizzled down their necks,
and soon began to j)ack up their traps; the jockeys lost all their
grit, and the boldest of them didn't believe there was a horse on the
ground that could trot a mile in ten minutes ; the men suddenly
came to the conclusion that 'discretion is the better part of valor,'
and departed to get up a flame within themselves, or find one at
their hotels. There was a regular stampede among the women,
and the fields, so lately sparkling with feminine beauty and grace,
became damp, dull and despondent, and the winds and rain had it
pretty much to themselves. Bat the exhibition was not a failure
after all, for the interruption which it experienced showed how much
the people regard and cherish the festival. It was not a failure,
either, because what goes to make up an exhibition was there, al-
though the people were prevented from seeing it. Some 500 cattle,
300 horses, 100 sheep, swine, poultry, bees and honey, grains and
vegetables, fruits and flowers, household manufactures, paintings and
pictures, and a respectable collection of farm implements and ma-
chines, were presented to be examined. Then there were the usual
arrangements for plowing, drawing, and the exhibition of horses."
The show of horses was good, the Messenger and Black Hawk
varieties of the Morgan stock predominating, and the "time" of
the trotting never exceeded 2.39 over a heavy track. The display
Agricultural Exhibitions of 1859. 325
of cattle was excellent, especially the working oxen ; it would be
clifiicult to find an equal number having so manj^ points of excel-
lence as the teams irom the town of Stark. A herd of Devon cows
exhibited by the Shakers of Lebanon, was very fine. There was
also a large display of Durham stock, grade and pure, some of which
was ver}' good. A few full blood Jersej^s were presented by Dr.
Holmes, editor of the Maine Farmer^ and they are among the first,
we understand, introduced into the State, The show of implements
and machines contained many attractive articles, among them a
Scotch "grubber," made to do the work of harrow and cultivator. It
is triangular, with one small wheel forward and two large ones be-
hind, on which the weight of the frame rests. The teeth are long
and bend forward and upwards, so that the action is to lift the dirt
up and leave it light — a desideratum long looked for by judicious
farmers. This machine is all of wrought iron ; it was made by
Messrs Gumming & Rose, of Portland.
AGRICULTURAL MEETING.
In the evening there were meetings in the senate chamber; T. S.
Lang, Esq., the President of the society', in the chair. On the first
evening, after the difi:erent superintendents had reported the char-
acter and number of entries in their various departments, Dr.
Holmes, (the efficient Secretary of the Society,) introduced the
following question for discussion :
" What breed of cattle is best adapted to the soil, climate, and
wants of Maine ? "
Wiiigate Haines, of Aroostook, is one of the largest and most
judicious farmers in the State. He said that he had commenced
with Durham cattle, but had found that a cross with Devon bulls
had suited liim best. The products had the spirit and hardihood of
Devons and the size of the Durhams. The cattle were fully as large
as the cross of Hereford with Durhams.
Mr. Goodale believed that a breed of cattle must be made up
expressly for the wants of tlie State, by breeding in the qualities
wanted. He had tried the Ayrshire stock, and liked them for milk
and work.
Isaiah Wentworth, of Poland, has the best herd of Devons in the
State. He commenced with the Devon stock three years ago, having
formerl}^ had Durhams. The Devons were more hardy and more
spirited ; keep in good condition wnth poorer feed, and are more
easily prepared for beef. He had proved one yoke of Devon oxen ;
and he thought that a yoke of Devon cattle, girting six feet and a
half, would outdo Durhams or Natives of seven feet. Devons suited
him better for farm use. In the logging swamp, the heavy and slow
Durhams were better. For all work, he preferred a cross between
Devon and Durham stock. For milk, he thought the Durham was
better than the Devon, and that the Native was better than either.
41
326 Secretary's Report on the
Devoiis would not yield an average of more than three gallons a
day. He had found them remarkable for docility.
Dr. Holmes was called upon to speak for Jerseys. He is a pioneer
in the introduction of this stock in Maine. He said they were a
poor despised race — the laughing stock of Durham and Devon
breeders — and they must work themselves into favor solely by their
good performance. They were the "martyrs of the barn-yard."
He spoke of the history of the Durhams in New England. The lirst
bull, Young Dunton, was brought to Boston in 1818, and after
remaining there a number of years, he was brought into Maine by
the speaker. He was the first thorough-blood Durham introduced
into Maine, and he was kept here until he died of old age. The
Durhams then were difl'erent from Durhams now. The stock had
been bred for size, and milking qualities had been overlooked. He
thought that the farmers who bred Durhams should try to regain
this quality. The Herefords he had found good for work and beef,
but not for milk. He said there was a difference between races and
breeds of cattle. Races had distinctive characteristics, which could
never be got out of them. Breeds were made up by crosses. Dur-
hams, Herefords and Aj-rshircs he called breeds. Devons, Jerseys
and Galloways were distinctive races. Pure Jersey stock might be
found in Canada, the first inhabitants having come from the coast
of Normandy. In such a length of time, the breeds would have
lost their characteristic qualities. To sum up, he thought that if
any man wanted to raise large, handsome cattle, they should get
Durham or Hereford ; if they wanted beauty and uniformit}^, the
Devon ; if they wanted good milk, he favored the Jersey. He
spoke favorably of the Galloways. He had found them very hardy,
bearing the cold better than any other race, and being good for
milk and beef.
Mr. J. F. Anderson spoke in favor of the Devon stock and its
grades.
Mr. L. Wetherell, of Boston, made a few remarks, and combatted
the argument of Dr. Holmes, maintaining that Durham stock would
not lose its characteristics by breeding in, and, consequently, that
it was a distinct race. "We regret not having a fuller report of his
remarks.
The discussion was one of uncommon interest, and it was very
evident that the speakers had informed themselves with much care
on the subject, the continuation of which must lead to good results
in Maine stock. The discussion was kept up until a late hour, and
resumed on the following evening, when —
Mr. Whitney, of Vienna, thought that different breeds were^use-
ful for difierent purposes, and should all receive attention. He
believed that any improvement in blood was desirable, and that
farmers might succeed in more breeds than one.
Mr. Abner Coburn, of Bloomfield, defended the Duihams from
the severe attacks which had been made on the breed, in the course
of the discussion. He referred to the great improvement in the size
of the cattle of the State within his recollection, and attributed it to
Agricultural Exhihitions of 1859. 327
the general introduction of tlie Durham stock. He spoke of the
noble oxen, and asked Dr. Holmes if there were any oxen or steers
among the Jerseys ?
The Doctor replied, with animation, that they did have six feet
oxen, which would kill any Durharas in the State.
Mr. Coburn resumed, denying that Durham cattle required great
feed to keep them in condition. The speakers against them had
summed up their quality, in a sarcastic manner, as great junks of
beef, just as if it was something against the breed. He thought it
was a valuable quality for the market, of Maine cattle. lie chal-
lenged comparison for the Durhams with any other breeds on the
Held. In speaking of Jerseys, he said that those we have here are
a degenerate race. In Canada the race reached its highest state.
He believed they had cows there which weighed two or three hun-
dred pounds apiece, and they actually had Jersey oxen ! He
acknowledged that the Jersey milk was rich. A man came to him
once, and said he wanted a cow which gave good milk ; he didn't
care about the quantity ; he only wanted enough for himself and
wife. He advised him, without hesitation, to get a Jersey cow!
(Laughter.) He declared that the Jerseys were great eaters, and
that they were like the pig which ate a pailful! and then was not
half a pailfull himself, altogether. (Laughter.)
The remarks of Mr. Coburn were directed to Dr. Holmes, who is
a staunch defender of the Jerseys, and they created a good deal of
merriment.
Mr. Abner Toothaker, of Rangeley, thought that any herd should
be improved by saving the best, which was as necessary as in seed
corn or grain.
LOCAL EXHIBITIONS IN MAINE.
East AYashington county society, at Pembroke, September 27-
28 ; oration by Rev. Mr. Philbrook, of Calais, on " dignity of labor."
N'orth Franklin county society, at Strong, September 28-29. West
Washington county society, first exhibition, at Columbia, Septem-
ber 29. ISTorth Aroostook county society, the most northei-n society
of the kind in the United States, held its second annual exhibition
at Presqu' Isle, October 5-6, where there was a fine display of cattle,
horses, farm products, and manufactured articles, raised or made
just beneath the forty-seventh parallel of north latitude. ISTorth
Penobscot county society, at Lincoln, October 5-6. Franklin county
society — organized 1841 — at its valuable grounds near Farmington,
October 5-7. Oxford county society, October 7 ; a successful exhibi-
tion, superior to that of any previous year, both in the display of
animals and articles, and in the number of people in attendance.
Kennebec county society — organized 1818 — at Readfield, October
11-13. Sagadahoc county society, at Topsham, October 11-13.
Lincoln county society, at Union, October 18-20. Pittston fair, at
328 Secretary's Report on the
Pittstoii, October 18. Waldo county societ}', at Belfast ; a meagre
exhibition, owing to want of grounds. Cumberland county societ}^,
at Gorham, October 20-21. Androscoggin county society, at Lew-
iston : the most successful ever held. Somerset county society, at
Bingham, October 20-23.
MARYLAND.
The State Agricultural Society held its twelfth annual exhibition
at Frederick city, October 25-28. The grounds, wdiicli contain
about ten acres, are those used during the Revolution as a military
post; and the substantial stone barracks were ample for all the uses
of the society. Around the fences w^ere stalls, a majority of which
had doors with locks — and the accommodations for cattle were
excellent. In the middle of the grounds a very fine course was laid
off" for the exercise and trials of speed of the horses entered for
competition. A durable fence enclosed the ring, and care had
been taken for the prevention of accidents. In order that the
numerous contests and trials of speed between the horses might be
the better witnessed, a large number of seats were erected on both
sides of the judges' stand. The highest premiums for the best
cattle and horses were $20 ; sheep, $8 ; swine, $6 — total amount of
premiums paid, $1,946. The gate receipts were $2,287 21; and
the exhibition was self-sustaining, giving ample assurance that
when the State shall act with proper liberality in aiding the advance-
ment of agriculture, the Maryland society will at once be placed on
a prosperous footing. Too much praise cannot be aw^arded to
President Merryman, who accepted office when the society was
embarrassed, and who has done so much to re-organize its aflairs.
The display of horses was the finest which has ever taken place
at any Maryland exhibition. The Cleavelaud ba}^ and Black Hawk
breeds predominated, and some of the animals on exhibition ex-
hibited all the excellent points of their celebrated progenitors.
Among the horses exhibited w^as an imported stallion, Symmetry,
Cleaveland bay, imported by Dr. John R. Woods, of Albemarle
county, Va., which arrived in this country about five weeks previous.
He is a most beautiful animal, perfect in limb and carriage, and
w^as purchased in England, b}" Sanford Howard, of the Boston
Cultivator^ on order of Dr. Woods, at a cost of $2,500. The display
of cattle was very fair, including the Ilerefords of Mr. Merryman
and the Devons of Mr. McHenry which took the first premiums at
the U. S. Exhibition at Chicago. Mr. Bowie's Devons were con-
sidered the best on the ground by the judges, and there were Alder-
Agricultural Exhibitions of 1859. 329
iicys, Durliams, grade, and native cattle of a high order of merit.
The show of sheep and swine was very good, and some very choice
ones in each of these chxsses. The implement show was a, very
good one — not as extensive as at some former shows, but of excel-
lent quality. The other departments were very fairly represented,
the farm and garden products being especially good.
On the afternoon of the third day, an address was delivered by the
Rev. John G. Morris, D. D., on " The Connection between Agri-
culture and Natural History." The learned researches of Dr.
Morris in natural histor}^ and his devotedness to agricultural in-
terests, eminently fitted him for such an address. It is needless to
add that it was an able efibrt, and was well received.
Upon the conclusion of the Doctor's address, the list of awards
and premiums was read, after which Mr. Merryman announced the
close of the fair, in a few" pertinent remarks. He said, that in closing
the exercises, he thought it his duty to express his sincere thanks to
the numerous friends of the Society, "the ladies (God bless them)
in particular." He thought the warmest thanks of every one con-
nected with the Society, was due the ladies for the great interest
they took, not only in coming to the fair, but in making and de-
positing articles to compete for prizes. He had been to many Ag-
ricultural fairs, had been connected with man}", but had never known
or seen such a Household Department as the ladies had gotten up
and sustained at the present fair.
Much of the preceding account of the Maryland exhibition is
taken from the Rural Register, edited by Samuel Sands, Esq., the
efficient and experienced Secretary of the Maryland Society.
LOCAL EXHIBITIONS IN MARYLAND.
Montgomery county society, at E-ockville, September 8 ; Joseph
H. Bradley, of AYashington, D. C., orator. Washington county so-
ciety, at Hagerstown, October 18-20. Charles county society, at
Port Tobacco, ISTovember 15-16.
MASSACHUSETTS.
The State Board of Agriculture — organized April 21, 1852 — held
no exhibition ; neither did the Massachusetts Society for Promoting
Agriculture — organized in 1792. The county and other local exhi-
bitions were well attended, and, generally speaking, very excellent.
LOCAL EXHIBITIONS IN MASSACHUSETTS.
Bristol county society, at Taunton, September 14-15 ; remarks
at dinner by Leander Witherill, Judge Marstou, and others. High-
330 Secretary's Report on the
land exhibition, at Middlefield, September l-l-lo. Middlesex county
South society, at Framingham, September 20-21 ; 221 entries of
stock, and 654 of produce and manufactures ; address by Governor
1*T. P. Banks, on " Industrial Exhibitions." Middlesex county Korth
society, at Lowell, September 21 ; address by Ex-Governor George
S. Boutwell, on '* The ^Necessities and Duties of the Great Profes-
sion of Agriculture." Green Mountain exhibition, at Worthing-
ton, September 21. Hampden county society, at SpringHeld, Sep-
tember 21-22 ; a humorous poem was delivered by Dr. J. G. Hol-
land, who said :
" The pigs are here — that liilcrary brocd,
So much contemned, so little understood —
The pigs, that like our literary men,
Sleep in the straw, and live upon the^m —
The pigs, that through all time perpetuate
That wondrous thing that purchased man his mate,
And pays us for the ruin Avrought by Madam,
With the old sjjarc-rib sacrificed by Adam!"
East Franklin exhibition, at Montague, September 28; Professor
Ward, of Bernardstown, orator. AVorcester county, West societ}',
at Barre, September 27. I^Norfolk county society, (organized in
1849, under the auspices of Hon. Marshall P. Wilder, who has been
annually re-elected President,) at Dedham, September 27-28 ;
a highly successful exhibition, comprising drawing, plowing and
spading matches, with a banquet, at whicli nearly a thousand per-
sons listened to addresses from President Wilder, George B. Emer-
son, Esq., and liev. A. L. Stone — an abstract of the last named
gentleman's remarks are appended. Franklin county society, at
Greenfield, September 27-28. Middlesex county society, organized
in 1794, held its sixty-jifth annual exhibition on its fine grounds
near Concord, September 28 ; Rev. Mr. Stebbins, of Woburn, orator.
Worcester county South society, at Starbridge, September 28.
Hampshire, Franklin, and Hampden counties society, at North-
ampton, September 28-29. Essex county society, (organized and
chartered in 1818 under the auspices of Timothy Pickering,) at
Danvers, September 28-29 — the plowing match was warmly con-
tested by twenty teams; the address w^as by J. J. H. Gregory, Esq.,
of Marblehead, whose subject was "Observation and experiment on
the part of the agriculturist with reference to the elevation of his
nature and the improvement of his calling;" there were addresses
at a banquet, by Richard S. Fay, Esq., Hon John B, Alley, M. C.,
and others. Hingham exhibition, at Ilingham, September 28-29 ;
addresses at a banquet — the school children were treated to a ride
Agricultural Exhibitions of 1859. 331
on a wagon, decorated with evergreens, and drawn by thirty-one
yokes of splendid cattle. Housatonic county, at Great Barrington,
September 28-29. AVorcester county society, (the parent institu-
tion, from which four others have been formed in that county,) held
its forty-first annual exhibition at its grounds, near Worcester,
September 28-29 — the display of cattle was very fine, and a lively
interest was excited by the plowing and drawing matches ; an
address was delivered by the Hon. Josiah Quincy, Jr, of Boston,
on "Material Fertilization, and how it maybe obtained" — Hon.
John Brooks, of Princeton, after a brief speech complimentary to
that gentleman, moved that C. L. Flint, Esq., the able Secretary
of the State Board of Agriculture, be elected an honorary member of
the society, which was carried with applause, and Mr. Flint hand-
somely acknowledged the compliment. Worcester county, North
society, at Fitchburg, September 29-80 ; Ex-governor George S.
Boutwell, orator; on the morning of the first day of the exhibition,
a cavalcade of citizens, with a band, met and escorted to the grounds
a procession of yoked working oxen, half a mile in length, formed
of "town teams," one town sending forty-five yoke. Mountain
Farmers' Club Exhibition, at Plainfield, October 4. Plymouth
county society, organized 1819, at its fair grounds, near Bridge-
water, (which cost with the buildings $17,500,) October 5-6.
Barnstable county societ}', at its grounds near Barnstable, October
5-6 — an abstract of the address by Dr. George B. Loring, of Salem, is
appended ; remarks were made at the banquet by PresidentPhinne}^
Hon. Marshall P. Wilder, William Sturgis, Dr. Loring, C. L. Flint,
Professor Clark, Major Rogers, J. B. D. Cogswell of Milwaukee, and
Judge Marston, who announced that Hon. William Sturgis of
Boston, had presented to the Barnstable society his check for $1,200.
Berkshire county society, its forty-ninth annual exhibition, atTitts-
field, October 5-7. Hoosic valley society, near North Adams,
October 5-6; address by Professor Tatlock, of Williams' college.
Eastern Hampshire society, at Ware, October 6 ; address by W. S.
B. Hopkins, Esq,, of Ware. Essex North, Horti-agricultural exhi-
bition, at Newburyport, October 11; address by GCTham P. Sergeant.
Esq,, of Byfield. Martha's Yinyard society, at West Tisbury,
October 11-12. Nantucket county society, at Nantucket, October
12-13. Hampshire county society, tenth annual exhibition, at
Amherst, October, 12-13 ; address by Dr. Winship, of Poxbury,
who claimed to be the strongest man of the times, and displayed
his strength by lifting eight casks of nails, weighing 800 pounds,
332 S&cretary's Report on the
and other feats ; at a subsequent banquet, Dr. Hitchcock, of Amherst
college, made some remarks, in which he alluded to the orator and
to a gymnasium just founded there, saying during his life he had
been engaged in three gymnasia, viz: "The agricultural, the
chemical and the geological;" of these he considered the first by
far the most important, and some times almost wished himself
again on the farm, handling the rake and axe.
ABSTRACT OF REMARKS BY REV. A. L. STONE.
Mr. Stone, after having been introduced to the ladies and gentle-
men seated at the long tables in the society's hall, said, in substance :
It is a pleasant surprise to me to find the agricultural interest rep-
resented by so many of the gentle and more domestic sex. And
yet their presence on such an occasion I believe to be in every respect
legitimate and wholesome, for their proper connection with this
interest is intimate and vital. The original description or definition
of a wife is that she is an helpmeet for man. Just in what way, or
in what variety of ways, this fitting help is to be rendered, that ori-
ginal document does not set forth. The practical answer exhibits
diversities so varied as never to repeat themselves. tSometimes this
sphere of helpful fellowship is very much restricted, and again
almost indefinitely broadened. The wife of the German farmer
limits this sphere only with the boundaries of his estate. Her
nursery is out of doors in the open field. Its canopy is the leafy
shade ; its carpet, the green turf or the soft brown mold. There
lier little ones roll, and tumble and sleep all day, while she keeps
even stroke with her husband in the day's toil. On a day's ride in
the diligence through a pleasant portion of Bavaria, I amused my-
self by jotting down the occupation of a dozen or so of ladies, as I
met them in succession. The first two were equipped with the
deep, heavy-bladed, short-handled, unwieldl}^ hoes of the country,
and were hoeing potatoes on a hillside ; tlie third was plodding
along on the road barefooted, bare armed, &c., with a burden on
her head that would have broken the back of a moderate-sized mule ;
the fourth and fifth were swinging scythes with the regular action
of the practiced farmer, one of them leading the procession and
keeping well ahead. Of the succeeding three, one was raking hay,
one was pitching, and one sat on the top of a load, loading, while
the only man of the group was driving the oxen. The next four
were attendants upon house-masons, and were carrying bricks and
mortar on their heads up tall ladders, with an ease of step and
balance that argned them experts at their trade. I have seen women
in that same country holding a plow, and in some instances assist-
ing a dumb all}^ — I mean a four-legged one — to draw the same
agricultural implement.
I suppose that some of us should not exactly covet this style of
female co-operation, even in the stress of harvest season. But the
question occurred to me then, and has again occurred to me here,
whether there were not some sort of co-operation the wives and
Agricultural Exhibitions of 1859. 833
daughters of our farmers could render their lords in that calling,
and" if so, what? Now, I take it, it is the desire of every true
wife to have at least an intelligent sympathy with her husband's
calling. There is here and there, perhaps, one sustaining the rela-
tion of a wife, to whom it is enough to share her husband's revenue,
leaving out his cares and toils as trifles not worthy her regard.
Thereniay be here and there a husband whose ambition is to keep
his more delicate half in blissful ignorance of all his out-of-door
work, whether plowing or financiering. But I suppose the old-
fashioned and better notion is that of reciprocal sympathy between
these fellow-pilgrims.
I never would marry a couple, if I knew it, who had any other
idea of the tie, no matter what the fee might be. And perhaps I
may be permitted to add, that with right views on this point, I am
ready to join any number of couples together, with a trifling
pecuniary proviso.
But if the sympathy of which I have spoken be an intelligent
sympathy, it should take some pains to be informed. I believe that
an agricultural literature, and we may say with just exultation that
we have now an agricultural literature, is quite as healthful and
stimulating a literature in the drawing-room as that which deals in
fashion-plates and love-sick heroines. I don't think it would be
unwomanly, in short, for the wives and daughters of our farmers to
be able to converse wisely and wittily upon agricultural topics, with
their husbands aud fathers, or with gentleman visitors. Such a
conversation might easily vindicate itself in contrast with the vapid
frivolities making so much of the staple of drawing-room chat.
It would do no harm, either, for these ladies to have a general
familiarity with the out-of-door pursuits of those to whom they are
thus allied, even if that were gained by an occasional walk afield,
instead of a shopping excursion.
A visit now and then to the stable and the farm-yard might save
the fair explorer from such a blunder as happened once to a metro-
politan friend of mine, of the same sex. Being in the countr}^ and
smitten deeply with rural tastes, it occurred to her one morning
that it would be quite romantic to play milkmaid. So she took a
pail and went forth, but not meeting with any great success in the
operation, it was discovered that she had made a slight mistake in
regard to the sex of the animal she waited upon.
But let the ladies of our agricultural homes make those homes
centres of intelligence, culture and refinement ; let them feel and
show a just and generous pride in the calling to which they are thus
allied, and a disposition and an ability to vindicate its true honor,
as compared with any other ; let them give their rejoicing and sym-
pathetic presence on such occasions as this; let the j'ounger rank
of these ladies place their delicate, soft hands, for life, as readily in
the large, brown hand of the practical farmer as in the soft and
whiter palm of a merchant's clerk or a professional aspirant.
