Kind of Fate: Agricultural Change in Virginia, 1861-1920Purdue University Press, 2002 - 256 pages A Kind Of Fate: Agricultural Change In Virginia, 1861-1920 surveys farming in Virginia through the experiences of Jacob Manning and his son James. We read about their individual struggles, the impact of the Civil War, contrasts between farming and country life, Jacob having to farm through the harsh times of the Civil War, his son James farming experiences during a post-war time of rising prosperity. Author Terry Sharrer (curator of health sciences at the Smithsonian Institutions, Washington, D.C.) focuses on the changes in agriculture and its shift from crop-focused to livestock-dominated farming. |
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Page xvii
... Cultures since 1880 ( 1985 ) have already addressed those topics , Diver- sified farming has had far less attention . But , further , the long , term trend in Virginia agriculture since 1865 has been toward greater Introduction xvii.
... Cultures since 1880 ( 1985 ) have already addressed those topics , Diver- sified farming has had far less attention . But , further , the long , term trend in Virginia agriculture since 1865 has been toward greater Introduction xvii.
Page xix
... cultural geography of Virginia's six distinct regions : the northern and southern Coastal Plain , the northern and southern Piedmont , the Great Valley , and the Appalachian Highlands . The " fall line " separates Tidewater and Piedmont ...
... cultural geography of Virginia's six distinct regions : the northern and southern Coastal Plain , the northern and southern Piedmont , the Great Valley , and the Appalachian Highlands . The " fall line " separates Tidewater and Piedmont ...
Page xxiii
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Page 43
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Page 45
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Common terms and phrases
acres Agri Agricultural Experiment Station Alwood American Agriculture animals army Augusta County Bailey became Blacksburg bovine Bureau bushels cattle Cavalry cedar-apple rust Census century Charlottesville Civil Commissioner of Agriculture commodity Company Confederate corn County cows crop cultural Cyclopedia of American dairy Department of Agriculture diphtheria Edmund Ruffin Education Experiment Station Bulletin farm farmers Federal feed field Fletcher freedmen fruit ginia glanders growers growing harvest History horses hundred Ibid improved insects John labor land livestock Loudoun Loudoun County Lynchburg milk million NARG Norfolk nutrients organism Pasteur pathogen peanut percent Piedmont Plant Diseases potatoes president problem production Report reprint Richmond Ruffin rural rust schools Science sharecropping Shenandoah Shenandoah Valley South Southampton County Southern Planter Tidewater tion tobacco tuberculosis typhoid U.S. Department University of Virginia University Press Valentine Museum Valley Virginia Agricultural Experiment Washington Westmoreland Davis wheat William Yearbook of Agriculture York
Popular passages
Page xiv - ... appeared to shrink into the "old fields," where scrub pine or oak succeeded broomsedge and sassafras as inevitably as autumn slipped into winter. Now and then a new start would be made. Some thrifty settler, a German Catholic, perhaps, who was trying his fortunes in a staunch Protestant community, would buy a mortgaged farm for a dollar an acre, and begin to experiment with suspicious, strange-smelling fertilizers. For a season or two his patch of ground would respond to the unusual treatment...