The speaker said he could not look upon the farmer without
regarding him as a heroic wrestler with nature. With him every
42
334 Secretary's Report on the
season was a campaign, and every harvest a victory; and may God
crown you all with a blessing, as you are already crowned with
honors.
ABSTRACT OP ADDRESS BY DR. GEORGE B. LORING.
In commencing, Dr. Loring briefly reviewed the dawn of agri-
culture in New England, and said he could not sufficiently admire
the tenacity with which the sons of the early farmers had adhered
to those acres, toiling on the laud with temptations of the sea all
about them, and the stronger temptations of more fertile soils con-
tinually beckoning them away. In passing, he paid a fitting com-
pliment to the thrift and intelligence of the people of the Cape. In
speaking in general terms upon the subject of agriculture, he said
it was education alone which could make the farming of New Eng-
land what it should be. Nothing else would so conduce to the
thrift and independence of our farmers. Only intelligent labor
could be truly profitable. The most intelligent men, other things
being equal, could plow the straightest furrow, raise the best crops,
select the best cow, drive the slickest team, and accomplish the
most work in the easiest way. The excellence which the art of
agriculture in England had attained, was attributable to the science
and intelligence which had ruled the mass of laborers. The
same intelligence was needed by the small farmers of New England
to render their eflbrts successful. The business of farming in this
country rested in the hands of the people, and it was for them to
say whether it should be well done or ill. The speaker drew a
forcible comparison between the labors of the foreign tenantry and
of our independent yeomanry, and spoke of our inducements to
labor and to develop the art of agriculture. There was no reason
why there should be better farmers in Europe than in our own
country. The soil and climate of New England gave a bounteous
response to well regulated industry. The products of our soil were
in proportion to our skill and industry in cultivation. The drainage
and manuring, judidiously applied, returned a hundred fold on the
investment. Dr. Loring enlarged with force upon the importance
of the cultivation of the mind of the farmer. A cultivated mind
created its own opportunity ; was watchful of every passing hour,
ingenious in making a moment of leisure for its own purposes. No
laborious occupation properly demanded more mental culture than
farming, and none furnished better opportunities of attaining it.
The importance of cultivating a taste for reading was also dwelt
upon at considerable length. Books were friends which never
failed. No life beside the farmers ofi:ered such advantages for
indulging in communion with books. Agricultural literature
formed a most important chapter in tije history "of the world. Could
English literature be deprived of the efforts of those who wrote
upon agriculture, it would lose one of its chiefest charms. Follow
your own Coleman in his enthusiastic researches, and you might
live in all the freshness of glowing country. The last State report
oil agriculture introduced you to the rurarhomes of a happy people,
Agricultural Exhibitions of 1859. 335
wbosc hills and valleys are alive with growing crops, and with flocks
and herds ; and when you had faithfully toiled through the last
leader of your favorite editor upon the great doctrine of popular
sovereignty, or upon our foreign relations, or have supped full of
horrors upon murders and robberies, or have been lashed into indig-
nation at some newspaper abuse of your best friend, lay this all
aside, and take up your last agricultural journal. Do you not fill at
once with an indescribable satisfaction that you have kept the good
wdne until now?
Farmers should remember, continued the speaker, that through
mental cultivation they had arrived at their modern improvements
in agriculture ; and these afforded the necessaries of life at moderate
prices. ' In order to maintain our social and civil organization, we
must furnish the producing classes with the most economical mode
of working and living. Perhaps we shall never cultivate the soil
better than did the Egyptians, or Saracens, or Romans, or than now
do the Chinese ; but we must do it with less demand upon human
time and strength, by the use of labor-saying machinery. Improved
machinery was the result of free institutions.
The speaker recommended the establishment of agricultural
schools. Such schools had brought the agriculture of France to a
high degree of perfection. He said we want the rudiments of agri-
culture taught in our schools, and asked if it would not be as useful
as algebra, or a smattering of metaphysics. He said w^e wanted a
greater number of competent editors for our agricultural journals,
well educated and competent judges and committees, agricultural
colleges and model farms — not farms cultivated by little wanton
boys, as a punishment for unruly conduct, and w^here no definite
and systematic mode of cultivation can possibly be adopted, but
farms where young men will learn the theory and practice of culti-
vating the earth under the instruction of well qualified teachers.
Dr. Loring closed by expressing his admiration of the ISTcw Eng-
land farmers, and by advising their sons to remain at home, in the
peaceful and happy pursuits of their fathers.
MICHIGAK
The State Agricultural Society — organized March 23, 1819— held
its exhibition where it has been located since 1850, at Detroit,
October 4-7. The weather was propitious until the last day, and
all the arrangements were of a most liberal and extensive character,
owing to the exertions of the able and indefatigable Secretary of
the Society, R. F. Johnston, Esq. The entries exceeded those of
any previous year, both in number and quality, the fair being open
for the first time to competition from all States, the State of Canada
included. The premium list was over $3,000, judiciously divided.
The display of cattle, (we quote from a correspondent of the
Country Cf-entleman,) was very creditable, especially the short-horns,
in which class Michigan took the lead, although the contest was
336 Secretary' s Report on the
a sharp one; the breeders of this State have been paying much
attention lately to first class animals. The horses on exhibition
comprised the best stock at the West; a trotting match came oif
between "Magna Charta," the famous competitor of "Ike Cook,"
at the National Fair at Chicago, and two other horses, who were
soon distanced, the former making his mile in 2.47. The sheep,
swine, and poultry, made a good appearance, and there \vas also
some choice fancy stock. One Cochin China was so enormous,
that he was said to be entered in the class "for all work."
The leading attraction of the fair was Waters' steam plow, which
moved about the grounds to the great delight of the spectators.
There were no plows attached to it on this occasion, but it is stated
that the inventor has already engaged to plow over ten thousand
acres with it in Illinois next spring. Day's shingle machine, and
Daines' drain tile-maker attracted much attention. The displays
of fruit, flowers, and produce w^as good.
On the third day. Governor Banks, of Massachusetts, accompa-
nied by Senators Bingham and Chandler, was escorted to the
grounds by the military and fire companies, where he made an
eloquent and instructive address to the vast crowd which thronged
the place.
LOCAL EXHIBITIONS IN MICHIGAN.
Kalamazoo county society, fourteenth annual exhibition, at Kala-
mazoo, September 21-23; address by Gen. F. W. Curtenius, Presi-
dent of the Society. INorthern Lenawee county society, at Tecum-
seh, September 21-22. Eaton county society, at Charlotte, Septem-
ber 26-28. Berrin county society, at Niles, September 27-29.
Allegan county society, at Allegan, September 28-29. Genesee
county society, at Flint, September 28-29. Jackson county society,
at Jackson, September 28-30. Kent county society, at Grand
Rapids, September 28-30. St. Joseph county society, at Centreville,
September 28-30. Ionia county society, at Ionia, September 29-30.
Van Buren countrj- society, at Paw-Paw, September 29-October 1.
Lenawee county society, at Adrian, October 5-6. Macomb county
society, at Utica, October 10-12. Washtenaw couut}^ society, at
Ann Arbor, October 11-13. Hillsdale county society, at Hillsdale,
October 12-13. Oakland county society, at Pontiac, October 12-13.
Lapeer county society, at Lapeer, October 18-20.
MINNESOTA.
There is a State Agricultural Society in Minnesota, organized in
1854, but no advices have been received of any exhibition held by
it during the year 1859.
Agricultural JExhibitions of 1859. 337
LOCAL EXHIBITIONS iN MINNESOTA.
Scott and Carver county society, at Shicopec, September 28-29.
Hennepin county society, at Minneapolis, October 5-7. Wabashaw
county society, at Wabashaw, October 13-14.
MISSISSIPPI.
The State Agricultural Bureau held its exhibition at the grounds
near the city of Jackson, November 7-12, as fixed by the constitu-
tion. The grounds had been put in complete order, and an am-
phitheatre with seats, a large exhibition hall, and a machine hall
had been erected. Mr. Rham, (who gained the grand gold medal
of honor at the National Exhibition of 1858,) brought from Rich-
mond a steam-engine, with saw-mill attached, and was prepared to
run all machinery brought on the ground. The premium list was
a liberal one, with an entrance fee of ten per cent, of the premium
to persons not members of a county agricultural society in the
State, and five per cent, to persons producing satisfactory evidence
of such membership. No account of the exhibition has been received
except that an account of the operations of the Board was given by
the President, Colonel T. J. Hudson, and an address was delivered
by Hon. A. M. West.
LOCAL EXHIBITIONS IN MISSISSIPPI.
Munroe county society, at Aberdeen, October 18-20. Marshall
county society, at Holly Springs, October 25-29.
MISSOURI.
The fourth annual exhibition of the St. Louis Agricultural and
Mechanical Association was held at its grounds, September 26-Oc-
tober 1. A partial description of these unequalled grounds is given
on page 61 of this volume. The amphitheatre is 305 feet in diame-
ter, and is capable of accommodating thirty-six thousand spectators,
(one-third of them seated,) around an area having a diameter of 225
feet, with a pagoda 45 feet high in the centre. A new building was
erected for the display of textile fabrics at the exhibition of '59, with an
additional range of stalls, and many other improvements. The pre-
mium list was, as usual, large, and well calculated to attract a large
concourse of exhibitors and of spectators. Two premiums of $1,000
each were oftered for the best horse and for the best bull. Heavy
rains interfered with the pecuniary success of the exhibition, but
the receipts more than defrayed the expenses. On Wednesday, it
was estimated that there were 65,000 on the grounds.
The display of cattle was large and excellent, comprising many
838 Secretary's Report on the
of the herds which had been exhibited at the National Exhibition
at Chicago, and the most noted horses of the country were present,
including Lexington, the veteran monarch of the turf. The other
departments of tlie exhibition were well filled, and the excellent
arrangements of President Barretts were promptly carried out, when
the weather permitted.
LOCAL EXHIBITIONS IN MISSOURI.
Randolph county society, at Huntsville, August 31-September 3.
Clinton county society, at Plattsburg, September 13-15. Lewis,
Knox, and Shelby counties. Union exhibition, at ]^ewark, Septem-
ber 13-17. Southwestern society, third annual exhibition, at Bow-
ling Green, September 20-24. Boone county society, at Columbia,
September 27-30. Central exhibition, at Booneville, October 3-8,
Lawrence county society, at October 4-7. Moniteau county
society, at Tipton, October 10-13. Green county society, at Spring-
field, October 11-14. Adams county society, at Quincy, October
12-14. •
NEBRASKA.
A territorial exhibition was held at Nebraska city, October 21-
23, and was "called a success by the Territorial papers." Local
exhibitions were held by the Cass county and by the Otoe county
societies.
NEW HAMPSHIRE.
The State Society held its tenth annual exhibition at Dover, Oc-
tober 5—7. This society was organized at Manchester in the winter
of 1848-49 by a few gentlemen, among them Hon. Frederick Smyth,
(since so prominently connected with the United States Society,)
who has continued to take an active interest in its welfare, and has
been for some years its Treasurer. There was at that time but one
county society in the State, but since then, although numerous local
organizations have grown into vigorous institutions, the State So-
ciety has gradually increased in its hold upon the estimation of the
public, and its exhibitions have become public festivals. They not
only stimulate the yeomen and mechanics in difierent sections of
the Granite State to healthy competition with their neighbors, by
showing them what improvements are being made in stock, prod-
uce, implements, and manufactured articles, but they gather together
the scattered members of the State family, to unite with those at
home in a holiday circle. In no section of the Union are exhibi-
tions more systematicall}^ planned, or more promptly and efliciently
conducted, than are those of the New Hampshire State Society.
Agricultural JExhihitions of 1859. 339
The President for 1859 was William F. Estes; the Secretary, Aaron
Young; the General Superintendent, Captain S. Hanson, and the
Chief Marshal, Col. George H. Peirce.
The grounds, about thirty acres in extent, were within the city
limits, and were well fitted up, and supplied with water and other
conveniences. There was a track one-third of a mile around, within
which was the plowing match. Large tents were erected for the
exhibition of produce, fruit, flowers, and manufactured articles, and
in a building for the business ofiices of the society, there was an
abundant supply of refreshments for committees, and for members
of the press. The premium-list was liberal. Private purses of $100,
$50, and $25 were oflered for the best trotting stallions. "The high-
est regular premiums for horses was $30, for oxen $15, for sheep
$12, for mowing machines $15, for ladies' driving $10, ladies' riding
$6. The receipts were about $6,000.
There was a fine show of cattle, the Durhams taking the lead. A
yoke of grade Durham working oxen, six years old, each, girthed
nine feet and six inches, and their joint weight was 6,500 pounds ;
a grade Durham steer, five years old, girthed nine feet, and weighed
4,000 pounds. There were eighty-five yoke of working oxen, all
grade Durhams or Devons, and a team of twenty yoke from Rock-
ingham county merited high praise. There were about forty sheep,
including some of the New Oxfordshire, which resemble a grade of
Spanish Merino. The show of horses was good, and there were
several exciting "trials of speed," especially when the ladies com-
peted. The dames went off very well at first, but soon engaged in
a reckless scrub race, which ended in a general smash-up, in which
one driver was thrown under the horses' feet.
The address was delivered by Hon. Jacob Collamer from the
stand. It was a most uncomfortable position, and the roaring of
the wind, the general commotion and discomfort would have dis-
heartened the most sanguine and eloquent orator in the world ;
but notwithstanding, at least 5,000 persons listened out of the
12,000 on the ground. He considered the objections to farming in
New England, and showed conclusively that neither the soil or the
climate were such as to warrant an exodus of agriculturists to the
west. It was an instructive and eloquent address, as were other
briefer ones, delivered at the "farmer's talks" held in the evenings.
LOCAL EXHIBITION IX NEW HAMPSHIRE.
The Connecticut River Valley association, located at grounds of
the Sullivan county society, Charlestown, September 20-22, would
340 Secretary's Report on the
have had a fine exhibition, had the rain not poured down in torrents
throughout the three days — the managers nevertheless awarded
and paid all their premiums ; Dr. George B. Loring, of Massachu-
setts, orator. Hillsborough county society had intended to hold
two exhibitions, one at Weare, September 22-23, the other at
Milford, September 29-30 ; owing to the weather they were post-
poned, and held at Milford, October 4-5. Cheshire county society,
at its spacious grounds near Keene, September 27-28. Belknap
county society, at Laconia, September 28-29. Merrimack county
society; first annual exhibition at grounds near Concord, where
the State Exhibition was held in 1857, September 28-30; Pres-
ident^WalterHarriman, orator. Merrimac river association, second
annual exhibition at Nashua, October 12-13, on grounds recently
fitted up; brief addresses were made by Hon. Frederick Smyth, (of
the United States and the State Agricultural Societies,) Governor
Goodwin and Ex-President Peirce, the latter congratulating the
farmers on the success of their exhibition, which gave so pleasant
a holiday ; in his opinion the American people have not holidays
enough, and he regarded these exhibitions as productive of great
good in bringing people together, and in encouraging them to
open their hearts to each other.
NEW JERSEY.
The State Agricultural Society held its fifth annual exhibition at
the city of Elizabeth, September 13-16. The premium list was
liberal, ranging down from $15 for best cattle and horses, $10 for
best sheep and swine, and $5 for best fruit ; an entrance fee of $5
was required for every single horse or pair of matched horses, but
those which actually competed for premiums had $4 refunded.
The regulations were excellent, adding to the reputation of W. M.
Force, Esq., the Secretary of the Society, who had the management
of the exhibition. The society has entirely recovered from the
disastrous effects of the third annual fair, which left it $1,500 in
debt, and it is doing much good by securing and disseminating
information.
The number of entries were: cattle 109, horses and mules 177,
sheep, swine, and poultry 96, farm and home products 207, home
made and factory articles 63, mechanical department 407 — total
1,059. The display of horses was excellent, embracing some of
noted races, and there were some fine cattle, imported and native,
among them Mr. Van Sickle's cow Rose, who gave from June 1st
Agricultural Exhibitions of 1859. 341
to June 10th, forty-eight pounds of milk a day, which yielded
altogether 21 lbs. 10 oz. of butter. The same gentleman exhibited
a pair of two year old matched steers, broke to drive in yoke and
single and double harness ; they were each marked with a white
stripe about a yard in width around the waist, while the fore part,
rump and legs were red.
There was a fine display of fruit, although the crop of peaches
had been nearly cut ofi:'. The weather was pleasant, and thousands
of people turned out in their holiday attire to view the fine native
and blooded cattle, the fancy, serviceable and fast horses, the fat
pigs, mammoth sheep, the great and small vegetables, luscious
fruits, beautiful flowers, and hundreds of other useful and orna-
mental articles which go to make up such exhibitions.
LOCAL EXHIBITIONS IN NEW JERSEY.
Cumberland county society, at Bridgeton, September 28. Som-
erset count}'^ society, at Somerville, October 4-7. Warren county
society, at Belvidere, October 11-14. Salem county society, at
Salem. Newark county society, at Newark.
NEW YORK.
The State Society held its nineteenth annual exhibition near Al-
bany, October 4-7. A historical sketch of this societ}^, by its expe-
rienced and respected secretary, Hon. B. P. Johnson, was published
in the " Journal of the United States Agricultural Society " for
1853-4; and its subsequent operations show an equal success. In
a report made last year to the General Government, Mr. Johnson
said : " The advancement made in this State, since the establish-
ment of public exhibitions by this society, in 1841, is most encour-
aging. In every department of our agriculture there has been
improvement — that of cattle, horses, sheep, swine, and poultry being
most marked ; and we can now favorably compare with any part
of the world. Our wealth has thus been greatly increased. In
implements and machinery of agriculture, we have progressed in a
most gratifying manner. Many visitors at our fairs remarked that,
had the society done nothing else than to secure the improvement
in implements on exhibition, the State would have been amply
compensated for all the outlay which had been made to promote
agriculture." The exhibition of 1859 was even an improvement on
its predecessors, and high praise was officially awarded to President
Conger for his exertions in promoting its success. Sanford Howard,
Esq., editor of the Boston Cultivator, said of it : "It has been the
fortune of the writer to attend most of the shows of this society for
43
342 Secretary's Report on the
the past fifteen years, and also to attend similar exhibitions in many
parts of the country. Comparing this with any other display of
the society, or any other association in America, we have no hesita-
tion in saying that it exceeds all we have attended. It may be that
some parts of other exhibitions have been equal or superior to the
same parts of this; but on a general comparison, we presume this
is unequalled."
The officers of the I^^ew York State Society can say, with just
pride, that their exhibitions have been strictly confined to the legiti-
mate objects of its charter, "To improve the condition of Agriculture,
Horticulture, and the Household Arts.'' " With fine weather," said
Mr. Tucker, of the Country Grentleman, "it has been shown that
the public interest in a purely agricultural exhibition manifests a
gratifying increase. The past week saw no ' trials of speed.' The
society, having never had recourse to a horse mania, or to any side
issues to attract attention to her shows, stands forth to represent
the rural interests of the State. For the farm, she points to imple-
ments and modes of culture ; for the stock-yard, to improvements
in domestic animals of all races ; for the garden, to all that is useful
and ornamental in fruits and flowers and vegetables ; for the dairy,
the housewife, the mechanic and the manufacturer, to whatever, by
promoting their several ends, may tend to increase the general
prosperity and comfort. All these several objects are objects of
permanent utility and interest. Balloon ascensions, trotting
matches, and catch-penny 'elephants,' of every kind, may 'draw'
during their day. It is no more than the experience of the past
nine years has abundantly taught us, that every body instituted for
the promotion of agriculture should avoid descending to other and
lower waj's of gaining a temporary popularity." By way of endorse-
ment to this assertion, Secretary Johnson informs us that the num-
ber of entries was three thousand five hundred and fifty-one, and
that the receipts were $18,111 33.
The grounds, which were about two miles north of Albany, were
about forty acres in extent, thoroughly under-drained, and fitted up
with all requisite buildings and accommodations for exhibitors and
the public. "The arrangements," said Secretary Johnson in his
Journal, " were more complete and convenient than on any former
occasion ; and the location of the grounds was such that the execu-
tive committee were enabled to carry out what they have long
desired. The plan upon which the erections were made, prepared
by a committee selected for the purpose, and adopted by the board.
Agricultural Exhibitions of 1859. 343
gave to the exhibitors in every department a fair opportunity ot
conveniently exhibiting their articles, and of securing an examina-
tion by those in attendance. Instead of being scattered over the
entire area, the buildings were arranged on the sides of an open
area of one hundred and fifty feet in width — passing through the
entire ground ; and the public were at liberty to examine the arti-
cles without traversing the whole enclosure. The cattle, arranged
in their order by themselves, in comfortable stalls ; the horses in a
convenient portion of the grounds, separate from the rest of the
exhibition, in stalls, enabled the officers to carry out what had long
been desired — a control over the exhibition in this department.
Sheep, swine and poultry were also conveniently arranged — and,
taken as a whole, we have never seen a showground so conveniently
arranged for exhibitors and visitors. The sketch which we have
given of it will convey to the reader the advantages it possessed.
The erections were well adapted to the purposes of the society, and
did great credit to the local committee and the builder. Many
were fearful that the erections would not be filled ; but the day
previous to the opening required an additional building, and a
large number of stalls for cattle and horses. The first day of the
fair gave unmistakable evidence that this was to be the great fair of
the society ; and in the number of entries, in the quality of the
stock, implements, machinery, domestic goods, new inventions,
fruits, and flowers, it may with safety be said that it has not had its
equal in this State, if it has in the Union.
" This year, as the last, the society had the pleasure of exhibiting
to the public the gratifying advance which had been made by the
society. The number of exhibitors exceeds any previous year.
The exhibitors in the leading departments are not confined to a few
individuals, but are widely dispersed throughout the State — the
society thus accomplishing what has steadily been its object, the
diffiision of its improvements throughout the State. All the officers
of the society, with one exception, were present during the fair,
and were fully employed, from its commencement to its close, in
the discharge of their duties."
The well-arranged programme was punctually and efficiently
carried out by Major M. R. Patrick, the general superintendent ;
and the procession of prize animals, exhibited under his direction
on Friday, is said to have been the finest ever witnessed on the
American continent. " The horses, of course, were fine, and the
cattle, embracing all the foreign breeds of Short Horns, Devons,
344 Secretary' 8 Report on the
Ayrshires, Herefords, Alderneys and grade animals, attracted uni-
versal attention," even eliciting the admiration of gentlemen from
the famous stock-growing regions of the west. Not only the adja-
cent States, but the British Provinces, contributed to this unequalled
EXHIBITION OF '59 !
The annual address, by Hon. John A. Dix, was thus briefly
noticed in. the Country Grentleman : " The speaker, after alluding to
the fact that twelve years ago he had read before the society the
last words written by Silas Wright, proceeded to the discussion of
his subject — the same on which Governor "Wright had written, and
one which has, moreover, during the interval, grown into still
greater importance — viz : the value to the farmers of this country
of their foreign grain and provision markets. We have not room
to give any outline of the remarks which followed ; their main purpose
was to show that our foreign exports of farm products are increasing
and must continue to increase ; to direct inquiry as to whether
we possess the means of supplying the promised foreign demand,
and if not, how our means of production are to be enlarged ; to
point to our wastefulness of natural fertility and common disregard
of fertilizers ; and, finally, to the great agricultural advantages we
really have, if we only rightl}' use them. General D.'s conclusions
will be read with interest when the address appears in the society's
transactions, to which it will be a valuable contribution."
The evening meetings held at the rooms of the society, at Albany,
constituted, as usual, an important feature of the exhibition. We
extract from the Country Gentleman the
DISCUSSION ON SOILING CATTLE.
Hon. Josiah Quiucy, of Massachusetts, said that, in connection
with the subject of soiling, one of the first questions asked is, how
much laud does it require to keep a cow? I have learned that one
square rod of grass, barley, oats, or corn, is siifficient for the food
of a cow a single day. The best fodder for the purpose of soiling
is grass, oats, Indian corn and barley. Mj' system is this : I use
grass until July ; about the 5th of April, oats are planted at the
rate of four bushels per acre; they are also planted on the 20th of
April and the 1st of May. This lasts through July and August;
and corn so planted will remain succulent for about ten days. The
southern variety of corn is then sown in drills, in the quantity of
three bushels the acre, which furnishes food for September and
October. Barley is then planted ten days apart, which lasts till
vegetables come on. In winter the feed consisted of hay, cotton
seed meal, and roots. [Mr. Quincy here spoke of the advantages
arising from this system, which he alluded to in his remarks the
previous evening, and continued.] The great increase in the soiling
Agricultural Exhibitions of 1859. 845
system is as seven to one ; that where only one cow was kept with-
out this practice, seven can be kept by it; and I have demonstrated
that one acre of land, in a good state of cultivation, will aflbrd suf-
ficient food to keep three cows through the season. [Here the gen-
tleman alluded to the manner of using liquid manure, as practiced
by Mr. Mechi in England, which consists of a series of pipes in the
ground, through which liquid manure is forced by means of steam
power — which has before been described in the Country/ Gentleman —
and he also spoke of the system of manuring in Scotland, by which
their lands have been made to produce from five to seven crops in
one year, and further remarked.] It has been well said that there
are three important elements or principles which constitute a good
farm; the first of these is manure, the second is manure^ and the
third is manure! I place but little confidence in patent fertilizers,
so great is the adulteration in most kinds, but strongly urge each
farmer to raise his own manure upon his own farm. Muck I use as
an absorbent, by placing it in a gutter in the stable for my cows —
which gutter is eighteen inches wide and four deep. There is a
cellar under the stable, into which the manure passes. I am sorry
to say that I keep only about twenty cows. In the morning and
evening these are let out in the yard, where they remain a few
hours, as it is not necessary that they have a great amount of exer-
cise. My cows are perfectly healthy, having never lost an animal;
and this system appears to agree perfectly with their health and
comfort in every respect. They do not suffer from drouth or loss
of pastures. The mowing is usually done in the morning, and the
cows are fed five times during the day. I think one man would be
employed half of his time in feeding twenty cows, if the fodder was
not too remote from the stable. One other advantage of the soiling
system was, that it added in importance and numbers to the list of
farmers in our country. Mr. Quincy then concluded : The tem-
perature of the ocean is always the same, and has the same influence
upon the surrounding atmosphere — so it is with the farmers of
America. From their quiet and retired homes, they are the men
who in peace or war are ever ready to serve their country when she
calls. I have always had for my neighbor a family who has occu-
pied as prominent and honorable a position in American history as
any other. One of this family, one hundred years ago, kept a
school in Worcester, then considered an inland town. I need not
add his name was John Adams. Later in life, I once asked him
when he thought the bond was severed between England and this
country — if at the signing of the Boston "Port Bill " or the meet-
ing at Independence Hall in Philadelphia? "Oh, no!" he
answered, " for when I kept school in Worcester, and heard the
FAiiMERs talk, then I knew that separation must take place."
[Cheers.] And so let it be now ; and let the farmers prove, by
their love and adherence to the common good of our country, that
they have not degenerated, but that the same blood flows in their
veins now that warmed the hearts of the farmers of the Revolution.
[Cheers.]
346 Secretary's Reijort on the
Mr. Gedney, of Westchester, said : I draw out my farm manure
in spring, and then turn it under for corn, after which wheat is
sown with top-dressing of bones. I keep twenty cows, from which
I save in one year about one hundred hogsheads of liquid manure,
by means of a series of spouts and a large tank, constructed for the
purpose. The liquid is pumped from the tank, and sprinkled upon
the land as a top dressing. In six months it will increase the pro-
duct of grass per acre three-fourths. Keep my cows up in stables
all summer — i. e., at night.
Mr. Stewart of Hamburg, Erie county, said : For three years I
have practiced soiling, and find it a benefit both to land and ani-
mals. In the course of my experiments, I have found that one acre
cut is equal to four acres in pasturage. The manure that is saved
by this system more than pays all the expenses attendant upon it ;
and the saving in fences would in most localities also pay all ex-
penses. The increase in the value of the animals is also about five
fold. I practice feeding cut straw, steamed and mixed with one
pint of corn meal to the bushel. This I find makes better feed than
an equal amount of timothy. I think one man can care for fifty
cows, and milk ten of them in addition, if the feed is close by. By
this method I make $500 per year more than by the old system of
pasturage. For feed I use roots till 20th of May, and then cut clover
until after haying. Have raised corn, and consider it the best fod-
der for the purpose, as it comes nearest to grass. I have also found
that butter made from it, will keep longer than that made from any
other feed. For winter, I mix carrots and oil meal with cut straw,
and give three bushels per day to each cow. Food is steamed before
it is given out.
Mr. Gedney considered one acre sown with corn in June, equal
as food for milch cows to ten acres of rowen. Had found no ad-
vantage from using steamed provender.
Mr. Geddes made some interesting statements, in which he said
each farmer must adapt his own plans to his own case. If I im-
prove the system of agriculture and the product of my farm, under
my own management, that is mj^aim and end. If you, under a dif-
ferent treatment, become successful, and improve your farm thereby,
I am not to point out to you a difierent mode.
Several others present gave their views, which proved nothing
more than that each one has his own opinions in regard to soils and
their management, and to manures and their application.
LOCAL EXHIBITIONS IN NEW YORK.
Broome county society, at , September 6-8. Saratoga
county society, at Saratoga Springs, September 6-8. "Washington
county society, at Fort Ann, September 7-8. Sandy Creek ex-
hibition, at Washingtonville, September 8-9. Moravia exhibition,
September 9. Bainbridge exhibition, September 12-13; B. S. Sill,
M. D., orator. Oswego county society, at Mexico, September
13-15. Rensselaer county society, at Greenbush, September 13-16;
Agricultural Uxhibitions of 1850. 347
Hon. L. Chandler Ball, orator. Smyrna exhibition, September
13-14. Chatauqne county society, at Jamestown, September 13-15.
Cayuga county society, at Auburn, September 14-16. Delaware
county society, at Bloomville, September 14-15. Genesee county
society, at Batavia, September ] 4-15. Schuyler county society, at
"Watkins, September 14-16. Warren county society, at Luzerne,
September 14-16. Perry and Castile exhibition, September 14.
Smithville exhibition, September 14-15. Union exhibition at Me-
dina, September 14-16. Queens county society, at Hempstead, Sep-
tember 15. Galen exhibition, at Clyde, September 15. Susquehanna
Valley exhibition, at Unadilla, September 15-16. Union exhibition,
at Adams, September 15-16. Lebanon exhibition, at Smith Valley,
September 16-17. Chenango county society, at Norwich, Septem-
ber 20-22. Cortland county society, at Homer, September 20-22.
Duchess county society, at Washington Hollow, September 20-22.
Livingston county society, at Geneseo, September 20-22. Onon-
daga county society, at Syracuse, September 20-22. Orleans
county society, at Albion, September 20-22. "Westchester county
society, at North Salem, September 20-22. Harpersville exhibition,
September 20-21. St. Lawrence international exhibition, at Og-
densburg, September 21-24. Franklin count}^ society, at Malone,
September 21-23. JetFerson county society, at Watertown, Sep-
tember 21-22. Lewis county society, at Lowville, September
21-22. Orange county society, at Goshen, September 21-22.
Tompkins county society, at Ithica, vSeptember 21-23. American
Institute exhibition, at New York, September 21-23. Tonawanda
Valley exhibition, at Attica, September 21-22. Wayne county
society, at Lyons, September 22-23. Essex county society, at
Elizabethtown, September 22-23. Byron and Bergen exhibition,
at Byron, September 22-23. Hartland exhibition, September 23-24.
Fulton and Hamilton county society, at Mayfield Corner, Septem-
ber 27-28. Cattaraugus county society, at Little Valley, September
27-29. Erie county society, at Buffalo, September 27-29. Madi-
son county society, at Morrisville, September 27-29. Oneida
county society, at Rome, September 27-29. Putnam county society,
at Carmel, September 27-29. Wyoming county society, at War-
saw, September 27-28. Coventry exhibition, September 27-28.
Green county society, at Cairo, September 28-29. Monroe county
society, at Rochester, September 28-30. Ontario county society,
at Canandaigua, September 28-30. Otsego county society, at
Cooperstown, September 28-29. Steuben county society, at Bath,
348 Secretary^ s Report on the
September 28-30. St. Lawrence county society, at Canton, Sep-
tember 28-30. Brookfield exhibition, September 28-29. Canase.
raga exhibition, at Dansville, September 28-30. Delaware Union
exhibition, at Deposit, September 28. Dryclen exhibition, Septem-
ber 28-29. Skaneateles exhibition, September 28. Union exhibi-
tion, at Trumansburg, September 28-30. Fredonia exhibition,
September 29-30. Oxford exhibition, September 29-30. Queens
bury exhibition, September 29-30. Otselic exhibition, October 5-6.
Hammond exhibition, October 6-7. Columbus exhibition, October
11--12. Palmyra exhibition, October 11-13. Seneca county society,
at Waterloo, October 12-14. Yates county society, at Penn Yan,
October 12-13. Schoharie county society, at Schoharie, October
13-14.
NORTH CAROLINA.
The State Agricultural Society held its seventh annual exhibition
at Raleigh, October 18-21 ; Hon. David Outlaw was announced as
the orator, and we regret that no account of the exhibition has
been received, as President W. R. Holt has a high reputation as
an energetic and successful agriculturist, under whose direction
this society cannot fail to prosper.
LOCAL EXHIBITIONS IN NORTH CAROLINA.
Mechlenburg county society, at Charlotte, October 26-29; Hon.
D. M. Barringer, orator. Union Society, at Petersburg, Virginia,
(in connection with the Virginia State Society,) November 1-4.
Cumberland county society, at Fayetteville.
OHIO.
The State Board of Agriculture held the tenth annual State Ex-
hibition at Zanesville, October 20-23. John H. Klippart, Esq., the
Secretary of the Board, states that "the location of this exhibition at
Zanesville was regarded as a test of the propriety of continuing the
migratory system, by those opposed to iteneracy. So far as the
leo^itimate objects for which the Board was organized are concerned,
the Zanesville Exhibition was perhaps the most successful fair ever
held b}'' the Board, and even so far as finances are concerned, it
has not left the Board in as embarrassed a condition as some of the
previous exhibitions. Were the Ohio State Board of Agriculture
a joint stock company whose sole object is to obtain large dividends,
the Zanesville Exhibition could not be regarded in any other light
than a downright failure ; but the object of the Board is the
encouragement of agriculture, and the development of the agricul-
tural resources of the State. Every one accustomed to visit exhi-
184
210
188
300
42G
424
25
13
11
318
398
473
58
90
54
24
51
63
909
1,188
1,213
409
340
351
485
413
411
113
353
348
399
318
424
92
232
82
Agricultural Exhibitions of 1859. 349
bitions, present at Zanesville, pronounced it the finest collection of
live stock, implements, machinery, &c., ever brought together in
the State.
"The fairs of 1856 at Cleveland, 1857 at Cincinnati, and 1858 at
Sandusky, embraced the following numbers of entries :
Cleveland. Cincinnati. Sandusky. Zanesville.
Cattle 219
Horses 464
Jacks and mules 22
Sheep (number of animals) 357
Swine 58
Poultry 82
First department 1,202
Second department, machinery, engines, &c. 328
Third department, manufactures, &c 669
Fourth department, farm products 201
Fifth department, horticultural 444
Sixth department, fine arts 185
Aggregate 3,029 2,408 2,844 2,829
Average 2,777.
" From the above it will be seen that the exhibition of live stock
Avas larger in the aggregate than any previous State Exhibition in
Ohio ; in machinery, engines, farm implements, &c., fully up to
the average ; in farm products, above the average ; in vegetables,
fruits, and flowers, much above the average, and falling short only
in manufactured articles and fine arts — two departments which are
not directly connected with agriculture. If, then, we consider the
articles on exhibition, which are the product of, or are directly
connected with agriculture, the account will stand as follows :
Entries at Cleveland, 2,175: at Cincinnati, 1,830; at Sandusky,
2,199 ; at Zanesville, 2,336. Thus proving beyond all cavil, so far
as the object of the Board is concerned, that the Zanesville Exhibi-
tion was the most successful of any fair ever held by the Board.
'• Notwithstanding several drawbacks, receipts at the gates wqyq
about $9,500. The account of the total expenditures, (exclusive of
premiums,) as well as the gate receipts at the previous exhibitions,
is as follows, viz ;
Receipts at Gate. Expenditures.
1850— Cincinnati $7,284 9G $y,026 88
1851— Columbus 8,309 04 12,077 80
1852— Cleveland 13,260 00 12,087 07
1853— Dayton 13,996 37 16,299 12
1854— Newark 8,824 58 12,653 60
1855— Columbus 9,745 54 12,266 79
1856 — Cleveland 16,649 20 13^528 34
1857 — Cincinnati 16,894 75 17,009 39
1858 — Sandusky 11,000 00 16,450 13
1859— Zanesville 9,500 00 10,350 00
44
350 Secretary's Report on, the
" The other receipts are made up from appropriations by the
legislature of show licences, and escheated lands ; by subscriptions
from the city where the exhibition is held, by rent of dining hall
and other refreshment stands on the ground, and from sales of
lumber used for enclosure, stalls, &c. It has been customary, in
the conduct of the Board, to dispose of the lumber after the exhibi-
tion to the best possible advantage — the amount thus realized
always fell short of the original cost. With these elements before
us, let us look at the worst possible picture which may be drawn of
the Zanesville Exhibition. The premiums offered by the Board
amount to a fraction over $8,000, but the amonut aivarded is $4,615
only."
Total gate receipts $9,500
Do. entry do 771
Do. rent of dining hall 500
Do. subscription of Zanesville 3,000
Received from State appropriation 2,000
Total $15,771
Total expenditures for|fitting up grounds, printing, &c, estimated at.. 10,350
Do. do. premiums 4.625
Total liabilities — 14,975
Surplus 796
"In addition to the above sum, the Board yet owns all the lum-
ber, which originally cost nearly $6,000-. The contingent expenses
wdll more than absorb the balance on hand, but the Board will not
be embarrassed ; it will be able to meet all legitimate liabilities on
presentation, without being under the necessity of sacrificing the
lumber. It is due to the citizens of Zanesville to state that they
entertained with generous hospitality, as far as their faculties for
accommodation extended, all of the thousands of visitors that felt
disposed to accept the profi'ered invitations,"
The above statement not only gives some valuable information
on the difierent State exhibitions in Ohio, but relieves the officers
of the State Board from ungenerous criticisms. The editor of the
Ohio Cultivator censures the action of the judges of implements and
machinery, saying: "The public had the assurance, last spring,
that a thorough examination and trial of implements should be had
at Zanesville, so that an intelligent judgment might be passed upon
their working merits, that the public might put confidence in the
decisions; but this expectation was sadly disappointed, and awards
were made on the most flimsy assumptions, involving the reputa-
tion of implements and machines, whose merits can only be known
by actual and thorough trial. All this is worse than a farce ; it is
Agricultural Exhibitions of 1859. 851
an outrage upon the meclianical genius of the country, and a delu-
sion in the eyes of the public. Better if this whole department had
been left to the unrecorded verdict of the people." This manner
of awarding premiums to implements and machines is becoming a
subject of general complaint.
LOCAL EXHIBITIONS IN OHIO.
Independent exhibition at Bedford, September 1-2. Independent
exhibition at Salt Creek, September 1-3. Brown county society,
at Georgetown, September 6-9. Independent exhibition at Twins-
burg, September T-9. Fayette county society, at Washington,
September 7-9. Clermont county society, at Bantam, September
7-9. Hamilton county society, at Carthage, September 13-16.
Ashtabula county society, at Jefferson, September 13-19. Geauga
county society, at Burton, September 13-15. Franklin county
society, at Columbus, September 13-16. Independent exhibition,
at Salem, September 14-16. Jeffersonville count}'' society, at Steu-
benville, September 14-16. Marion county society, at Marion,
September 14-16. Erie county society, at Huron, September 14-16.
Madison county society, at London, September 14-16. Lorain
county society, at Elyria, September 14-17. Guernsey county
society, at Cambridge, September 15—16. Gallia county society, at
Gallipolis, September 15-16. Clinton county society, at Wilming-
ton, September 15-17. Portage county society, at Ravenna, Sep-
tember 19-21. Brown county society, [Independent,] at Ripley,
September 20-23. Preble county society, at Eaton, September
22-23. Independent exhibition, at Plymouth, September 27-29.
Belmont county society, at St. Clairsville, September 27-29. High-
land county society, at Hillsboro, September 27-29. Greene county
society, at Xenia, September 27-29. Lucas county societ}', at To-
ledo, September 27-29. Medina county society, at Medina, Sep-
tember 27-28. Clermont county society, at Olive Branch, Septem-
ber 27-30. Champaign county society, at Urbana, September 27-30.
Adams county society, at West Union, September 27-30. Inde-
pendent exhibition, at Madison, September 28-30. Independent
exhibition, at Richfield, September 28-30. Tuscarawas county
society, at Canal Dover, September 28-30. Geauga free exhibition,
at Claridon, September 28-30. Columbiana county society, at Wew
Lisbon, September 28-30. Seneca county society, at Tiffin, Sep-
tember 28-30, Fulton county society, at Ottokee, September 28-30.
Defiance county society, at Defiance, September 28-30. Union
county society, at Marysville, September 28-30. Pickaway county
352 Secretary' s Report on the
society, at Circleville, September 28-30. Ottawa countj^ society, at
Fort Clinton, September 28--30. Knox county society, at Mt. Ver-
non, September 28--30. Putnam county society, at Ottawa, Sep-
tember 29-30. Hancock county society, at Findlay, October 3-5.
Logan county society, at Bellefontaine, October 3-6. Independent
exhibition, at Orwell, October 4-6. Independent exhibition, at
Wellington, October 4-6. Mahoning county society, at Canlield,
October 4-5. Darke county society, at Greenville, October 4-6.
Cuyahoga county society, at Cleveland, October 4—6. Clark county
society, at Springfield, October 4-6. Butler county society, at
Hamilton, October 4-7. Licking county society, at Newark, Oc-
tober 5-6. Noble county society, at Sarahsville, October 5-6.
Wood county society, at Bowling Green, October 5-6, Stark
county society, at Canton, October 5-7. Muskingum county soci-
ety, at Zanesville, October 5-7. Lake county society, at Paines-
ville, October 5-7. Morrow county society, at Mount Gilead, Octo-
ber 5-7. Harrison county society, at Cadiz, October 5-7. Wyan-
dotte county society, at Upper Sandusky, October 5-7. Sandusky
county society, at Fremont, October 5-7. Wayne county society,
at Wooster, October 5-7. Monroe county society, at Woodfield,
October 5-7. Montgomery county society, at Dayton, October 5—8.
Van Wert county society, at Van Wert, October 6-7. Independent
exhibition, at Greenfield, October 12-14. Delaware county society,
at Delaware, October 12—14. Hardin county society, at Kenton,
October 12-14. Summit county society, on their large and well
fitted-up grounds, at Akron, October 12-14. Morgan county soci-
ety, at McConnellsville, October 12-14. Crawford county society,
at Bucyrus, October 12-14. Trumbull county society, at Warren,
October 12-14. Ashland county society, at Ashland, October 12-14.
Independent exhibition, at Cuyahoga Falls, October 23-24. Carroll
county society, at Carrolton, October 25-27.
The following lines were written by Col. Harris, Editor of the
Ohio Cultivator, and sung at the Franklin County Fair, September,
1859.
ODE TO OHIO.
Am — Star Spangled Banner.
When the God of our fathers looked over this land,
To choose out a country most Morthy possessing,
Where the rivers and plains ever beauteous and grand,
Might so constantly smile on the light of his blessing.
From Erie's broad waves to the river below,
The Scioto's sparkle and the Muskingum's flow,
And the graceful Miamis together rejoice,
And bless the All-Father with silver-toned voice.
Agricultural Exhibitions of 1859. 353
'Twas here the gooil angel encamped with his host
To cheer the brave woodman 'mid his toil and privation,
Whose sturdy ax fell, never grudging the cost,
To rear up such a State as the gem of the nation;
Then join all your voices in grateful acclaim,
'Tis the triumph of toil in Jehovah's great name.
Our sons and our daughters together may sing,
The Might is the Right, and the Farmer is King.
And here we are gathered, from farm and from town.
To behold and rejoice in each other's possession,
So let the world wag, in its up and its down,
We are proud of a hand in this noble profession.
Where the sweat of our face shall earn us our bread,
And the angels of peace shall pillow our head.
We are joined in a band no tyrant can sever —
Hurrah for the Farmer, for ever and ever I
OREGON.
When admitted into the Union, Oregon had but two regularly-
organized county agricultural societies ; but six others were organ-
ized during the past summer, and initiatory steps were taken for
the formation of a State society. Three delegates from each county
society were appointed, and have probably ere this met in conven-
tion, to organize a State society and to arrange preliminaries for
holding a State Exhibition in 1860 ; while the Executive Committee
of the Fruit Growers' Association, (in accordance with a resolution
adopted at the annual session,) will confer with the convention with
the view of merging that association into the State Society.
LOCAL EXHIBITIONS IN OKEGON.
Linn county society, at Albany, September 28-29 ; address by
L. F. Grover, Esq., in which he reviewed the resources and products
of Oregon in a forcible style, and eloquently urged the people to
renewed efforts in adding to the wealth and prosperity of the State,
by making use of the many advantages which our soil and location
give over most of her sister States. Lane county society, at Eugene
City, October 11-12 ; address by Governor VVhiteaker. Benton
county society, at Corvallis, October 13-14. Yamhill county
society, at McMinnville, October 20-21 ; address by A. S. Watt,
Esq.
PENNSYLVANIA.
The State Agricultural Society held its ninth annual exhibition
at Powelton, near Philadelphia, (on the ground where the National
Exhibition was held in 1856,) September 27-30. The grounds were
j&tted up under the superintendence of President Taggart and Sec-
retary Heister, in an economical but attractive and convenient
manner. There were halls, stalls, pens, an amphitheatre, and an
artificial lake, which furnished a supply of water for the trial of
354 Secretary s Report on the
steam fire engines. The schedule of premiums amounted to over
$8,000, and the exhibition was a pecuniary success. Many distin-
guished gentlemen were present.
The display of horses was fine, especially the Morgan Black
Hawks ; there was a good show of cattle ; excellent sheep and
swine; a fine collection of products and flowers, and numerous
implements and machines, including two caloric engines, and a new
stump extractor.
LOCAL EXHIBITIONS IN PENNSYLVANIA.
Mercer county society, at Mercer, September 14--15. Bucks
county society, at Newtown, September 12--13 ; address by Senator
David Taggart, of jSTorthumberland county — there was great compe-
tition for the butter premiums, for which there were seventy-eight
entries. Erie county society, at Erie, September 21-22. Clarion
county society, at Clarion, October 4-5. Chester county society,
at Westchester, October 14-15. The Record says that this exhibi-
tion " was a most triumphant aflkir. In the quantity and variety
of articles on exhibition, the good arrangement of every department,
and the number of people in attendance, it was very far superior to
any exhibition ever held in Chester county — indeed, most intelligent
gentlemen, familiar with the history and progress of agricultural
societies, very freely express their opinion that it was unrivalled by
any county exhibition ever held in the United States. The receipts
of the fair were about |2,000 — far greater than at any former fair.
There were entered for exhibition 130 horses, 170 head of cattle,
101 sheep. 111 swine, 36 loaves of bread, 189 glasses of jellies, and
185 of preserves, and a many-headed monster team of oxen, and
several teams of mammoth horses.
RHODE ISLAND.
The Aquidneck Society held its eighth annual exhibition on its
well fitted up grounds at Middletown, near Newport, September
20-22. The weather was inclement, but there was a good display
of horses, cattle, sheep and swine. The working oxen were princi-
pally Durham and Devon grades, and the sheep SoutVi Downs. The
garden products were numerous and abundant, and there were fine
lots of butter and cheese. The annual address was delivered by
J. Stanton Gould, Esq., of New York, a native of Newport.
ABSTRACT OF MR. GOULD's ADDRESS.
After describing the nature and component parts of grass and its
species, he proceeded to exhibit statistics showing the importance
of its cultivation. Six-tenths, he said, of the whole cultivated area
Agricultural Exhibitions of 1859. 355
of the State of New York is occupied by grass. We are indebted
to it for all the meat, and wool, cheese and butter which we produce.
Its annual value in the State of New York was sixty million dollars.
The average production of the raea«lows of New York is 9G tons of
dry hay to the hundred acres, while the county of Kings, the most
fertile in the State, was 160 tons to the hundred acres. The differ-
ence between the average production of the State and county was
not on account of the superiority of the soil or climate, but of the
skill of its farmers. He proceeded to classify grass into iive distinct
varieties: 1, Jungle; 2, Aquatic; 3, Marine; 4, Agrarian; 5,
Meadow, all of which were intended for some useful purpose.
It is the business of practical agriculture to find out what that
purpose is, and to place it in the locality and under the conditions
best suited to its most profitable development. The soil best adapted
to the growth of the most valuable grasses is a strong calcareous
soil, resting on a clayey sub-soil. Such would resist drouth and
heat, and make a fine durable sod. There were five principles to
be kept in view in seeding lands for meadows :
1. We must sow a variety of seeds.
2. We should only sow such grasses as flower at the same period.
3d. The seeds sown should be exactly adapted to the soil and cli-
mate.
4th. We must stock our meadows w^ith the most nutritive grasses.
5th. The meadows on a farm should be so arranged as to come
successively to maturity.
These principles, although universally admitted to be correct, are
almost habitually neglected in practice. He then stated the kinds
of grasses adapted to various kinds of soil. Lucerne (not a true
grass) is admirably adapted to sandy soils resting on porous subsoils.
Meadow foxtail grows well in sandy loams, which are not too dry,
and also in heavier loams. Orchard grass grows well in dry, slaty,
as well as sandy soils. Italian rye grass flourishes in Europe, and
its most congenial home is a tenacious, moist, fertile soil. Hard
fesque is adapted to dry soils, and relished by sheep. Tall meadow
oat grass, and soft grass, and red and white clovers are suited to
sandy soils. For calcareous, loams, the following varieties seem
specially adapted : Kentucky blue grass, timothy, annual spear grass,
sweet scented vernal, upright brome grass, and white and red clo-
vers. Adapted to moist and tenacious clays, are perennial rye grass,
crested dog tail, red top, wire grass, and oat grass. He then pro-
ceeded to show the best manner of insuring the germination of
seeds, and laid down the principles to be observed in manuring
grasses. Bone dust occupies a very conspicuous place among the
manures suited to the improvement of grass. Lime is extensively
used, and is of special use on dry pastures, liable to burn in hot
weather. It may be beneficially used in connection with common
salt, by dissolving 800 pounds of salt in water used for slacking one
and a half tons lime, to be slacked in small heaps, and to be used
in a week. Shoddy, soot, and guano compost, also peat, were good
for various lands. One-sided manuring was very dangerous. He
356 Secretary' s Report on the
then unfolded the principle of irrigation, and showed the important
benefits of it. It has proved to have the effect of diminishing the
number of poor grasses, and increasing the number of the better
ones. Slow moving streams a1*e richer than more rapid ones, and
those running through alluvial are better than those running through
primitive soils. It has been found that flat lands are not benefited
by irrigation, unless they are underdrained. There are thousands
of streams in the State of ISTew York, which are now wasting their
treasury of fertility at the tide waters, which, if skillfully distributed
over our grass lands, would incalculably increase their fertility, and
add correspondingly to the wealth of the State. It has been demon-
strated that 6,000 cubic yards of the waters of the Vaucluse or the
Vosges contain all the elements of an ox, and the Garrone carries
to the sea every day more guano than is imported into France in a
year. The principal object of the discourse was to show in simple
language the value of a more increased cultivation of grass, and the
advantages which would result from it.
SOUTH CAKOLINA.
The State Agricultural Society held its fourth annual exhibition
at its valuable grounds, at Columbia, November 8-11. A spacious
amphitheatre had been constructed, and the arrangements made by
R. J. Gage, Esq., Secretary and Treasurer, were excellent. There
were nearly two hundred horses entered, some of them of the best
English blood, and among the cattle were Devons, Durhams, Ayr-
shires and Brahmins. The Cotswold sheep of R. S. Porcher, of
Pickens, were much admired. There was an excellent display of
implements for southern use, including a large collection of plows
by different makers. The show of products and fruit was good,
while the elegant counterpanes, the quilts, the tapestry, crotchet
and tidy work, show the highest order of taste and skill, both in
comfort and unique designs.
LOCAL EXHIBITIONS IN SOUTH CAROLINA.
Lawrens district society, exhibition at Lawrensville, address by
Col. D. Johnson. Fairfield district association, exhibition in Oc-
tober. South Carolina Institute, at Charleston, November 15-19.
Beech Island Planters' Club, exhibition of results of experiments
with fertilizers in growing cotton.
TENNESSEE.
The State Agricultural Bureau — organized in 1854 — held its
annual exhibition on its grounds (worth $50,000) at Nashville, Oc-
tober 10-16. The premium list was about $3,000 ; and we regret
having neither received a promised report of the exhibition or a
copy of the opening address, delivered by Captain M. F. Maury,
U. S. Navy.
Agriculhiral Exhibitions of 1859. 307
At the same time, a Planters' Convcntiou was held at Nashville,
composed of delegates from the Southern States. Resolutions were
passed recommending to the several Southern States the establish-
ment of State Boards of Agriculture, with auxiliary county socie-
ties ; the adoption of a plan for collections and publishing annual
agricultural statistics, and semi-monthly reports of the growing-
cotton crops in all the counties of each State ; also appointing a
committee to apply, through Congress, to the Navy Department,
for a corps of engineers to survey the Mississippi valley, with a
view to the improvement of the levee system; also recommending
the publication of a periodical to be devoted to the cotton and
sugar interests.
LOCAL EXHIBITIONS IN TENNESSEE.
Marshall county societ}', at Lewisburg, September 13-17. Maury
county societ}', at its excellent grounds at Columbia, September
19-24. Middle Division exhibition, at Shelbyville, September 26-
October 1. Lincoln county society, at Fayetteville, October 3-8.
Hickman county society, at Centreville, October 4-8. Wilson
county society, at Lebanon, October 5-8. Shelby county society,
at Memphis, October 11-15. Western Division exhibition, at
Jackson, October 18-22. Warren county society, at McMinnville,
October 19-21. Carroll county society, at Huntingdon, October
27-29. Eastern Division exhibition, at Knoxville, October 27-29.
Each of the three "Division" exhibitions receives ^1,000 per
annum from the State treasurj^
VERMONT.
The State Agricultural Society held its ninth annual exhibition
at Burlington, September 13-16, on the grounds which it had pre-
viously twice occupied, and which has been improved each time in
the completeness of arrangements and general convenience of the
accommodations for exhibitors and visitors. The Vermont State
Society (we learn from the Br attleboro Phoenix) was organized at an
exhibition at Middlebury, September 11, 1851, gotten up by two
or three enterprising individuals, acting under the advice and with
the full approbation of a large number of the leading agriculturists
of the State, but with the responsibility of success or failure on
their own hands. The exhibition was so large and the results so
satisfactory that the society, in 1852, accepted the proposition of
these same gentlemen to hold a second exhibition at Rutland, in
September of that year. Both of these exhibitions were large and
well attended, but no premiums were paid, for none were offered.
45
358 Secretary s Report on the
In 1853 the Directors of the Society voted to oiFer a premium list
amounting to between two and three thousand dollars, giving their
personal guaranty that the premiums should be paid, and running
the risk of success or failure. Under these circumstances the ex-
hibition of 1853 was held at Montpelier ; that of 1854 at Brattle-
boro ; that of 1855 at Rutland, and that of 1856 at Burlington. In
the fall of the last named year, the legislature of Vermont, five
years after the first application therefor, granted the society an act
of incorporation, which act was accepted, and on the 8th day of
January, 1857, the society was duly organized according to the
provisions of said act. From this date its corporate existence
commenced, and its founders point to its annual exhibitions as
their reward, and as a justification of their judgment and the value
of their labors.
Previous to 1853 the exhibitions were creditable ; they attracted
much attention, and elicited commendation from all quarters, but
as no premiums were oflered, no record of the number and character
of the entries was kept. Since that time there is accurate data
by which to determine the progress of the society and the increas-
ing interest felt in its operations. From the records of its trans-
actions during the seven years now just passed, there has been
compiled the following tabular statement of the number of entries
in the three principal departments of stock, which will be found
interesting and instructive. It is stated that in 1853 the classifica-
tion was somewhat imperfect, as it was the first attempt of the
society to arrange a premium list. In the department of cattle
many of the entries under the head of Durhams and Devons should
properly come under that of mixed breeds ; for it was not until the
following year that full and satisfactory pedigrees of blood stock
were required. In the classification of sheep the Spanish and
Silesian varieties were kept distinct for two or three years, but as
the latter variety has since been excluded from the list, they have
been put all under one head. The totals are found by counting
each pair of horses, oxen, and steers as two animals :
Horses 1853. 1854. 1855. 185G. 1857. 1858. 1859.
Sherman Morgan.... 34 32 VO 76 102 88 96
Woodbury do 18 40 43 46 51 52 74
Bulrush do 7 11 9 13 37 33 37
Hambletonian, &c.. 15 26 49 48 33 65 71
Matched pairs 19 11 27 39 35 51 58
Geldings and mares. 65 46 105 124 144 136 127
Foreign horses 16 43 12 49 13 36 24
Totals 193 220 342 434 450 512 545
Agricultural Exhibitions of 1859. 359
Cattle 1853. 1854. 1855. 1856. 1857. 1858. 1859.
Duihams 14 17 17 11 16 32 39
Devons 29 19 22 20 18 38 21
Heretbrds 6 7 9 1 — 2 10
Ayrshires 5 — 5 — 1 — 3
Mixed and native... 22 45 35 82 48 66 40
Milch cows 9 3 — — 4 5 5
Oxen, pairs 18 118 26 20 57 6 17
Steers, pairs - 15 30 10 34 19 33 21
Fat cattle — 5 3 27 10 18 7
Foreign cattle 4 16 3 1 — 44
Totals 155 408 166 250 249 243 205
Sheep 1553. 1854. 1855. 1856. 1857. 1858. 185
French merinos 129 154 106 15 15 42 14
Spanish do 267 229 231 93 140 256 225
Mixed 51 56 74 35 35 89 31
Long and M.wooled 93 27 99 100 67 137 118
Totals 540 469 410 243 257 424 388
It is stated that the above tables, while they indicate a gradual but
steady growth from year to year in the number of animals in nearly
all of the several classes, do not tell the whole truth. If the yearly
increase is gratifying, the improvement that has been made manifest,
if not directly stimulated by these successive exhibitions, is still
more encouraging. In all the departments of stock the animals
that have been bred during the last four years are far in advance of
those that were on the stage when the exhibitions were first held.
The essential points and qualities that give characterand usefulness
to the animals in these difterent divisions, are more perfectly and
more constantly developed in the breeding of to-day than in that
of ten years' since. This change is so great as to be patent to the
most casual observer. Yet the highest premiums paid were $15
for best horses, $12 for cattle, and $10 for best sheep, with prizes
of |50, $30, and $20 for trotting horses.
The weather was windy and inclement during the greater part of
the exhibition, but it was well attended. The above tables show
the numbers of fine horses, cattle, and sheep exhibited. In swine,
poultry, vegetables, fruits, mapel sugar, butter, and cheese, the exhi-
bitions of the society have never been, for some unexplained reason,
fair indications in number and quantity what they should, and
might easily be. The quality this year was much better than the
average of past years, and the amount fully equal. The Mechanics'
and Floral Halls contained some excellent specimens of native in-
dustry as well as of foreign skill. The number of agricultural
implements and labor-saving machines was large. Among them
were " Howe's Platform Scales," which received the first premiums
at the National Exhibition of 1858 ; a potato digging machine, &c.
360 Secretary's Report on the
A large number of invited guests were present, including Major
General Wool and Governor K. P. Banks of Massachusetts, who
delivered an address, of \vhich the following is an outline sketch,
reported for the Boston Journal:
ABSTRACT OF THE ADDRESS OF GOVERNOR BANKS.
After a few off-handed prefotory remarks, in which he said his
address was for an audience in-doors, rather than out-doors, he
alluded to the old times — the first settlements of Vermont, and the
trials which had beset her hardy sons at the beginning. He should
speak, he said, upon Industrial Exhibitions.
The origin and growth of popular institutions is a study of public
interest. It is only by tracing an idea from its origin to its com-
plete development — following it from its inauguration in barbaric
life, through constant transformation, as it enters advanced con-
ditions of society, until it developes its influence and the extent
of its power in the highest periods of civilization, that we can
thoroughly comprehend the character of a popular idea, and measure
its influence and value. Among the ideas or institutions which
mark the limits of arbitrary power and the triumphs of popular
interests, industrial exhibitions justly attract a large share of public
attention in both hemispheres. The industrial exposition of the
world's wealth has a history of its own, and is as firmly established
by its triumph as the principle of government itself It began with
the organization of society, and found its first flush of honor in the
feeble eftbrts of agriculture, in its primitive condition, to breathe
the breath of life into its first ofl'spring — the trade of individuals and
the commerce of nations. The industrial exhibition of modern
times had its origin in the trading fairs of the earliest civilization.
In this connection, the state of Roman society — arts and agricul-
ture and trade — was enlarged upon, and the encouragement given
by modern governments.
Originally established to secure advantages afforded by stated and
convenient markets, the ancient fair was encumbered with all the
restrictions which the watchful jealousies of localities and trade
could invent. They excluded from exhibition or sale all articles
that w"ere not, upon the narrowest regulations, entitled to such
privileges, and, as far as they were able, narrowed down the advan-
tage to the simple object of pecuniary compensation. The fi^ir
retained this character until institutions of modern civilization had
transformed the materials of which society was composed. The
principal book sales of Germany are made at the fairs of Leipsic.
Public and private charities are often aided by the attraction and
novelty of the fairs. In other parts of the world, less affected by
political changes, it holds its ancient sway and power. The Russian
fair at Novogorod, the largest of the present day, is attended by
200,000 persons, and sales are made to the amount of $20,000,000.
On the eastern coast of Africa an annual fair is still held, in a
locality where, except for a brief period in each year, the jackall
and hyena have undisputed dominion. The fairs of the present
Agricultural Exiiihitions of 1859. 361
day originate from societies. A little more than a century since,
the Society of Arts in London offered prizes for excellence in the
higher manufactures of carpets and porcelains, and made public
exhibition of the specimens offered. In this society originated, a
century later, the great exhibition of 1851. The Royal Academy
strengthened the popular taste for works of art by exhibitions of
engravings, paintings and sculpture. The science of music had its
share in the inauguration of the grand idea of industrial improve-
ment. But these were specialities, merely. They contemplated
nothing like a complete development of a nation's progress in
industry and art, much less that of the whole world.
The first exhibition recognized as a national institution was held
in France in 1798. It was repeated at intervals for about twenty
years, when France inaugurated her systematic exposition of national
industry and art, which, continued till now, has had a marked influ-
ence upon European products. The leading cities and towns of
Great Britain, stimulated by the example and by local interests,
have at various times made exhibitions; but these were local.
English cities excluded the products of Ireland ; excluded the Irish
towns. Burmingham was the first to depart from the narrow
principle of exclusion, in 1819.
The great success of the French exposition of 1844, suggested to
English associations the expediency of enlarging the sphere of local
societies. The Society of Arts in London, over which Prince Albert
presided, led ofi"; and the movement resulted in the great Crystal
Palace exhibition. The features of that exhibition, and its effect
upon industry the world over, were dwelt upon briefly.
The Industrial Exhibition should present, in one form or another,
the life of the people, and the character of the age it represents — its
products, its habits, its labor, its leisure. What is not exhibited in
products, should be witnessed in the people themselves. But it is
among the wonders of life that the most manifest and indispensable
aids to human effort in every age and every land, should have been
successfullj' resisted for extended periods of time. The introduction
of machinery, gas, pure water, railways, and many of the common arti-
cles of food, have met with such opposition. Products with capacity to
endure every soil and climate have, by such prejudices, been restricted
to special latitudes. Even in New England, where young men are
leaving health and home for the newer country of the west, and a
little more land — even in New England, one-half of the soil, and
sometimes of the best capacity, is, out of custom and usage, unim-
proved and useless. The surest method of breaking into such cus-
toms, that have held men in poverty, is to bring them together, not
for a single object, but for every practicable purpose and interest.
The reflex influence of industrial occupations on governments was
considered at length ; and it was shown that rev(^lutions were brought
about by mismanagement on the part of governments, turning the
products of industry into wrong uses, as instanced by the French
revolution. Referring to our own exhibitions, it was asked why the
three following grand" objects should not be united in one grand
362 Secretary' s Meport on the.
system — the exhibition of the productive power of government8 and
the people.; the philosophic analysis and comparison of results and
methods ; the attractions and pleasures of private and public festivi-
ties. In what manner can we unite the private and pecuniary
interests of all persons ? By uniting the purposes of trade with the
ordinary objects of exhibition and observation. AVhy should the
elements of strength that sustained this institution with governments
and the people, with despots and democrats, for thousands of years,
be excluded from the exhibitions of our time ? The multitudes here
to-day are gathered from every part of the State to witness the strength
of the State, the extent of its acquisitions, the riches of its industry,
the achievements of its invention and discovery, working harmo-
niously in purpose and process with the laws of nature and of God!
They come from every walk of life — both sexes and of every age.
Welcome all ! thrice welcome ! This is the day of the people — a
regular bread and butter day. Hosts and guests are one! We
come to see and hear what is and what is to be in the kitchen and
the parlor for the coming year — wiiat shall be the order of our life,
and how to accomplish it ? What is the size of potatoes, and how
many in a hill? How about the rot? (Thank God, not a sign of
it yet.) Where are the fattest cattle, and how are they fed ? Who
has the fastest nag, and what is his time ? Let us see the reaper
that rides the iield like a ship at sea, and cuts down the j^ellow grain
as the Italians and French did the Austrians at Solferino. Is there
any improvement in the people ? Are the young to grow up wiser
and better than their fathers? These are the things we desire most
to know —
We are the people !
Not one is for a partj',
But all are for the State ;
The rich man helps the poor,
And the poor man loves the great.
Our lands are fairly portioned,
Onr products fairly sold.
And we are what our fathers were.
As in the honest days of old.
We come just as we are. There is no shame in us. If we are
intemperate, profligate, idle, vicious, disorderly, you will see it. If
we are quiet, inquisitive, and interested — if order vainly seeks for
disorder, \vith a policeman out of employment to aid her, you will
know it. It is vain for a multitude to assume virtues to which it
has no title. We have a life interest in all things here. It is by
them we live, and in the triumphs of industry over all obstacles is
our hope of prosperity and happiness.
As you make an immediate pecuniary interest predominate in
all parties to industrial exhibitions, you will greatly enlarge the
scope of inquiry and experiment. Profitable sales are better for the
producer than high premiums, and the judgment of those who back
their opinions by planking the rhino, will be more satisfactory
than the awards of commissioners, for the producer and consumer
should be brought together. They cannot fail to suggest the neces-
sity of close inquiry to those interests as to the best methods of
Agricultural Exhibitions of 1859. 863
culture, of preparation for exhibition, and upon such an interest it
will be easy to engraft an earnestness of investigation that is now
seldom or never known.
The great triumph of the world's exhibition at London, was less
in the articles presented for inspection, than in the lectures upon
the progress of art and science by Playfair, Whewell, De la Bache,
and other Savans upon the general influence of the exhibition —
metallurgical processes and products, naval architecture and kindred
subjects, delivered by request of the Council of Arts. It would be
fortunate, if we could engraft upon our system of exhibitions similar
instruction upon subjects related to national prosperity. Would
not this be accomplished by coupling the interests of trade with the
inquisitiveness of curiosity? By such means, assemblies could be
enlisted for longer periods of time, and directed to higher ends than
at present. It is a natural desire that seeks to couple rational
pleasures with such popular exhibitions.
Physical recreation is essential to our mental and moral culture.
It is as essential for artisans and farmers to know how a man with
a voice like a willow-whistle can be transformed to a full- chested
and strong-lunged stentor, how tiny limbs and puny frames, by
exercise and right living, may attain something of the tendons and
flesh of Hercules, as to know by what process cattle may be reared
in three years for the market, instead of six. Why not ? Are not
men of as much consequence to the world as the most delicious of
tenderloin steaks? One who can hear a musket shot at his ear
without moving a muscle of his face has an attribute of power which
none of us have ; and at the first public disaster, a riot, or conflagra-
tion, or scene of danger, we should see the superiority of his train-
ing over ours. If every man knew his full capacity of power, it
would be a different world in which we live. " Measure us," should
be our constant cry.
The usual accompaniment of industrial assemblies, and of all
American festivals, is a plentiful supply of public addresses, fol-
lowed by poor dinners, usually, and then — more speeches. No
occasion is free from this public speaking; no sense of propriety re-
strains us, and the only rule that seems to be implicitly followed is,
that the less it seems to be required, the more we have. He put in
a protest for the speakers ; it was not always their seeking. Those
who rule the world do it by other than oratorical powers. This is
true of all its leaders.
He made a wide distinction between rhetoric and talk. Plain
talk is mighty. It has the same relation to ideas that oratory has
to sound. It creates men — not only those who are talked at, but
those who talk.
Jefferson's system of agricultural societies was taken up and con-
sidered— the multiplication of town societies, which would thus em-
brace the entire community.
The introduction of music was urged as another element of culture.
In conclusion, it was remarked that he had seen in our own New
England homes, life stripped of everything but the barest existence
864 ^Secretary's Report on the
and the dullest labor — no fruits or flowers ; not a shot gun ; not a
saddle horse ; scarcely a vegetable growing ; nothing that ministers
to the beautiful; all the old sports dropped; not a jest left to throw
at a dog. If we hope to retain our young men on their paternal
acres, we must show^ them that it does not doom them to the joyless
labor of the galleys, the fasts of Anchorites, or the solitudes of Cel-
ibates. Let it be seen that if agricultural or industrial toil does
accumulate in our iron coffers the golden sorrows of the millionaire,
it returns for honest labors the only substantial and permanent in-
dependence. Let its serene contentment and laughing pleasures,
as w^ell as its solid compensation of health and happiness, be written
in our countenances, seen in our enjoyments here, in our industrial
festivals, as it is redolent in the atmosphere of our prosperous, labo-
rious, happy home.
LOCAL EXHIBITIONS IN VERMONT.
Champlain Valley exhibition, at Vergennes, September 8-10 ;
Hon. Erastus D. Culver of New York, orator. Rutland county so-
ciety, at Rutland, October 3-5 ; addresses by Senators S. Foot and
J. P. Hale, and others. Addison county society, sixteenth an-
nual exhibition, at Middlebury. The arrangements for this exhibi-
tion were excellent, the grounds comprising twelve acres, besides a
Floral Hall, 130 feet in length, and Mechanics' Hall, which is about
100 feet in length. The track is a good half-mile track. The
buildings \vere filled to their utmost capacity w^ith the varied pro-
ducts of the industry and enterprise of the county, the entry books
having closed with nearly nine hundred entries. The most promi-
nent features of the exhibition were the displays of horses and sheep,
for which the county is so famous. Of horses. Black Hawks were
the most numerous; and of sheep, the Merinos were in the ascend-
ant. Exhibitions were held by the other county societies in the
Green Mountain State, the farmers of which were told b}' John G.
Saxe, in a humorous poem, that they —
"Took most pains
W^ith the nobler grains
Of higher value, and finer tissues,
Which possibly one,
Inclined to a pun.
Would call — like Harper — the ^cereal issues?'
With wheat the lands were all a-blaze ;
'Twas amazing to look at the fields of maize ;
And there were places
That showed rye-faces,
As pleasant to see as so many graces.
And as for hops.
The annual crops
(So very extensive that, on my soul,
Thej- fairly reached from pole to pole !)
Would beat the guess of an old fogy.
Or — the longest season at Saratoga!
And they raised tomatoes,
And lots of potatoes,
Agricultural Exhibitions of 1859. 365
More sorts, ia sooth, than I could tell ;
Turnips that always turned up well;
Celery all that they could sell ;
Grapes by the bushel, sour and sweet;
Beats, that certainly couldn't be beat ;
Cabbage — like some sartorial mound :
Vines, that fairly cw-cumbercd the ground ;
Some pumpkins — more than they could house, and
Ten thousand pears, (that's twenty thousand!)
Fruits of all kinds and propagations —
Baldwins, pippins, and carnations,
And apples of other appellations."
VIRGINIA.
The State Agricultural Society, (after unsuccessful negotiations
with the Central Society at Richmond,) held its seventh annual ex-
hibition at Petersburg, November 1-4, on the grounds of the Union
Society of Virginia and North Carolina, "The show of horses of
all classes, wrote a correspondent of the American Stock Journaly
was excellent. The Durhams were badly represented, many of them
being deficient around the girth, but there were some fine high-
grade spayed heifers and fat steers. Mr. Strandburg, of Maryland,
and others exhibited some good Devons, and there were two very
splendid Devon heifers, bred by Prince Albert and Mr. Turner, of
England. They looked splendidly, and as if they had fared sump-
tuously from their birth. Though in very high condition, they had
not the substance of some of the same breed shown at the Mary-
land exhibition. A few Ayrshires and a few Alderneys were ex-
hibited. The sheep and pigs exhibited were nothing extraordinary.
Mr. Delany, the most extensive importer and breeder of Short Horns,
sheep and horses, Col. Ware, and several others whose names are
familiar to me as breeders and exhibitors, were not at this show."
The exhibition of samples of home-made cloth, blankets, quilts,
and counterpanes was highly commended
LOCAL EXIIIEITIONS IN VIRGINIA.
Northwestern society, at Wheeling island, September 13-16.
Southwestern society, third annual exhibition, at Wytheville, Oc-
tober 12-14. Lynchburg society, at Lynchburg, October 18-22.
A^alley society, chartered 1858, fourth annual exhibition, on its
grounds at Winchester, October 18-21. State Central society, (with
which the United States Society was associated in holding the Na-
tional Exhibition of 1858,) at new grounds fitted up by it near Rich-
mond, October 25-29 ; a portion of the address, by Hon. A. H. H.
Stuart, is given below. Rappahannock River society, at its grounds
in Fredericksburg, (where the first exhibition in Virginia was held,)
November 8-10 ; John Seddon, Esq., orator ; at a to-urnameut or\
46
366 Secretary s Report on the
the last day, Miss Catharine Collins, of Caroline county, was the
recipient of the set of jewelry awarded by, the successful knight,
and also of the gold cup awarded by the second knight. Seaboard
society, at Norfolk, IS'ovember 8-11. Rockbridge county society,
at Lexington, jSTovember 23-24; address by Rev. John Miller, who
is also a practical farmer.
ADDRESS BY HON. A. H. H, STUART, OF VIRGINIA.
G-entlemen : In obedience to your request, I appear here to-day,
to speak to you in behalf of the agricultural interests of our State.
Although distrustful of my ability to offer anything worthy of the
occasion, or calculated to interest or instruct the enlightened audi-
ence which now surrounds me, I am encouraged to make the at-
tempt, by the conviction, that the same spirit of courtesy which
prompted your invitation will induce you to look with indulgence
on the imperfections of my discourse.
In preparing for the discharge of my duty, the first difficulty I
had to encounter arose from the magnitude of my subject, and the
nmltiplicity of its relations to the other great interests of society.
It presents itself in so many and such attractive aspects, as to create
embarrassment in making a selection of those most appropriate to
the present occasion.
I know that it is customary, at anniversaries like the present, to
speak of the importance of agriculture as one of the great interests
of society ; to trace its history and progress ; to discuss its relations
to the natural sciences; to explain the diversities of soil, and the
systems of cultivation appropriate to each ; to indicate the proper
rotation of crops, and the best means of augmenting production ; to
descant on the charms and beneficent influences of rural life, and to
bestow merited praise on the public spirited projectors and patrons
of associations like that which I now have the honor to address.
Either of these topics would present a theme alike attractive and
instructive, but, for reasons which I have deemed satisfactory, I pro-
pose, on the present occasion, to pass them all by, and to devote the
hour that is allotted to me to the development of some practical
views of the relations of agriculture to the other great industrial
interests of our country.
It is unquestionably true that Agriculture is the most important
interest of society. It is the principal source of production, and is,
therefore, the basis of all other interests. It supplies the raw ma-
terial for a large proportion of our manufactures, and infuses life
and activity into ail the operations of commerce. It gives occupa-
tion to a larger per centage of our population than any other pur-
suit, and it employs a larger amount of capital than all others com-
bined. But it is not an isolated interest. It cannot prosper alone.
It is intimately connected with other interests, and its success or
failure is, in a great degree, to be measured by the condition of
those interests.
He who limits his views of agriculture to production only, can
Agricultural Exhibitions of 1859. 367
have but an imperfect idea of the subject. He has looked at it in
but one of its aspects. To comprehend it fully, he must embrace
a much wider field of inquiry, and understand, not merely how the
earth can be made to yield its richest returns to the liusbandman,
but, also, how those returns can be made most available for his com-
fort and happiness.
Of what value is production, without consumption ? Of wh?vt use
are abundant crops, unless some fair equivalent can be obtained for
the surplus over the wants of the producer?
A correct view of the agriculture of a countrj^, therefore, must
embrace the consideration, not only of the modes by which the
largest crops can be raised, but also of the means by which they can
be best disposed of; or, in other words, how the best markets can
be provided, and the best prices maintained.
The function of agriculture is to produce — of manufactures, to
convert — and of commerce, to exchange. And, as it is obvious that
a large portion of the productions of the soil are comparatively of
little value, until they have been converted, by the processes of man-
ufacture, into new forms, and the surplus has been exchanged for
such commodities as the producer may need, it follows, as a neces-
sary consequence, that there must be an intimate relation between
agriculture, manufactures, and commerce.
It will readily be conceded, that if all the labor of the world Avas
directed to the production of food, the surplus, above the wants of
the producers, would be of little or no value, because there would
be no demand for it. As every one would raise enough for his own
use, he would not find it necessary to look to his neighbor for a
supply. The surplus above the wants of the farmer would there-
fore be useless, and left to perish in the fields in which it was pro-
duced. To give value to it, a demand must be created for it. In
the absence of such a demand it would soon cease to be produced.
This demand can be created only by multiplying the occupations of
the citizens, or in other words, by withdrawing a portion of the
population from the production of food, and directing their labor
to other pursuits. When this is effected a demand is ere,'; ted pro-
portioned to the number of laborers, who are thus rendered consu-
mers instead of producers, and the foundation is laid for the inter-
change, between the different classes of laborers, of the fruits of
their respective branches of industry. This interchange constitutes,
in the first place, the barter — and, in the more advanced stages of
its progress, the commerce of the world.
The prosperity of the farming interest, then, depends upon the
preservation of the proper relation between production and con-
sumption. If an over proportion of the people are engaged in pro-
duction, the supply will exceed the demand ; the market for the
products of the soil will be depressed, and the interests of agricul-
ture must languish. If, on the other hand, occupation can be given
to a large portion of the population in the mechanic arts, in manu-
facturing, in mining, in navigation, and in commerce, the demand
for the fruits of agriculture will be increased, their prices enhanced,
and the farmers must prosper.
368 Secretary's Report on the
The benefits resnltinir from this division of labor are two fold.
It tends, not only to enhance the price of what the farmers has to sell,
in consequence of the increased demand for it, but also to cheapen
what he may have occasion to buy, because of the increased compe-
tition among those who furnish such commodities as he may need.
These are elementary principles of social economy which are,
theoretically, familiar to every intelligent man. But, unfortunately,
they are too much neglected in practice, I hope, therefore, I shall
be pardoned for presenting them in their simplest form, as they have
an important bearing on the line of thought to which I wish to
direct your attention.
Whether the proper relation exists in Virginia, and the United
States, between production and consumption, is a question which
deserves your most serious consideration. The intelligent superin-
tendent of the census of 1850 estimates that three-fifths of the adult
population of the United States are engaged in the cultivation of
the soil; and the statistics of our own State show that near one-
half of the adult male population are farmers, or, in other words,
producers of provisions. In the term farmers, I do not include
hired laborers, who are employed on farms, but only the independ-
ent proprietors or tenants, who cultivate separate farms.
The census tables of 1850 show that the whole number of white
adults in A'irginia, engaged in the various professions and occupa-
tions at that date, was 226,875. Of these, 206,807 were farmers;
46,989 laborers; 1,374 planters; and 3,747 overseers.
These figures would seem to indicate that too large a proportion
of our people are engaged in the production of food; and the pre-
sent low prices of almost every article of provisions confirms this
impression. A larger quantity is produced than can be sold for
remunerative prices. Every improvement which may be made in
the system of farming will tend to a still further depression of prices,
by increasing the supply. And when we contemplate the rapid set-
tlement, now in progress, of the almost boundless grain-growing
region of the Northwest, a region of unparalleled fertility, we must
acknowledge that the prospect is b}' no means encouraging to the
farmer. High prices in this country have always been the eflect of
a foreign demand. This demand will always be, as it has been,
fluctuating; for it depends, not only on natural causes, such as the
failure of crops abroad, but upon poHtical events which may disturb
the tranquillity of Europe, American farmers are, therefore, com-
pelled to look more to the condition of things abroad than at home
in making their estimates as to the breadth of land they shall seed,
and the probable prices they will receive for their crops.
This fluctuation of prices is one of the most serious evils that can
befall any country; it unsettles the value of every species of pro-
perty. When prices are high the tendency is to speculation, to
incur debt, and to form habits of expenditure, which, although
they might not be deemed extravagant, if high prices were to con-
tinue, must prove ruinous when, by some change in the policy of
the great powers of Europe, or other cause, the foreigu demand is
cut oflt', and prices sink to their natural level.
Agricultural Exhibitions of 1859. 869
The iiiquiiy then forces itself upon our attention, how is this evil
to be corrected ?
The most etlective remedy that I can suggest is, to diversify the
occupations of our people — to withdraw a large number of them
from agriculture, and. to direct their labor to other pursuits — to build
up home manufactures — to stimulate the development of our mine-
ral resources — to encourage domestic commerce, and all the me-
chanic arts, and thereby create a demand for the products of our
farms at home. By adopting this policy, we will diminish the num-
ber of producers — increase the number of consumers — and make
some progress towards the establishment of a more just relation
between the supply and demand.
And here, to prevent misconstruction, I wish to say in advance,
that I do not propose, upon an occasion, and before an audience
like the present, to enter into a discussion of any of the controverted
questions connected with the jurisdiction of the Federal Government
over this subject. Whilst I entertain very decided opinions on these
questions, and have not hesitated, under suitable circumstances, to
express them, I desire carefully to abstain from introducing into
this discourse anything that could offend the sensibilities of the
most fastidious, or be regarded as invading a field which, unfortu-
nately for the best interests of the country, has been dedicated to
parti zan strife.
When, therefore, I speak of the encouragement of domestic
industry, I throw out of view, for the present, any legislation by
Congress directed to that end, and limit myself exclusively to such
encouragement as can be afforded by the enlightened enterprise and
public spirit of our own people, aided by the co-operation of our own
General Assembly.
Ko one will deny that every furnace, and forge, and foundry —
every woolen, and cotton, and tobacco factory — every shop for the
manufacture of shoes, and clothing, and saddlery — every mine that
is opened — every house that is erected — every ship that is built — in
a word, every enterprise that gives mechanical employment to our
people, tends to promote the interests of the farmer, by increasing
the demand for what he has to sell.
Let us, then, for a moment survey the extent of the field which
presents itself for the employment of the labor of our countrymen.
The statistics of our foreign commerce show that the aggregate
value of merchandize imported into the United States in the year
1858 was, in round numbers, 282i millions of dollars, and in 1857,
360f millions of dollars. If we analyze the tables, it will be found
that of this latter amount, about 100 millions worth could be pro-
duced, and ought to be produced, in our own country, by the labor
of our own people. For example, we import of —
Copper, in various forms $3,617,000
Iron 15^209,000
Lead 2,305,000
Paper 597,000
Gloves 1,559,000
China and Earthenware 4,037,000
370 Secretary's Report on the
Linseed $3,003,000
Wiae, in casks 2,448,000
Wine, in bottles 1,825,000
Brandy 2,527,000
Grain Spirits 1,125,000
Molasses 8,250,000
Sugar, brown 42,614,000
Sugar, white and loaf 154,000
Tobacco 1,358,000
Cigars 4,221,000
Salt 2,031,000
Coal 772^000
Glass 1,166,000
Making an aggregate of 99,819,000
Virginia alone could supply the iron, coal, copper, lead, salt,
tobacco, glass, and kooline, for China, and earthenware for the
whole Union. Louisiana, Florida and Texas ought to produce the
sugar, molasses and rum ; and other States should produce the wine,
brandy, distilled spirits, linseed, and many other articles now
imported, in quantities sufficient for the consumption of our popu-
lation. And yet, with a climate and soil adapted to the growth of
all that we need, except tea, coffee and spices — with mountains and
valleys filled with iron, and coal, and salt, and copper, and lead,
and gypsum — we leave them all but partially developed, and draw
our supplies from foreign countries !
An apt illustration of Virginia policy is to be found in an incident,
which will probably be remembered by many of the inhabitants of
this city, as it occurred within a short distance of the spot on which
I now stand.
About twenty years ago it became necessary to erect a banking
house in Richmond for the use of the Exchange Bank, then recently
incorporated ; and although the structure is probably erected on a
stratum of granite, and certainly stands within a mile of the finest
granite quarries in the Union, the granite of which it is constructed
was imported from Quincy, in the State of Massachusetts!
If the articles which I have enumerated among the imports were,
as they should be, produced in the United States ; if the laborers
necessary to produce them were consumers instead of producers of
provisions, it is easy to perceive what an increased demand would
be created for the breadstufFs, live stock and other products of our
farms. An ample and a steady market would spring up at our own
doors for everything we have for sale, and prosperity and comfort
would spread through all our borders.
******
******
******
jtTo nation ever possessed such a heritage as we enjoy. Provi-
dence has lavished on us every blessing in the richest profusion.
With a territory stretching from the Atlantic to the Pacific ocean,
and almost from the Tropical to the Arctic region, we embrace
within our limits every variety of soil and climate, and an aptitude
for every production essential to the comfort and happiness of man.
*
*
*
*
*
*
*
*
*
Agricultural ExJdhitionB of 1859. 871
If we were isolated from all the rest of the world, we have within
our own borders every material element of national prosperity and
greatness. And, as if with the design of securing perpetual har-
mony and union between the difieren't parts, Providence has wisely
ordained a natural and necessary division of labor between them,
by adapting each to particular staples and occupations which are
uusuited to the climate and soil of the others. The southern States
produce the cotton, sugar, rice, and tobacco necessary for the whole
country. The north supplies the skill and labor to manufacture
the raw material into sucli fabrics as are required by the other sec-
tions. And the middle States furnish the food for the north and
south. ISTeitlier can successfully compete with the other in its
peculiar department of industry. Each is benefited by the ex-
change of its surplus productions for those of the others, and they
thus reciprocally minister to each other's wants. And by a remark-
able departure from the general law of nature, which requires large
streams to seek their outlet to the ocean by the shortest route, the
great father of rivers, instead of flowing eastward to the Atlantic,
pours his vast volume of waters in an almost due southward course,
from the northern limits of the confederacy to the Gulf of Mexico ;
thus passing through all the great divisions of our country, and
furnishing a highway for commerce between them, unequalled in
extent and excellence on the face of the globe.
If the climate, soil, and productions of our whole country were
similar, competition and rivalry might engender ill feeling between
the different parts. But each has its separate gift, and their natural
diversities, instead of being elements of discord, are sources of
union, harmony, and strength.
But, like the foolish Coriiithians, some of our people are disposed
to indulge "in vainglory, envy, corrupt emulations and repinings,"
which are alike opposed to truth, charity, and patriotism.
To all such, may we not, reverently paraphraising the language of
the Apostle, say —
" For as the body is one, and hath many members, and all the
members of that one body, being many, are one body, so also is
OUR COUNTRY !
"For by one spirit are we all baptised into one body, whether
we be Jew or Gentile — bond or free — and have all been made to
drink into one spirit — the spirit of the Constitution !
" For our confederacy is not one member, but many. If the north
shall say because I am not the south, I am not of the Union, is it,
therefore, not of the Union ?
" And if the east shall say, because I am not the ivest, I am not
of the Union, is it, therefore, not of the Union ?
" If the whole country were manufacturing, where were the cotton
and sugar growing ?
"If the whole were agricultural, where were the commercial and
manufacturing ?
" But now hath the ivisdom of our fathers set the separate States,
every cue of them in the Union as it hath pleased them.
372 Secretary's Report on ths
"And if they were all one jState, where were the Union ?
"But now are they many States, yet but one confederacy.
"And the ^ast cannot say unto the West, I have no need of thee;
nor, again, the Northern States to the Southern, we have no need
of you !
"And whether one member sufier, all the members suffer with it ;
or one member be honored, all members rejoice with it!"
These are the teachings of inspiration ! And I appeal to my fel-
low-citizens, in all parts of the country, if they do not convey to us
an instructive lesson of practical wisdom and patriotic duty !
Let us, then, in everything that affects the interests of our coun-
try, cultivate a comprehensive, catholic, national sentiment ! Let
us discard from our confidence and our concils all "fanatical agita-
tors" who attempt, by any device whatever, to array one portion of
the Union against another! Let us remember that, while each sec-
tion has its appropriate function to perform, each is essential to the
welfare and security' of the whole. Let us bear in mind that "the
liberty and independence we possess are the work of joint councils
and joint efforts — of common dangers, sufferings, and success."
Instead of fostering local jealousies, and striving to inflame one sec-
tion against another, let me urge you, fellow-citizens, in the impres-
sive language of Washington, to raise up your minds and your
hearts to a just appreciation "of the immense value of your JSTational
Union to your collective and individual happiness, so that you may
cherish a cordial, habitual, and immovable attachment to it; accus-
toming yourselves to think and to speak of it as a palladium of your
political safety and prosperity ; watching for its preservation with
jealous anxiety; discountenancing whatever may suggest even a
suspicion that it can in any event be abandoned ; and indignantly
frowning upon the first dawning of every attempt to alienate any
portion of our country from the rest, or to enfeeble the sacred ties
which now link together the various parts !"
WISCO^SSIK
The State Agricultural Society held its ninth annual exhibition
at Milwaukee, September 26-30. The grounds — about twenty
acres in extent — were located on high land about two miles from
the central portion of the city, and were fitted up with temporary
buildings for exhibitors and officers, and a trotting course three-
quarters of a mile in circuit. The weather was rainy on Monday
and gusty on Friday, but fair the remainder of the week ; yet the
attendance was not large. The entries were only 1,400 against
2,000 at Madison the year previous; and the receipts for entries
and at the gates only |5,309 49 against $6,332 54 the year before.
The premium list was admirably arranged, and, with the other
arrangements, reflected great credit on Secretary Powers.
The show of horses, we learn from the Wiscoiisin Farmer, was
Agricultural Exhibitions of 1859. 373
sufficiently excellent to justify the rising fame of the State, as the
Vermont of the N'orthwest in horse matters. The cattle were in
no way behind the shows of former years, in quality — the Devons,
especially, are obviously on the increase in the State, coming much
nearer the Durhams in the number on show than formerly. Sheep
and swine were not abundant. A great number of mechanical
inventions, labor-saving machines and works of utility, farming
implements, and novel machines and beautiful specimens of art
and skill were on exhibition. There were D:iany exhibitors from
other States, among whom may be mentioned the proprietor of a
very superior "plaster," from Grand Rapids, Mich. The stone
contains from sixty to seventy per cent, of pure sulphate of lime,
the balance being iron, salt and magnesia : it is cut and polished
into beautiful slabs for tables, &c., or makes au excellent fertilizer
when ground.
An excellent and practical address was delivered by Hon. Abram
Lincoln, of Illinois. We make the following extracts :
ADDRESS OF THE HON. ABRAM LINCOLN, OF ILLINOIS.
******* **
My first suggestion is an inquiry as to the eftect of greater tho-
roughness in all the departments of agriculture than now prevails in
tlie northwest — perhaps I might say in America. To speak en-
tirely within bounds, it is Icnown that fifty bushels of wheat, or one
hundred bushels of Indian corn, can be produced from an acre.
Less than a year ago I saw it stated that a man, by extraordinary
care and labor, had produced of wheat what was equal to two hun-
dred bushels from an acre. But take fifty of wheat, and one hun-
dred of corn, to be the possibility, and compare it with the actual
crops of the country. Many years ago I saw it stated in a Patent
Office Report that eighteen bushels was the average crop through-
out the United States; and this year an intelligent farmer of Illinois
assured me that he did not believe the land harvested in that State
this season had yielded more than an average of eight bushels to
the acre. The brag crop I heard of in our vicinity was two thou-
sand bushels from ninety acres. Alany crops were threshed, pro-
ducing no more than three bushels to the acre; much was cut, and
then abandoned as not worth threshing; and much was abandoned
as not worth cutting. As to Indian corn, and, indeed, most other
crops, the case has not been much better. For the last four years,
I do not believe the ground planted with corn in Illinois has pro-
duced an average of twenty bushels to the acre. It is true that,
heretofore, we have had better crops, with no better cultivators ;
but I believe it is also true that the soil has never been pushed up
to one-half of its capacity.
What would be the eftect upon the farming interest to push the
soil up to something near its full capacity ? Unquestionably it will
47
374 Secretary's Report on the
take more labor to produce fifty bushels from an acre, than it will
to produce ten bushels from the same acre. But will it take more
labor to produce fifty bushels from one acre than from five f Un-
questionably, thorough cultivation will require more labor to the
acre ; but will it require more to the bushel? If it should require
just as much to the bushel, there are some probable, and several cer-
tain, advantages in favor of the thorough practice.
It also would spare a large proportion of the making and main-
taining of enclosures — the same, whether these enclosures should
be hedges, ditches or fences. This again, is a heavy item — heavy
at first, and heavy in its continual demand for repairs. I remember
once being greatly astonished by an apparently authentic exhibition
of the proportion of the cost of an inclosure bears to all the other ex-
penses of the farmer; though I cannot remember exactly what that
proportion was. Any farmer, if he will, can ascertain it in his own
case, for himself.
Again, a great amount of "locomotion" is spared by thorough
cultivation. Take fifty bushels of wheat, read}' for the harvest,
standing upon a single acre, and it can be harvested in any of the
known ways, with less than half the labor which would be required
if it were spread over five acres. This would be true, if cut by the
old hand sickle; true, to a greater extent, if by the scythe and
cradle; and to a still greater extent, if by the machines now in use.
These machines are chiefly valuable, as a means of substituting ani-
mal power for the power of men in this branch of farm work. In
the highest degree of perfection yet reached in applying the horse-
power to harvesting, fully nine-tenths of 'the power is expended by
the animal in carrying himself and dragging the machine over the
field, leaving certainly not more than one-tenth to be applied directly
to the only end of the whole operation — the gathering in the grain,
and clipping of the straw. When grain is very thin on the ground,
it is always more or less intermingled with weeds, chess and the
like, and a large part of the power is expended in cutting these. It
is plain that when the crop is very thick upon the ground, the larger
proportion of the power is directly applied to gathering in and cut-
ting it; and the smaller, to that which is totally useless as an end.
And what I have said of harvesting is true, in a greater or less de-
gree, of mowing, plowing, gathering in of crops generally, and, in-
deed, of almost all farm work.
The efiect of thorough cultivation upon the farmer's own mind,
and, in reaction through his mind, back upon his business, is per-
haps quite equal to any other of its efiects. Every man is proud of
what he does well; and no man is proud of what does not do well.
With the former, his heart is in his work; and he will do twice as
much of it with less fatigue. The latter performs a little imper-
fectly, looks at it in disgust, turns from it, and imagineg himself ex-
ceedingly tired. The little he has done comes to nothing, for want
of finishing.
The man who produces a good full crop will scarcely ever let any
part of it go to waste. He will keep up tlie inclosure about it, and
Agricultural Exhibitions of 1859. 375
allow neither man nor beast to trespass upon it. He will gather it
in due season and store it in perfect securit}'. Thus he labors with
satisfaction, and saves himself the whole fruit of his labor. The
other, starting with no purpose for a full crop, labors less, and with
less satisfaction; allows his fence to fall, and cattle to trespass;
gathers not in due season, or not at all. Thus the labor he has per-
formed is wasted away little by little, till, in the end, he derives
scarcely anything from it.
The ambition for broad acres leads to poor farming, even with
men of energy. I scarcel}^ ever knew a mammoth farm to sustain
itself, much less to return a profit upon the outlay. I have more
than once known a man to spend a respectable fortune upon one ;
fail and leave it; and then some man of modest aims get a small
fraction of the ground, and make a good living upon it. Mammoth
farms are like tools or weapons, which are too heavy to be handled.
Ere long they are thrown aside at a great loss.
LOCAL EXHIBITIONS IN WISCONSIN.
Iowa county society, at Dodgeville, September 6-7. Grant
county societ}', at Lancaster, September 13-14. Dodge county
society, at Juneau, September 14-16 ; D. S. Curtis, orator. Web-
ster county society, at Fort Dodge, September 14-15. Pierce
county society, at Prescott, September 14-15; Professor J. W.
Hoyt, orator. Sheboygan county society, at Sheboygan Falls, Sep-
tember 14-15. Waukesha county society, organized 1854, at Wau-
kesha, September 14-15; Professor J. W. Hoyt, orator. Columbia
county society, at Portage City, September 20-21. Dane county
society, organized 1856, at Madison, September 20-22. Rock
county society, at Janesville, September 20-22. St. Croix county
society, at Hudson, September 20-21; Professor J. W. Hoyt, orator.
Waupaca county society, at Waupaca, September 20-21. Jefferson
county society, at Lake Mills, September 21-23. Richland county
society, at Richland Centre, September 21-22. Walworth county
society, at Elkhorn, September 21-23. Green county society, at
Monroe, September 22-24 ; N. L. Stout, orator. Winnebago county
society, at Oshkosh, September 22-23. Kenosha county society,
at Paris, September 23-24; Hon. H. P. Harvey, orator. Lake
county society, at Libertyville, September 27-28. Manitowoc
county society, at Manitowoc, October 3-4 ; Professor J. W. Hoyt,
orator. Fond du Lac county society, organized 1852, at Fond du
Lac, October 4-5. Brown county society, at Green Bay, October
5-6 ; Professor J. W. Hoyt, orator. Waushara county society, at
Wautoraa, October 12-13.
376 From the Secretary's Tahle,
ccrdarg'5 Cable.
Rooms of the United States Agricultural Society,
356 Pennsylvania avenue, Washington, D. C, January, 1860.
When it was determined by the Executive Committee of the United States Agricultural
Society to issue its publications as a Quarterly Magazine, to be called the ^'■Journal of
Agriculture," those who proposed this appellation were of opinion that there would be
no lack of volunteer contributors. It was thought that gentlemen occupying high posi-
tions in the various departments of theoretical and applied agriculture, would cheerfully
contribute the result of their observations and experience, in articles of more elaborate
research and more elevated tone than is required for the newspaper press.
These hopes have not been realized. A large number of gentlemen of acknowledged
abilitj' have been applied to, either personally or by letter, yet but one of them has fur-
nished an article for publication. Unprovided with means wherewith to secure the ser-
vices of contributors, or even to procure foreign journals from which to make extracts,
the Secretary has been forced to use such materials as his official correspondence aiforded ;
and the Society's Seventh Volume, of which this is the closing number, is in fact what it
should have been entitled : The Journal of the United States Agricultural Society. As such, he
respectfully submits it.
It is for the members of the United States Society to determine whether they desire a
continuance of this Chronicle, or whether they desire to make their publications equal to
those in active and influential operation abroad. In either case, the present Secretary
will gladly retire from the editorial position, which he has filled under the most disad-
vantageous circumstances, cordially thanking those Officers and Members of the Society
who have appreciated the difliculties under Avhich he has labored.
The Report on the Exhibitions of 1859, compiled from every attainable source, will
give an idea of what may be done, when the United States Societ}'- shall have become
more generally recognized as a receiving and distributing reservoir of practical informa-
tion. What facts have been collected and embodied, show that the exhibitions of 1859
have been unusually interesting, and that Agriculturists, throughout the length and
breadth of the Union, have every vvhere given proof of improvement in stock-raising and
in the modes and applications of culture. Should the United States Society determine
to continue the collection of accounts of Exhibitions, it is to be hoped that Secretaries of
State and local societies will more generally respond to the requests for information.
Accounts of the familiar discussions at Exhibitions and at the meetings of Farmers' Clubs,
condensed and arranged, would form a valuable addition to the agricultural literature of
the country ; for the decisions of these councils of practical men are of great value.
Addresses at Exhibitions, when they contain useful suggestions or tested theories, deserve
a wide circulation ; and even when they are but the rhetorical flourishes of politicians,
jt is well to place them on record, for reference at that no very distant day, when these same
eulogists of agriculture may be called upon to give a more practical demonstration of
their interest in the advancement of husbandry.
United States Agricultural Society. 377
An Agricultural Bureau. — The Secretarj"^ of the Interior, in his last annual report,
said: "The intrinsic importance of agriculture and the number of our people engaged
in this pursuit justify the expenditures annually made for its improvement. Experience
has demonstrated the incalculable benefits which the farmer has derived from the dis-
coveries of science, and the diffusion of intelligence has generally removed his aversion
to change in the modes of cultivation."
Thus far, the agricultural operations of the General Government have been conducted
under the direction of the Commissioners of Patents, whose laborious legitimate duties
have left them but little opportunity for superintending the clerks, writers, and agents,
the preparation of reports, or the purchase and distribution of seeds. It is not therefore
to be wondered at, that subordinates, often unqualified for the positions which they have
managed to secure, have been convicted of gross mismanagement, plagiarism, and use-
less expenditures.
This state of things has made the announcement doubly welcome, that the Secretary
of the Interior proposes to establish a Bureau of Agriculture, and that he has invited the
Hon. Thomas G. Clemson to organize it, and afterwards to act as its head. The selection
is an excellent one, and the Agriculturists of the Republic will congratulate Mr. Thomp-
son, and each other, that he has found ^'■the right man for the right place." A gentleman
of rare scientific attainments, Mr. Clemson is also a practical farmer, who carries his
theories into successful and profitable practice. Distinguished abroad as an accom-
plished diplomatist, and recognized there and at home as a scholar possessing high at-
tainments, he is no less esteemed by his neighbors for the success which has attended his
labors in regenerating a worn-out plantation near this metropolis, Avhere he has resided
since his return from Belgium.
Anxual Meeting. — The United States Agricultural Society will hold its Eighth An-
nual Meeting at the Smithsonian Institution, in Washington City, on the second Wednesday
of January, 1860, when the business required by the Constitution will be transacted.
Oflficers and Members of the Society are respectfully notified to attend, and a cordial
invitation is extended to State and other Agricultural Associations to send delegates,
that there may be a general representation of Agriculturists, " in Congress assembled,"
to protect and sustain their interests, acting as a national organization on such matters
pertaining to Agriculture as may be deemed appropriate. Gentlemen from other lands
who may be interested in the acquisition and diffusion of Agricultural knowledge, are
also invited to attend, and to participate in the proceedings.
Important Agricultural topics will be publicly discussed, among them " the establish-
ment of a Department of Agriculture;" "the steam-plow;" "Physical Geography, in its
relation to Agriculture ;" " Agricultural Statistics of the next Census ;" " the culture of
Sorgho and Imphee ;" " under-draining ;" and " forest-trees."
Gentlemen having other topics pertaining to the advancement of Agriculture, which
they may wish to introduce or to have discussed, will please refer them to the Executive
Committee, through the Secretary, that a place may be assigned them on the daily
programme.
Delegates are requested to bring copies of the publications of the Societies which they
represent — one for the Library of the U. S. Society, and others for foreign interchange.
Propositions from cities at which the next Annual Exhibition of the Society is desired,
will be received and considered.
The Medals, awarded at the Chicago Exhibition, have been ordered at the United States
Mint, at Philadelphia, and will be sent by Express^ when ready, if the Secretary of the
Society receives instructions to so forward them. The Diplomas and Certificates will be
delivered, sent by Express, or Mailed if the postage is remitted. The postal charge for
a Diploma, on a roller, is ninety cents — for a Certificate, folded, six cents.
378 From the Secretary's Table,
England. — At the December meeting of the council of the Royal Agricultural Society,
the names of ten gentlemen were selected from the seventj- who had applied in writing
for the office of Secretary, which had been temporarily filled by Mr. Brandreth Gibbs
since the dismissal of Mr. James Hudson. These ten candidates appeared in person, suc-
cessively, before the council of the society, and answered such questions as were pro-
pounded. The balloting was then commenced, and after several trials, Henry Hall Dare,
Esq., was chosen. His salary will be four hundred pounds per annum, with a house,
fuel, and lights — equal to !52,500.
The society has filed its claim as a creditor under the deed of assignment executed by
Mr. Secretary Hudson (since deceased) for £1,771 8s. 6d., which will nearly cover the
amount of his defalcation. It is represented as having funded property to the amount
of £10,000, and a cash balance at its bankers of £2,000. In future, a professional ac-
countant will keep its books and accounts.
The council of the society have determined to employ a literary editor for their Jo^ir-
nail, who is to receive an annual salarj'of five hundred pounds; and notice Avas published
that candidates might send in their names up to the 20th inst. Premiums, varying from
fifty to two hundred and fifty dollars each, have been offered for essays for t\\Q Journal —
on the agriculture of Berkshire ; on the application of manure ; on the influence of prices
on farm management ; on late improvements in dairy practice ; on the proper office of
straw on a farm ; on farm capital ; on seed-beds for agricultural crops ; on adulteration
of seeds ; and on any other agricultural subject. The topics are sufficiently varied to
open the competition to all parts of the kingdom.
The premium list for Royal Society's Exhibition of 1860, at Canterbury, states that
the judges will commence their examinations on Monday morning, July 9th, and the ex-
hibition will close on the Thursday afternoon following.
The Eleventh Winter Exhibition of the Birmingham and Midland Counties Society
was satisfactory, although there was a falling off in point of numbers as compared with
the year previous. There were 109 entries of cattle, 44 of sheep, and 81 of pigs. The
first premium for short-horned oxen over three years of age, together with the breeder's
silver medal, were awarded to Mr. R. Stratton, of Broad Hintou, for an animal Avhich
had gained the first premium and the extra premium of £20 at the Smithfield Exhibition
of 1857 ; but the next week, at Darlington, Mr. Stratton's ox was defeated by one belong-
ing to the Duke of Cleveland. Prince Albert (for the first time) received the breeder's
silver medal for a Devon ox.
English Brkeds op Swine. — The Loiidon Field, of December 3d, says : There is no
portion of the live stock of the farm so necessary and profitable as a good assortment of
pigs. Tlie store-pig, in turning over the manure in the fold-yard, not only feeds upon the
grain, which would be otherwise wasted, but the same time regulates the fermination of
the manure. The swill of a farm-house where there are from six to eight cows kept is,
to it, much more than bare support. By nature it is constituted to collect the fragments
of every kind of fiirm produce, and therefrom appropriate, as from the smallest drop of
oily or rich matter obtained, by the cleansing of the milk and other cooking utensils,
that proportion of flesh and fat-forming matter, which must be lost to any other animal
but itself. The processes by which the flesh of the pig is converted into various kinds
of meat, together with the facilitv it is prepared for the market, must render the position
it occupies in the live stock of the farmer well deserving his notice. In the keeping pro-
perties of pork, bacon, and hams, when salted, dried, or smoked, the science of cookery,
as practised in Great Britain and Ireland, is greatly enriched. Each district could enu-
merate its savoury list of dishes peculiar to itself, and the constitution of almost all of
which will be found to consist cf the flesh ofthe pig, in its multiplied form of conversion
into meat. The porkers of the London market afford from the beginning to the end of
the season a species of viand, which, in point of delicacy and flavor, is almost unsur-
passed. The cottager, mechanic, and agricultural laborer find the addition of a pig
contribute materially to their domestic comfort. A slice from their own flitch of bacon
gives a double relish to the meal. That this class of live stock is increasing in quantity
and quality we are enabled to judge from the prominency they occupy at our agricultu-
ral shows. The quality of the animal has undergone, and is still undergoing, a very
marked improvment. At the Christmas Smithfield Club and Birmingham shows, there
have been exhibited specimens of a first-rate class possessing those properties which are,
in the estimation of the improvers of the breed, of the first importance — namely, free
growers, and, at the same time, readily fattened. The Coleshill breed, as exhibited and
improved by the Earl of Radnor on his Berkshire estate, which are wholly w-hite, exhibit
all those proportions that can be desired, while they possess the above-described qualities.
We have a greater number of varieties of swine than ^we have of any other of our meat-
producing animals on the farm. We might say that almost every county in England has
United States Agricultural Society. 379
its own breed of pigs. Those breeds common to Berkshire, Hampshire, Hereford, Shrop-
shire, and Yorkshire are considered best suited for bucon ; -while tlie breeds of Bucking-
ham, Essex, Oxford, and Sussex are better adapted for pork. The Norfolk and Suffolk
breeds are in high repute in the London market as porkers. The latter kinds having a
dash of the Chinese breed in them, are well suited for the London butcher and the meat
salesman ; they are thick and broad-chested, possessing the advantage of early maturity,
tenderness, and fineness of flesh, with lightness of olfal. We have the following joints
from the two-quarters of the porker : the hind quarter contains the leg, the loin, and the
spring ; the fore quarter the hand, the fore chine or spare-rib, and the cheek. Grain of
different sorts is used for the purpose of feeding pigs ; and no kind of food will fatten
them quicker and produce finer meat than crushed barley. But, in order to render the
feeding of pigs on a large scale profitable, recourse must be had to the application of heat
in preparing food for them, on Avhich the stomach may act freely. The boiling and
steaming of I'oots exert a change in the food so favorable to the operation of feeding, in
comparison with the giving of it entirely raw, that we strongly recommend the process
on the score of efficiency and profitableness.
Louis Napoleon as a Farmer. — Louis Napoleon farms very extensively. In addition
to the farms on the Crown lands and on estates which have been acquired for him in
Sologne and Landes, he occupies, as tenant of the State, a A^ast tract in Champagne. At
the present time the extent of laud farmed by the Emperor is about 50,000 acres. The
extent may be increased considerably at any time by reclaiming lands in his possession,
but not in cultivation. The number of farms is twenty-six, and nine additional farms
are to be formed in the course of the year and incoming spring, thus making thirty-fivo
farms. The number of new steadings and those in course of erection is twenty. Beside
the lands farmed, there are grazings in the domains or parks of St. Cloud, Versailles,
Madon, St. Germaine, Champagne, P'ontainbleau, Biarritz, Senart, Vincennes, &c. Por-
tions of these are in grass and portions are forest. In addition to the estates at Sologne
and Landes, the Emperor has purchased a property in the south of France, near to
Bayonne, consisting of 2,500 acres, which is being drained and put under cultivation.
The lands were originally a morass ; part is still to reclaim. It is understood that after
the estate has been thoroughly improved, it will be presented by the Emperor to the
present Minister for Foreign Affairs, Count Walewski. In the centre of the barren lands
of Bretagne, the cousin of the Emperor, Princess Baciocchi, is reclaiming an extensive
estate out of heath. The whole lands farmed by the Emperor, are being reclaimed and
cultivated upon the systems the best suited for the character of the soils, climates, and
situations. These farms are in different parts of France, and chiefly in the less improved
districts.
Cultivating Hops. — A valuable discovery in the cultivation of hops has just been
communicated to the French Academy. Like most agricultural improvements, it has
been the result of observations made by a laboring peasant. It consists in making the
plant run in a horizontal direction, instead of climbing up the pole. This is managed
by means of a low trellis Avork of the simplest construction. The advantages of this
mode of culture are numerous. In the first place, it enables the grower to investigate
the plant while growing, and cleanse it from the numerous insects which injure it to so
vast an extent; then it is protected from the sun, which always destroys the upper shoots;
it obviates the great destruction of hops in stormy weather, when the wind lays low whole
hop grounds from the height of the poles; and, most of all, it enables the gathering of
the cones to take place without uprooting the plant, besides permitting the selection of
the ripest ones at first, and preventing the great loss which arises from the necessity of
tearing down the whole plant to get at the ripest blossoms.
Works for Wine-Growers. — A recent letter from Paris mentions two new works on
the growth of the vine and the processes of extracting and preserving the precious juice.
One is Chemistry applied to Viticulture and Onology, being a course of lectures delivered
in the cities of Dijon and Beaune, byM. C. Ladrey, Professor of Chemistry in the Faculty
of Sciences at Dijon, the capital of Burgundy; the other — Theoretical and Practical
Indications for the working or preparation of wines, and particularly of the vins mousseux,
the forming or sparkling wines, by H. J. iMaumene, Professor at Rhcims, Champagne.
The two Professors have furnished, in the most instructive and intelligible details, all
the information which the vine-grower or amateur can need or desire. Competent judges
write in unqualified commendation of these books.
Alderneys. — Herds of Alderneys and Guernsey cows and heifers were offered for sale
at the Smithfield and other winter exhibitions.
380 From the Secretary's Table,
New York State Agricultural College, at Ovid, New York. — A pamphlet has just
been issued, containing the charter, ordinances, regulations and course of studies of this
institution. A portion of the college buildings are erected, and will be ready the coming
spring for the accommodation of one hundred and iifty students. The farm connected
with the college contains about 700 acres of laud, of great variety of soil, aud admirably
adapted to the objects of the institution.
.Major M. R. Patrick — educated at West Point, and formerly in the army., but since the
close of the Mexican war engaged in agricultural pursuits — has been elected President of
the institution, and a better selection could not have been made.
Professor Wm. H. Brewer has been appointed agricultural chemist, and is in everyway
well qualified to discharge the duties of that important position. Suitable persons will
be selected to fill the other positions ; and it is hoped that an institution so important to
the agriculturists of New York and of the country will soon be in successful operation.
The Board of Trustees comprises some of the most distinguished agriculturists
in the State, viz: Hon. John A. King, Chairman; 'Q.V.iohnson, Secretary ; William Kelly,
Henry Wager, Wm. Buel!, A. A. Post, Joel W. Bacon, J. B. Williams, E. P. Prentice,
Samuel Cheevcr, Addison Gardner, M. R. Patrick, Rufus K. Delafield, Alexander Thomp-
son, Arad Joy, James 0. Sheldon, and Benj. N. Huntington.
The Maryland Agricultural College Mas inaugurated in October last, and is in
successful operation, under the efficient direction of Charles B. Calvert, Esq., President
of the Board of Trustees. The State of Maryland appropriated $G,000 per annum for its
perpetual support, on condition that $50,000 should be raised by private subscription for
its establishment. The college farm is situated in Prince George's county, Maryland,
about nine miles from Washington, on the line of the Baltimore railroad, and comprises
428 acres of soil adapted in character and variety to the purposes of experiment. The
site of the college is a commanding eminence, upon which a portion of the proposed
buildings for the college has been erected. The completed portion is a wing constituting
about one-third of the whole structure, 120 feet by 54. Agricultural science, in all its
departments, is to be learned practically, and simultaneously with the theoretical instruc-
tion of the text-books. The farm, in its general management, it is proposed to make a
model and an example of the best modes of culture in the several departments of agri-
culture. It is of course to be stocked with the best breeds of cattle, sheep, hogs, &c., &c.,
and the most approved implements and machines. Tlie plan includes, likewise, a com-
modious workshop, with motive power sufficient for all its purposes, and with space
enough for exercise and instruction in such of the mechanic arts as are required by agri-
cultural pursuits. '' This institution," as was happily remarked by President Calvert,
when it was inaugurated, ''is calculated to do more good than any other in the country.
Its object is to diffuse that peculiar knowledge which will increase the products of the
soil, by the most economical expenditure of time, labor and money, and to place the
cultivators of the soil in the high and dignified position to which they were justly
entitled."
Hon. Jacob Thompson, Secretary of the Interior, made a few well-timed remarks at
the inauguration, in whith he gave the following outline of what an American Farmer
should be. "He must," said the Secretary, "to be a farmer, first own a tract of laud.
He must be so much of a law3er as to know the difference between mcum and tein7i, and
to be assured that his title to his land is good. For this purpose he must at least dip
into the preface of Blackstone. He must also be as much of a mechanic to enable him
to know when his hired mechanics do their work well ; so much of a chemist as to know
the soil of his land, what will grow best on it and how to manure it; so much of a doctor
as to enable him to physic his slaves when they are sick; so much of a farrier as to un-
derstand wheu his horses are well shod, well attended and cared for when sick. He
must be also an engineer to such an extent that he will be able to ditch well, to know
what soil to turn up and what to leave alone. In short, a farmer must know everything.
The 3'ouiig men, he said, who come to this college will have to control labor. Great re-
sponsibility would therefore rest upon them. They must learn to have a clear head, pure
heart, and to live honest, sober, upright lives."
The Farmers' High School of Pennsylvania. — Governor Packer, in his recent message
to the Legislature, says:
"The aid which the Legislature has hitherto extended to the establishment of the
Farmers' High School of Pennsylvania, strongly evinces their high appreciation of the
advajitages which it is anticipated Avill grow out of that institution. While it must be
admitted that knowledge is as essential to the art of farming as it is to all the other em-
ployments of life, we cannot but feel deeply interested that a community so peculiarly
agricultural as we are should have all the advantages of an education which combines
United States Agricultural Society. 381
in itself as well the knowledge of the practical art of agriculture as scientific acquire-
ments in all those branches of learning which are especially applicable to its profitable
pursuit. A school where agriculture is practically taught is a new field to which our
attention has been called ; and one whicli, because of its great importance, well deserves
our attention. It embraces the principle that, while youth are taught habits of industry,
they arc iuii)resscd with the proud consideration that the labor of their own hands con-
tributes to their acquisition of knowledge. And thus, too, education is brought within
the reach of many a bright genius, who would otherwise struggle and languish for the
want of the means of acquiring it. Our school, within its limited means, has been in
successful operation during the past year ; having under its chai-ge one hundred bo^'S,
who, while they are carefully instructed in all those branches of science which pertain
to a high order of education, are daily engaged in all the practical operations of the
farm — fitting them to return to rural life, and to infuse throughout the State an amount
and kind of knowledge which must ultimately produce a most beneficial influence upon
this most cherished branch of industry. The practical workings of the school, for the
past year, have impressed the trustees who have it in charge with the highest hopes of
its complete success. The great interest which is everywhere felt tliroughout the Com-
monwealth, in the further extension and progress of the institution, commends it to our
care and protection."
Iowa Agricultural College. — The trustees of this institution, we are informed, have
selected as its site a farm iti Story county. It contains about 648 acres; of which about
150 acres is good timber land, 100 of creek bottom, and the remainder rolling prairie.
There is some wet land on the high prairie, as well as ou the bottom, all of which can be
made tillable land without much cost of draining. It is proposed to build plain, sub-
stantial houses for the college, commencing with one capable of accommodating 100 stu-
dents ; and in time completing three separate buildings, sufficient for 400.
The land cost $5,400. Sundry expenses in locating, surveying, getting title, etc.,
about $450. Work done upon the land and preparation for building, $600— leaving
$3,550 in the treasury. This falls short, by about $2,500, of the requisite sum for build-
ing house, barn, and fence, and breaking 160 acres. In the way of assets, the board have
Story county bonds, bearing 7 per cent., to the amount of $10,000; $'2,800 in subscrip-
tion notes, payable in two years, a part of which can be worked in in the improvements ;
3,000 acres of wild land in the vicinity of the college, and 3,200 acres near Monroe, in
Jasper county.
Agricultural Professorships in Virginia. — In addition to the late Col. Cocke's dona-
tion of $20,000, Hon. Wra. C. Rives, in whose hands $10,000 had been placed by a friend
of his, not a resident of Virginia, to be appropriated to the causes of Agricultural Edu-
cation in that Commonwealth, has definitel}' concluded to give it to the Virginia Jfilitary
Institute, towards the advancement of a second chair in the school of Agriculture, to be
denominated the chair of Natural History, Animal and Vegetable Physiology, &c.
Michigan Agricultural College — It is stated that the Michigan Board of Education
have changed the programme of the Agricultural College, and established the following
Professorships: 1. Agricultural Chemistry. 2. Botany and Vegetable Pliysiology. 3.
Zoology and Animal Phj'siology. 4. Civil and Rural Engineering. 5. Theory and Prac-
tice of Agriculture. We gather the foregoing from a correspondent of the Marshall
Statesman, who calls this a marked change in the course of study at this college. He
believes it demanded by the people of the State. There are 250 acres of the fiirm in an
araljle state, and it is now designed to teach the students scientific and practical agriculture.
The same correspondent asserts that, "in consequence of the new programme, all of the
college professors resigned." A letter of more recent date gives reason to hope for a
satisfactory arrangement of all difficulties, without any change in the government.
Lectures in Wisconsin. — D. S. Curtis, Esq., of Madison, Wisconsin, is delivering fa-
miliar lectures to the people of that region, with the following specific objects in view:
First — To induce farmers to adopt a deeper and more thorough system of cultivation.
Second — To stimulate in them an ambition for a higher standard of intellectual ac-
quirements; and
Third — To prompt them to assert and assume their proper and proportionate control
in political economy and official stations of the State and Nation— tlieir ranks containing
above five-sixths of the voters, and furnishing full that proportion of the support and
expenses of our Government — while agriculture is more neglected by the law-maker
than any other interest.
48
382 The Secretary's Table,
Agricultural Lectures at Yale College. — Professor Porter, of tbe Department of
Natural Science, Chemistry and Agriculture at the Scientific School connected with
Yale College, New Haven, has completed his arrangements for the most thorough course
of Agricultural Lectures ever given on this continent. The cost of attending the entire
course will be only ten dollars, and the following programme will give an idea of the
value and interest of the lectures. The first lecture will be delivered on the first of
February.
First week. — Science in its Relations to Agriculture.
Chemistry. — Prof. S. W. Johnson.
Meteorology. — Prof. B. Silliman, Jr.
Entomology. — Dr. Asa Fitch.
Vegetable Physiology. — Daniel C. Eaton.
Second week. — Horticulture and orcharding, ^-c.
Pomology (in general). — Hon. Marshall P. Wilder.
Grapes.— Dr. C. W. Grant.
Berries. — R. G. Pardee, Esq.
Fruit Trees. — P. Barry, Esq.
Fruits as Farm Crops. — Lewis F. Allen, Esq.
Agricultural Chemistry. — Prof. S. W. Johnson.
Third week. — Agriculture proper.
Drainage. — Hon. H. F. French.
Grasses and Irrigation. — I. Stanton Gould, Esq.
Cereals.— Joseph Harris, Esq.
Hops, Tobacco, &c.— Prof. W. H. Brewer.
, Cultivation of Light Soils.— Levi Bartlett, Esq.
English Agriculture. — Luther Tucker, Esq.
Agricultural Statistics. — Pi'of. John A. Porter.
Fourth week. — Domestic Animals, ^-c.
Principles of Stock Breeding. — Hon. Cassius M. Claj-.
Stock Breeding in the United States. — Lewis F. Allen, Esq.
Breeding for the Dairy. — Charles L. Flint, Esq.
Horses. — Sanford Howard, Esq.
Root Crops, and Sheep Husbandry. — Theodore S. Gold.
Pisciculture. — John C. Comstock, Esq.
Rural Economy. — Donald G. Mitchell, Esq.
Harris's Revised Work on Injurious Insects. — This work, (we learn from the Boston
Journal,) is progressing with as much dispatch as its character and prospective perma-
nence and value will warrant ; but it will scarcely be ready for publication in less than
a year from this time. Its preparation for the press is supervised by Prof. Agassiz and
the Secretary of the Massachusetts Board of Agriculture. The text will be copiously
illustrated with steel and wood engravings, in the very highest style of the art. The
drawings are by two gentlemen who came to this country with Prof. Agassiz, and who
have, perhaps, no peer in their line of art. We allude to Sonrel, of France, and Burk-
hardt. Before their drawings pass into the hands of the engraver, they are submitted
to tlie scrutiny of Prof. Agassiz, whose quick and accurate discernment of the forms and
colors of nature enables him to pass upon them a critical judgment. The engraver is
Henry Marsh, of Boston.
Appended to the matter contained in the work of Dr. Harris, there will be notes from
several scientific gentlemen of Europe and America, who have been engaged for this
service. Among others is Baron Osten Sacken, of the Russian Legation, the highest
living authority in the order of the diptera. Dr. Leconte, of Philadelphia, the highest
American authority on the coleoptera, will furnish notes upon that order. Dr. Morris, of
Baltimore, one of the best authorities upon the lepidoptcra, will furnish notes upon that
order. Prof Kirkland of Cleveland, will also furnish notes upon the last named order,
and make other contributions to the work. Prof Agazziz will also probably furnish
notes, and write the introduction to the work. The letter-press and paper will be made
to correspond with the high literary and scientific character of the book ; and, on the
whole, it will undoubtedly surpass any similar work of the kind ever published in
America, while it will be entitled to rank with the best works upon natural history in
Europe. It will be a credit to the State of Massachusetts, under whose auspices and at
whose expense it is to be edited and published. The appropriation for this purpose was
$,8,000. Twenty-five hundred copies are to be printed for the State, and a portion of
tkem are to be distributed among the members of the late Legislature, agricultural soci-
eties, town and public libraries, &c., &c.
United States Agricultural Society. 383
Journal of the Royal Agricultural Society, Vol. XX, Part 1. — This, the first part of
the volume for 1859, did not apj)ear until September. It contains many interesting
papers, among them : On the Preservation of Timber, by Dr. Richardson ; Beetroot Dis-
tillation, by Monsieur Trehonnnis ; American Agricultural Implements, by Dr. Eddy;
Steam Cultivation, by Mr. Clarke ; Climate, by Dr. Voelckcr ; Grass Land Manure, by
Lawes & Gilbert; and on the Agriculture of Jersey and Guernsey, by C. P. le Cornu.
How TO Farm Profitably, or the Sayings and Doings of Alderman Mechi, is the title
of an English work recently brought to this country. It will be, of course, regarded with
suspicion, as the work of a " fancy farmer ; " but Alderman Mechi is a man who has
applied himself earnestly and practically to the work which he discusses. Here are
detailed at length the experiments and the improvements which the writer made in irri-
gation, draining, application of manures, subsoiling, alternation of crops, use of imple-
ments, rearing of animals, &c., &c., through all the round of practical farming. The
writer is confident that " the subterranean glazed pan over which the plow has slid for
a thousand years will be torn up by steam power, and the joyous roots of the plants will
testify their exultation by a more vigorous surface vegetation, highly gratifying to the
British stomach." In the last words the Aldermanic speech has the traditional savor of
the Aldermanic appetite.
Transactions OP the Connecticut State Agricultural Society for 1858. This volume —
the publication of which has been unavoidably delayed — contains much valuable mate-
rial, especially the Report of Professor Johnson on " Fertilizers," and Dr. Miner's essay
on "Sea-weeds as Manui-e."
The American Herd Book, containing Pedigrees of Short-horn Cattle, with introduc-
tory notes by Lewis F. Allen, Vol. IV. It is creditable to our country, (says the New
York Observer,) that already it has four such volumes of record of valuable stock in this
family. Nearly three thousand original pedigrees are found on the pages of this volume
alone. Such a work is indispensable to all breeders and dealers in Durham stock, if
they would understand their business ; and the volume will instruct and benefit a large
class outside of breeders and dealers. It is interesting to trace the history of all good
stock from its origin, and to notice its improvement. We look with confidence to the
day when we shall return to the mother country specimens of stock superior to any re-
ceived from it.
The Farmer and Gardener, published since September last at Philadelphia, is a
handsomely printed quarto of sixteen pages. It is edited by A. M. Spangler, assisted by
able writers, and published at one dollar per annum.
The Nebraska Farmer, reeently established, is a neat looking monthly quarto of six-
teen pages, well printed, and conducted by R. A. Furnass, at Brownsville, Nebraska Ter-
ritory. Price, one dollar per annum.
The Wisconsin Farmer commenced its twelfth volume on the 1st of January. It is
a well printed octavo magazine, published semi-monthly at Madison, Wisconsin, and ably
edited by D. J. Powers, Esq., and Professor J. W. Hoyt! Price, one dollar per annum.
The Country Gentleman: Published weekly at Albany, New York, at $2 per annum,
by Luther Tucker & Son. This ably conducted and valuable paper has been improved
at the commencement of its fifteenth volume, and its veteran editor-in-chief is nobly
realizing his hope of " infusing new life and spirit into each succeeding volume, and of
bringing each, with the benefit of greater experience, the expenditure of larger means,
and the command of wider resources." Mr. Tucker, senior, commenced the publication
of the Genesee Farmer some thirty years ago, and published it until he removed to Al-
banj', in 1840, to become the proprietor and senior editor of the Cultivator^ which posi-
tion he still occupies, with high honor. Mr. Luther H. Tucker, the junior editor, has
recently returned from a visit to Europe, where he creditably represented the agricultur-
ists of America, and gleaned much valuable information, which has and is appearing
in the. Country Gentleman. Mr. J. J. Thomas, the associate editor, is well known to
the members of the United States Agricultural Society, as the author of its most valua-
ble document — the '-Report on Reapers and Mowers."
The American Stock Journal, published at New York by D. C. Linsley, is a highly
interesting and valuable periodical to all engaged in the breeding and management of
domestic animals. Dr. George H, Dadd has taken charge of the Veterinary Department.
384 From the Secretary' s Table,
The Agricultural Report of the Patent Office for 1859, has been promptly pre-
pared by those gentlemen now in the Agricultural Division of the Patent Office, and
transmitted to Congress some six months earlier than in years past. This will enable
the public to receive it within a few months after its date.
Among its varied contents are papers on — Veterinary Science and Art, by Professor
Rallston ; Acclimation of Animals, by Dr. Craig, U. S. A. ; Administering Medicines to
Domestic Animals, by Dr. Wagenfelld ; Vegetable Fibre, by Dr. Schjefer; The Produc-
tions of the Ionian Islands, by S. R. Parsons, Esq.; Fertilizers, by Hon. T. G. Clemson ;
Rearing and Management of Saxon Merinos, by Baron Von Speck ; Farm Journals, by
Mr. Gaw ; Fruits of Japan, by Townsend Harris ; List of Agricultural Patents granted
in 1859; Notices of Agricultural Societies, &c., &c., &c. This brief glance at the titles
of the more important papers will give an idea of the value of the report.
Government Propagating Garden. — The drainage of this garden proves to have been
imperfectly executed, and many of the lines of tile-drain will have to be re-laid. The
attempt to heat the forcing houses by the warmth developed from the fermentation of
sorghum plants and stable manure Avas found to be impracticable, as there was no pro-
cess by which the heat could be regulated. After a thorough trial, it has been found
that when manure was first thrown in, the heat emitted exceeded a temperature of 150
degrees; this would probably continue two or three days, or perhaps a week. Then it
would gradually decrease, until finally all the heat would be exhausted, when a new
supply of manure must be thrown in, which repeated applications were both expensive
and trouble'feome. Again, when the weather was pleasant and the outside atmosphere
moderately warm, the temperature of the heat within might be at its height, and could
not be diminished. They are now heated by means of flues from a furnace, which are
found to answer every purpose, though steam would be preferable were not the office
circumscribed in its operations by the limited amount of funds.
The culture of the tea-plant in these forcing houses has thus far equalled the expecta-
tion of the most sanguine friends of the enterprise, and the Commissioner has offered
them to members of Congress for distribution in those sections where the shrub will
probably flourish in the open air. A few plants have also been sent to those in more
northern latitudes who can protect them in green-houses during the winter. They are
accompanied by a circular, giving the replies of R. Fortune, Esq., of England, to inter-
rogatories concerning the culture of the plant in India and China. This will be a valu-
able guide to those who propose to emljark in tea culture.
Several thousand grape cuttings and seedlings are in a health}- condition. The}" have
been collected in New Mexico bj- Major Williams, in southern Europe by Mr. Parsons, and
in New England by Mr. Weber. Reports from these agents will appear in the next agri-
cultural Report of the Patent Office.
The wax plant and an oil tree from Japan, the sycamore fig, tlie seedless pomegranate,
the camphor tree, the cork-oak tree, several trees valuable for dying purposes, and other
productions which it is thought may be usefully grown in this country, are also being
experimented on at the Propagating Garden.
Steam on Common Roads. — It is stated in Tlte Practical Mechanics' Jowncil that Messrs.
J. Whitham & Son, Leeds, England, have recently constructed and shijiped for San
Francisco, one of Barran's Traction engines for common roads, to be reshipped from
thence around Cape St. Lucas, through the Gulf of California, and up the Colorado river
to Fort Yuma, from whence it goes inland some thirty miles to the borders of the Great
Desert. Its purpose is to travel sixty miles back and forth across this Desert, carrying
its own water, and conveying ore from and provisions to the Mariposa copper mines ; a
work hitherto and at present done by mules, driven by half-breed Mexican Indians. It
drew thirty-five tons of pig iron, and 120 men, at the rate of five miles per hour on a
level road.
Zebras in Harness. — In the last century the Queen of Portugal had a team of eight
zebras, which probably came from Angola. M. Correa de Serra, the perpetual secretary
of the Academy of Lisbon, told M. Dureau de la Malle, in 1802, that he had often seen
her Majesty about Lisbon with her zebra equipage ; and one of the royal stables in Lisbon
is still called the stable of the zebras.
"Handling". — The premium heifer Beauty's Butterfly wns so exhausted with the
" handling " of her examiners at the Smithfield winter exhibition, that she lay down, and
many prophecyed that she would never leave the grounds alive. Hurdles were placed
around her, and by careful nursing she recovered.
United States Agricultural Society. 385
ABSTRACT OF CORRESPONDENCE.
[Quarter ending January 10, I860.]
Alabama. — The State Society proposes to have a medal struck, to be awarded at its
exhibitions.
California. — At the exhibition of 1859, the exhibitors numbered over 750, the visitors
over 20,000, the receipts from memberships and admission tickets $21,000.
Canada. — The Provincial Exhibition of 1860 has been located at Hamilton. The newly
elected President of the Provincial Agricnltural Society of Canada is John Wade of Co-
burg; 1st Vice President, Hugh C. Barwick, of Woodstock; 2d Vice President, F. W.
Stone, of Guelph, who is a life-member of the United States Agricultural Society, and was
a successful exhibitor at the Chicago Exhibition.
Connecticut. — The State Agricultural Society will meet at Hartford on the 11th inst.,
and the Grape Growers' Association will meet the evening previous. Professor John-
son. Chemist to the State Agricultural Society, has published a report on reducing whole
bones into a pulverized condition, (without grinding or the use of oil of vitriol.) by a
process of fermentation. This is but a portion of the useful labors of Professor Johnson,
who has rendered the fiirmers of Connecticut a great service by his analysis of muck,
peat, bones, and the "fertilizers" now offered for sale.
Delaware. — The Kent county society is holding regular meetings, at which valuable
papers are read by Dr. Ridgeley and other agriculturists.
Florida. — Several successful efforts have recently been made in Florida for the culti-
vation of lemons, from seed and graftings. The Charleston Courier mentions a specimen
sent to that office from the plantation of Col. T. L. Dancy. These were Sicily lemons,
from imported seed, after several years' cropping in Florida. They are pronounced to
be admirable in size and appearance, and excellent in flavor.
Georgia. — Successful results have followed experiments in cultivating " upland rice,"
which yields a good crop on wornout pine land, where corn will not grow without manure.
A second importation of Cashmere goats has been made into this country, for Hon. W.
H. Stiles. The first lot imported was sold to Mr. Richard Peters, of Atlanta, from which
importation all the crosses and half-breeds in this country have sprung. Mr. Stiles has
eight of them, and they are no less curious than valuable — something of the size and
shape of our native breeds. They differ widely in their hair, which grows so luxuriously
as to give them the appearance of a sheep with an immense fleece on it. The experiment
having been thoroughly tried as to their thriving in our climate, and resulting satisfac-
torily, there can be no doubt of the value they will be to our country. The uses to which
the hair is put are numerous. Camlet and worsted goods and ladies' fabrics, as challies,
mousseline de lainc, gentlemen's clothing for summer wcp.r, hosiery, &c., promising a
beauty, strength, durability, lustre, and permanency of color far superior to the wool of
the sheep or the alpaca. These goats are found in the Himalaya mountains, and have to
be brought about a thousand miles before they reach a shipping port. They are not
sheared like the sheep, but the fleece is pulled off twice every year. An ordinary fleece
weighs between three and four pounds — the New York price, $8.50 per pound, making
at least $51 a year for each goat, while there is no cost in feeding them, for they areas
frugal and hearty as the common' goat. Their great value in this country is the
splendid cross with our common goat, the half breed being nearly as valuable every
way as the full breed. The expense of keeping them is a mere trifle, as they live on
briars and foliage not touched by other animals.
Indiana. — In the year 1775, Minard Sturgess, grandfather of Prof. Sturgess, of Hanover
College, emigrated to Indiana, bringing with him the first hive of bees ever seen in the
Wabash Valley. The Indians, who had never seen any before, after being stung a few
times, called them the white man's fly, while the French settlers became very much
alarmed for fear the bees would injure the fruit by sucking the blossoms.
Kansas. — A fine lot of Durhams and Devons, as, also, imported Suffolk hogs, have
been introduced in Anderson and Douglass counties, and the farmers are giving attention
to the improvement of the stock of the country. During the present year, however, seve-
ral hundred head of good cattle died with what is called "the Spanish" or " Texas fever,"
a disease which in almost every instance has proved fatal. It has been quite prevalent
for a few years, both in Kansas and Missouri ; and if any person can suggest a remedy,
it will be of much benefit in the advancement of cattle raising upon the prairies of the
West.
Kentucky. — At the annual meeting of the State Agricultural Society, held at Frank-
fort, December 7th, Col. L. J. Bradford, of Bracken county, was unanimously elected
386 From the Secretary's Table,
President, with a Vice President and Directors for each district. The receipts of the
past year were $11,149 89, the expenditures $7,352 71, leaving a balance in the treasury
of $3,797 18. A recent assessment shows the number of hogs in the State, in 1859, to
have been 815,538 ; an increase of 17G,241 head over the number in 1858.
Louisiana. — In the year 1852 the production of sugar in Louisiana was 236,547 hogs-
heads. Last year it was 440,000 hogsheads, but this year, says the Sugar Planter, the
results of observation in a part of the State where the crops more rarely fail than in any
other, and the concurrent testimony of planters in other sections, have brought us to the
conclusion that the yield of this season will be less than that of the last by over one
hundred thousand hogsheads.
Massachusetts. — A State Exhibition, under the direction of the Board of Agriculture,
will probal)ly be held in September next, at Springfield. By direction of the Board of
Agriculture, the Secretary, C. L. Flint, Esq., has prepared No. 1 of a proposed series of
tracts on Agriculture, for distribution among the farmers of the commonwealth. No. 1
is a valuable treatise upon the culture of the grasses — a subject of great importance to
the farmers of Massachusetts. An edition of fortj^ thousand copies will be printed, and
any farmer in the State can obtain a copy of the pamphlet free, by mail, by sending a
request enclosing a penny-postage stamp. Subsequent tracts will treat of the grain crops,
the cranberry crops, neat cattle, &c., &c.
Maine will probably soon have a Department of Agricultural Chemistry, properly
endowed, attached to some of the seminaries of learning already established. The An-
droscoggin Agricultural Society has talvcn the initiative steps to secure a donation of
$15,000 from the State, and a pi'ivate subscription of the same amount.
Minnesota. — The members of the Minnesota Legislature, now in session at the city of
St. Paul, have organized from their body an Agricultural Club, which meets in the capi-
tol one evening in each week, to talk over the various productions of the State, to com-
pare experiences, and generally to discuss all subjects bearing upon the interests of agri-
culture. At their meeting on Wednesday evening, December 28, we see that wheat-
oTowing was the subject of investigation. The counties were well represented by several
delegates; and from these we learn that, even in that mellow and fertile soil, the bulk of
experience went in favor of deep plowing. The estimates of the average yield of wheat
to the acre varied from twenty to twentj^-five bushels. Mr. Ford (Ramsey county) had
stated before the United States Agricultural Fair the average of the State to be twenty-
five bushels, but now thought he was then too high.
Missouri. — The " St. Louis Vine and Fruit Growers' Association" contemplate planting
a vineyard of 1,000 acres. It is estimated that not less than 5,000,000 acres in southern
Missouri present rare attractions to the vine-dresser, while favorable localities exist in all
parts of the State, in which the grapes can be cultivated to advantage.
New Mexico. — Although large numbers of sheep are raised in this territory, they are
never sheared, and the fleece does not enter into the calculation of their value. The
flocks having been herded during the winter among the valleys of the mountains, are
early in the spring driven in by the shepherds to the haciendas of their proprietors,
which, for the most part, are in the immediate valley of the Rio Grande del Norte. While
the sheep are grazing in the mountains, and while being driven to and from their winter
quarters, they lose quite a large portion of their fleece among the bushes and prickly
shrubs of the country. In driving a large flock through some patches of thorns, it is not
uncommon for the sheep to lose from one to two thousand pounds of their wool. This
is left hanging to the bushes and is gathered up by the Peons, properly sacked, taken to
the merchants or freighters engaged in the commerce between New Mexico and the States,
sold for a trifling sum, (for the ignorant and lazy natives, or "greasers," have no idea of
the value of the wool,) and by these traders is forwarded to the frontier towns. Last
summer trains arrived at Kansas city, bringing as many as ninety thousand pounds of
this wool, gathered in this manner. Shearing sheep is never done, though some of the
more scientific and industrious of the Peons will take off a fleece with a common butcher
knife — rather a tedious and savage operation.
New Brunswick. — At the recent annual meeting of the St. John Agricultural Society,
Thomas Davidson was elected President, and R. Sands Armstrong Secretary, with other
officers.
North Carolina. — Professor Buckley says, that in no part of the United States have
we finer apples than in the mountain regions of North Carolina, and they are mostly
from seedlings originally planted bj' the Indians. Silas McDowell, of Franklin, in Macon
county, has devoted more than twenty years to the selection and grafting of those best
native apples, and he now has an orchard of more than GOO apple trees, which bear fruit
United States Agricultural Society. 387
equal if not superior to the best northern kinds. There is said to be a line or belt on
the mountain sides about three hundred feet above the adjoining plain or valley, and ex-
tending upwards several hundred feet, whore fruit trees always bear, because the belt is
free from frost. If this be true, — and believe its truth has been pretty well tested by ex-
periment,— the mountains of North Carolina might supply the South with an abundance
of the choicest fruit, if the means of transportation were good.
Pennsylvania. — It has been proposed to hold the next exhibition of the State Society,
on the spacious grounds of the Lucerne County Society, in the Wyoming Valley, now
accessible by railway from all parts of the State.
Rhode Island. — The manufacture of hay rakes is a large business near Woonsocket.
Since the 1st of September Wilcox & Son have shipped to California 800 dozen of hand
rakes and 250 horse rakes, and more are to follow.
South Carolina. — A cargo of 1,000 bales of hay has been landed at the port of Charles-
ton, by the Dutch bark Netherlands, from Rotterdam. The Nnvs says, that "it is equal
in quality to any of the northern hay, and will pay a good profit." The progress of the
geological survey of the State has been stopped, although Mr. Lieber will remain in office
another year to complete the ofifice work, and to superintend the publication of the
fourth volume.
Texas. — Wool-growing is becoming an important business in Texas, and will soon
rival the coiton-interest. The woolen factories of the South consume more than is ottered
in the New Orleans market, and agents are sent to Texas to engage it. G. W. Kendall,
Esq., was one of the first pioneers in Texas wool-growing, and his sheep now number
several thousand. More recently other gentlemen have gone thither, and they receive
remunerating prices for their " clips," although generally badly put up, ditt'crent quali-
ties being mixed together, unwashed and matted with burrs or dirt.
Utah. — A letter in the Mountaineer, of Salt Lake city, Utah, written from Washington
countv, has the following: " Our prospect for a good harvest of cotton in this place is
very flattering at present. We have already picked between two and three thousand
pounds, and feel sanguine that we have yet five or six thousand pounds to pick."
Virginia. — The Farmers' Assembly met during the Petersburg exhibition, and elected
the ofiicers of the State Agricultural Society for 1860. John R. Edmunds, of Halifax,
President ; Chas. B. Williams, of (Richmond) Henrico, Secretary and Treasurer. A reso-
lution was adopted declaring it to be expedient "to hold the next fair at the Metropolis
of the State, and to hold there all succeeding fairs ;" and the raising of a committee "with
full powers to arrange for the holding of the next fiiir accordingly, if provision can be
made therefor satisfactory to the committee." Another committee was ajtpointed to
memorialize the General Assembly of Virginia to pass a law requiring the Commission-
ers of the Revenue to take annually the agricultural statistics of the Commonwealth.
The thanks of the society were unanimously voted to Edmund Ruffin, Sr., Esq., for his
services as president.
The Central Society at Richmond, which now has fine grounds sixty acres in extent,
proposes to hold a horse show and horticultural fair in May next.
Wisconsin. — The board of officers for 1860 was elected at the Milwaukee exhibition.
B. R. Hinkley, Waukesha county, President; F. W. Hoyt, Dane county. Secretary. Pro-
fessor Hoyt is one of the editors of the Wisconsin Farmer, published at Madison.
The Milwaukee Sentinel estimates the wool crop of Wisconsin for the past year, at
one million of pounds. The average price is estimated at from 39 to 42 cents a pound.
At 41 cents the amount would be $410,000. Much of the wool was so badly put up that
it brought an inferior price, solely from the neglect of the owners. Every farmer in the
State could keep a flock of sheep, and realize a handsome income from the lambs and
wool annually, without restricting his other fi^rming operations. Farmers have been so
much given to wheat growing that the production of other articles has been compara-
tively neglected.
Baker's Island, in the Pacific, has been provided with a wharf and fi.xturcs for load-
ing guano.
African Cotton. — Dr. Livingston writes from the interior of Africa that the natives
offered for sale "cotton of two kinds, one indigenous, short in the staple, but very strong,
and wooly to the feeling; the other very fine, and long in the staple. We brought a
number of specimens of their spindles and yarn, and as it was quite equal to American
uplands, did not offer them any American seed. The cotton-plant is met with every-
where; and, though burned down annually, springs up again as fresh and strong as ever.'
388 The Secretary s Table.
Delegates who may attend the Eighth Annual Meeting, are requested to hand in their
credentials, and to annex their Post Office address, that an account of the meeting may
be sent to them.
The Medals Awarded at Chicago were ordered without delay at the United States Mint
at Philadelphia, where they are struck from fine gold and silver, or the best bronze, thus
avoiding any chance for the deceptions often practiced by those who manufacture these
valued testimonials of merit for associations.
The Grand Gold Medal of Honor, and a large number of the silver medals, were fin-
ished in due time, aud forwarded to Washington by John McGowan, Esq., of the Execu-
tive Committee. But, for the reason given in the annexed letter, some weeks will prob-
ably elapse before they can be finished, and engraved with the names of the exhibitors
to whom tliey have been awarded.
Mint op the United States,
Philadeli)hia, January 5th, 1860.
Dear Sir: The delay in furnishing the balance of the medals ordered by the United
States Agricultural Society is owing to the press on which they are struck having given
out. It is in course of repair, and as soon as finished, your medals will be made without
delay.
Very respectfullv,
JAMES' ROSS SNOWDEN, Director,
Per H. R. Linderman.
John McGowan, Esq.,
Of Executive Committee U. S. Agricultural Society.
The Publications of the society for 1857, '58, and '59, can be supplied to life members
who have not received them at the business office, or they will be sent by mail if the
postage is remitted.
New Life Members. — James N. Brown, Springfield, Illinois; IT. M. Billings, Wisconsin;
J. B. Crippen, Cold Water, Michigan; John M. Cannon, Davenport, Iowa; B. Dodge, War-
saiv, Indiana; F. W. Giessenhainer, Neiu York City; W. H. Haling, Sylvania, Ohio; Syl-
vester Mowry, Tucson, Arizona; Jonathan Peream, ; F. W. Stone, Guelph,
Canada West; Howell Taylor, Somerville, Tennessee.
OBITUARY NOTICES.
David Thomas, an able writer on agricultural and horticultural topics, died at his
homestead near Union Springs, Caj'uga county, New York, aged 84 years. He came
from Pennsylvania to the early settlement of Scipio, Cayuga county, N. Y., and being a
civil engineer, he was employed more as a surveyor than in the labors of his farm ; yet
such was his passion for Horticulture, Pomology and Floriculture — being an accomplished
botanist — that his domain at Greatfield, two miles east of Aurora, was soon celebrated
for its fine fruits and beautiful flowers. He was one of the first contributors lo the Agri-
cultural Press of the State, and the young Genesee Farmer was often graced and enlivened
by articles on the pi-oper culture of fruits and flowers, from his practical pen. Appointed
by Governor DeWitt Clinton to the responsible position of Chief Engineer of the Western
Division of the Erie Canal, Mr. Thomas built a new house on his farm, with an observa-
tory on top overlooking the broadest expanse of the Cayuga; here on shelves were
numerous geological specimens he had himself collected. His ornamental and fruit trees
were now increased, his flower garden extended, and its beautiful specimens greatly
augmented. But as age and infirmity crept on, he became more and more dependent on
costly mercenary help; and rather than see his beautiful flowers run wild, and his fruit
trees a prey to insects, he sold the beautiful domain and retired to a comfortable cottage
near the sparkling lake waters at Union Springs. Here, as his physical infirmities
increased, his mind and memory partially gave way ; yet Providence dealt kindly with
him, for he might often be seen on a genial summer's day among the flowers of his now
narrow border, or the evergreens in his door-yard, enjoying their fragrance and beauty;
a comfort kindly vouchsafed to compensate us for the privations and infirmities of age. —
Rural New Yorker.
Thomas Nuthall, the distinguished botanist, died at his residence near Liverpool in
September last, aged "73. Mr. Nuthall was one of the highest botanical authorities, an
extensive traveler and most accurate observer. Every student of American botan}', and
eveiy florist, knows and reverences his name. His contributions to our knowledge of
American forest trees and our flora generally are second only in importance to those of
the great men who immediately preceded him in laborious pioneer investigations.
THE
JOURNAL OF AGRICULTURE:
COMPRISING
TI-IE TKA.NS_A.CTIO]SrS
THE CORRESPONDENCE
OF THE
UNITED STATES AGRICULTURAL SOCIETY
FOTl 1859.
EDITED BY BEN: PERLEY POORE,
SECKETARY OF THE SOCIETY.
^^
VOL. VII
WASHINGTON, D. C.
PUBLISHED AT THE ROOMS OF THE UNITED STATES AGRICULTURAL SOCIETY
W. H. MOORE, PRINTER.
1860.
OFFICERS AND MEMBERS
OF THE
UNITED STATES AGRICULTURAL SOCIETY,
FOR THE YEAR 1859— '60.
PRESIDENT,
TENCH TILGHMAN, Oxford, Maryland.
VICE PRESIDENTS,
N. B. CLOUD Alabama,
SYLVESTER MOWREY Arizona,
D. P. HALLOWAY Indiana,
A. W. McKEE California,
H. A. DYER Connecticut,
A. G. FULLER Dacotah,
JOHN JONES Dclatcare,
W. W. CORCORAN Dist. Columbia.
S. A. MALLORY Florida,
RICHARD PETERS Georffia,
JOHN A. KENNICOTT Illi?iois,
LEGRAND BYINGTON Iowa,
W. F. M. ARNY Kansas,
W. L. UNDERWOOD Kentucky,
J. D. B. DeBOW Louisiana,
JOHN BROOKS Massachusetts,
A. KIMMEL Maryland,
EZEKIEL HOLMES Maine,
N. N. HARRISON Mississippi,
HENRY LEDYARD Michigan,
H. M. RICE Minnesota,
J. R. BARRET Missouri,
HENRY F. FRENCH N. Hampshire,
J. H. FRAZEE New Jersey,
D. P. JOHNSTON New York,
MANUEL A. OTERO New Mexico,
W. T. BROWN Nebraska,
H. K. BURGWYN N. Carolina,
F. G. CARY Ohio,
J. H.LANE Oregon,
A. CLEMNENTS Pennsylmnia,
ELISHA DYER Rhode Island,
F. W. ALSTON S. Carolina,
THOS. AFFLECK Texas,
DELANO R. ECKELS Utah,
FRED. HOLBROOK Vermont,
W. A.fSPENCE Virginia,
D. S. CURTIS Wisconsin,
I. S. STEPHENS Washington T.
EXECUTIVE COMMITTEE,
T. TILGHMAN, {ex-officio)... Maryland,
MARSHALL P. ^\\j\)Y.^... Massachusetts,
HENRY WAGER New York,
JOHN McGOWAN Pennsylvania,
FREDERICK SMYTH N. Hampshire,
J. MERRYMAN Maryland,
J. M. CANNON lou-a,
HORACE C APRON Illinois,
JOSIAH W. WARE Virginia,
B. P. POORE, {ez-officio.) Massachusetts.
TREASURER,
BENJAMIN B. FRENCH, Washington, D. C.
SECRETARY,
BEN: PERLEY POORE, Office, 3bG Fcnnsijlvania Avenue, Washington, D. C.
Office hours from 9 A. M. to 1 P. M.
INDEX.
PAGE.
Address by President Tilghman 9, HI, 199, 217, 224
Address by Senator John J, Crittenden, of Kentucky 203
Address b}-- Senator Stephen A. Dovighis, of Illinois 207
Address by Hon. Alvan P. Hyde, of Connecticut 288
Address by Henry Hull, .Ir., Esq., of Georgia 299
Address by Richard Owen, M. D., of Indiana 308
Address by Rev. A. L. Stone, of Massachusetts, (abstract) 332
Address by Dr. George B. Loring, of Massachusetts, (abstract) 334
Address by J. Stanton Gould, Esq., of New York, (abstract) 354
Address by Governor N. P. Banks, of Massachusetts, (abstract) 360
Aderess by Hon, A- H. H. Stuart, of Virginia 366
Address by Hon Abram Lincoln, of Illinois, (extract) 373
Alabama, information from 185
Alabama, Local Exhil)itions in 49, 285
Alabama State Agricultural Society 48, 84, 185, 285, 385
American Herd Book, Short Horns, Vol. IV 383
Annual Meeting U. S. Agricultural Society for 1859 9
Annual Exhibition U. S. Agricultural Society 193
African Cotton 81, 387
Agreement with Hotel-keepers at Chicago 179
Agricultural Bureau proposed 377
Agricultural Chemistry 134, 191
Agricultural Division of Patent Office . , .81, 180
Agricultural Education, resolutions on 28
Agricultural Lectures at Yale College 382
Agricultural Patents 80
Agricultural Professorships in Virginia ,381
Agricultural Report of Patent Office 13, 25, 29, 78, 181, 384
Agricultural Schools, their chances of usefulness 98
Agricultural Statistics 37
Archives of American Agriculture 105
Arizona, Information from 185
Arkansas, Information from 84, 185
Arkansas, Exhibitions in 49, 286
Bishop, Hon. Wm. D., Commissioner of Patents 180
Bread Region, the 123
Connecticut, Information from 186, 385
Connecticut, Local Exhibitions in 53, 298
Connecticut State Agricultural Society 51, 287, 383
Columbian Agricultural Society 114
California, Information from 84, 185
California, Local Exhibitions in 50, 287
California State Agricultural Society 49, 185, 286, 385
Canada, Information from 185, 385
Canada, Exhibitions in 50
Cotton 82
Country and City Life 73
vi INDEX.
PAGE.
Cuba 81
Cultivating Hops 379
Delaware, Information from 385
Delaware, Exhibition? in 53, 298
District of Columbia, farms near 186
Domestication of the Elk 28, 40
Drainage 184
English Breeds of Swine .378
Essay, by Professor Francis G. Carey, of Ohio 89
Essay, by A. L. Elwyn, M. D., of Pennsylvania 98
Exhibition of 1859, located at the Northwest 21, 192
p]xhibition of 1859, Premium List 136
Exhibition of 1859, Awards of Premiums 227
Farm Drainage, a Work by Henry F. French 184
Farming by Steam 126, 182, 253
Foreign Information 81, 83, 126, 284, 378, 379
Fruit Culture in the ^Jorthern States 46
Harris' Revised Work on Injurious Insects 382
Illinois, Information from 84, 186
Illinois, Local Exhibitions in 54, 303
Illinois State Aricultural Society 54, 84, 186, 303
Indiana, Information from 186, 385
Indiana, Local Exhibitions in 55, 306
Indiana State Agricultural Society 55, 84, 186, 305
Farmers' "Talks" 325, 213, 344
Georgia, Agricultural Information from 186, 385
Georgia, Local Exhibitions in 53, 299
Georgia, State Agricultural Society 53, 298
Inaugural Exercises at Chicago Exhibition 199
Inundations, a Solution of the Problem of the 44
Iowa, Information from 186
Iowa, Agricultural Exhibitions in 58, 321
Iowa State Agricultural College 84, 381
Iowa State Agricultural Society 58, 84, 320
Kansas, Information from 84, 186, 321, 385
Kansas, Local Exhibitions in 322
Kentucky, Information from 186, 385
Kentucky, Agricultural Exhibitions in 57, 322
Kentucky State Agricultural Society , . 56, 322, 385
Lectures and Lecturers at New Haven 382
Louis Napoleon as a Farmer 379
Louisiana, Information from 84, 187, 386
Louisiana, Local Exhibitions in 323
INDEX. vii
PACiK.
Maine, Information from 187, 38()
Maine, Local Exhibitions in 59, 327
Maine State Board of Agriculture 58, 84, 32.3
Maryland, Information from 187
Maryland, Local Exliibitions in 58, 329
Maryland State Agricultural College 187, 380
Maryland State Agricultural Society 57, 85, 187, 328
Massachusetts, Information from 59, 187
Massachusetts, Local Exhibitions in 59, 329
Massachusetts Society for the Promotion of Agriculture 59, 85, 329
Massachusetts State Board of Agriculture 59, 187, 329, 380
Mechi's Sayings and Doings 383
Members U. S. Agricultural Society 86, 192, 388
Medals awarded for Reports of Exhibitions 387
Michigan, Information from 187
Michigan, Local Exhibitions in 61, 85, 336
Michigan State Agricultural College 188
Michigan State Agricultural Society 60, 335
Model Farm of Prince Albert at Windsor 43
Morrill Land Bill, Discussion on 18
Minnesota, Information from 188, 336, 386
Minnesota, Local Exhibitions in 85, 337
Mississippi, Information from 188
Mississippi, Local Exhibitions in 62, 337
Mississippi State Agricultural Bureau 62, 337
Missouri, Information from 188, 386
Missouri, Local Exhibitions in 61, 188, 338
Nebraska, Information from 188, 383
Nebraska, Exhibitions in 62, 338
New Brunswick, St. John Society 386
New Hampshire, Information from 188
New Hampshire, Local Exhibitions in 63, 339
New Hampshire State Agricultural Society 62, 338
New Jersey, Information from 188
New Jersey, Local Exhibitions in 64 341
New Jersey State Agricultural Society 63, 85, 340
New York, Information from 188
New York, Local Exhibitions in 65, 346
N ew York State Agricultural College 2j<4, 380
New York State Agricultural Society 64, 85, 188, 341
New Mexico, Information from 3S6
North Carolina, Information from 189
North Carolina, Local Exhibitions in 67, 348
North Carolina State Agricultural Society 66, 348
Notices of New Works 184, 382, 383
Ode to Ohio, by Col. Harris 352
Ohio, Information from 189
Ohio, Local Exhibitions in 68, 351
Ohio State Agricultural Society 67, 85, 348
Obituary Notices 16,88, 388
viii INDEX.
PAGE.
Oregon, Local Exhibitions in 353
Oregon, Organization of a State Society 353
Pennsylvania, Information from 189, 387
Pennsylvania Farm High School 3?0
Pennsylvania, Local Exhibitions in 69, 354
Pennsylvania State Agricultural Society 69, 189, 353, 387
Premiums awarded at Chicago 227
Presentation of Grand Gold Medal to Mr. Rahm 19
Presentation of Premium Colors to Chicago Cadets ; 217
Propogating Garden of the Patent Office 181, 384
Reaping Machines first used 124
Rhode Island, Information from 189, 387
Rliode Island, Local Exhibitions in 69, 354
Rhode Island, Society for the Encouragement of Domestic Industry. . . .69
Royal Agricultural Society of England 81, 212, 378, 383
Rules of Exhibition of 1859, at Chicago 136
Secretary's Table 76, 180, 283, 376
Sheep-Shearings at Arlington 112
Society for Promoting Public Economy Ill
Soiling Cattle, discussion on, at Albany 344
South Carolina, Information from . . .' 189, 387
South Carolina, Local Exhibitions in 69, 356
South Carolina State Agricultural Society 69, 356
St. Louis Agricultural Association 61, 85, 188, 337
Steam Plowing in England 126
Steam Plows at Chicago, Report of Committee 253
The Country Gentleman 383
Tennessee, Information from 189
Tennessee, Local Exhibitions in 71, 357
Tennessee State Agricultural Bureau 71, 356
Texas, Information from 190, 387
Utah, Agricultural Information from 71, 190, 387
Vermont Farmers, described in rhyme, by J. G. Saxe, Esq 264
Vermont, Information from 190
Vermont, Local Exhibitions in 71, 364
Vermont State Agricultural Society. 71, 357
Virginia, Information from 190, 387
Virginia, Local Exhibitions in 71, 365
Virginia State Agricultural Society 71, 365
Wisconsin Agricultural Lectures 381
(nlllWisconsin, Information irom 190, 387
l^:;;j\\^;^SiConsin, Local Exhibitions in 73, 375
^.[^.jlWjiscoj'ii^in State Agricultural Society 72, 372
,;.:;;;,rW^htijgton's Views on a National Agricultural Society 105
Works for Wine-Growers 379